Opisthosyllis flaccida ( Grube, 1878 ) Grube, 1878

Aguado, Teresa, Martín, Guillermo San & Ten, Harry A., 2008, Syllidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from Indonesia collected by the Siboga (1899 – 1900) and Snellius II (1984) expeditions, Zootaxa 1673, pp. 1-48 : 16-18

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.180233

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235735

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D24A2A37-FF95-FFC1-5894-E030E7390878

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Opisthosyllis flaccida ( Grube, 1878 )
status

comb. nov.

Opisthosyllis flaccida ( Grube, 1878) View in CoL n. comb.

Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6

Syllis flaccida Grube, 1878: 118 View in CoL –119 + p. 112, Pl. 7, fig. 6. Typosyllis flaccida View in CoL .— Licher, 1999: 246, 247, fig. 103.

Material examined. 3 Syntypes MPW 394, 2 Syntypes ZMB Q 4395, Philippines, Camiguin, Aibuhit. 2 spec. ZMA V.Pol. 1985.04 (as Syllis exilis ), Indonesia, Lesser Sunda Isl., Bay of Bima, near south fort, trawl, dredge, muddy bottom with coral sand, 55 m, Siboga Expedition, Sta. 47, 8/ 12 April 1899.

Comparative material examined. Opisthosyllis leslieharrisae Aguado, San Martín & Nygren, 2005 . Type material MNCN 16.01/10264-66, USA, California, Santa Catalina Island, Wrighley Marine Science Centre, 1–4 m, 33°26.7’N 118°29.1’W.

Description. Largest syntype 37 mm long, 1.5 mm wide, with 121 segments. Specimens from Indonesia 27 mm long, 1.2 mm wide with 82 segments; 32 mm, 1.3 mm, 77 segments, respectively. Body broad and flaccid. Segments slightly annulated secondarily, with about four to five rings. Dorsal surface covered by small irregularly distributed dark inclusions ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 A). Prostomium wider than long, rectangular to oval, with two pairs of dark eyes in trapezoidal arrangement, anterior pair larger than posterior, eye spots absent. Palps broad, fused at base, with central groove, similar in length to prostomium, ventrally folded. Antennae, tentacular and dorsal cirri distinctly thick. Median antenna with 20 articles. Lateral antennae inserted on anterior margin of prostomium, slightly shorter than median antenna, with 16 articles. Triangular occipital flap partially covering posterior part of prostomium. Peristomium shorter than subsequent segments ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 A). Dorsal tentacular cirri with 32–35 articles, ventral pair shorter, with 20 articles. Anterior dorsal cirri with 21–24 articles, midbody and posterior dorsal cirri with 25 articles. Ventral cirri digitiform, inserted proximally, reaching tip of parapodia ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 H). Prechaetal and postchaetal lobes similar in length, on all parapodia. Seven heterogomph compound chaetae on anterior chaetigers, nine to ten on median and five to seven on posteriorly-most parapodia. Compound chaetae of anterior and midbody parapodia with slightly bidentate blades, proximal tooth small. Blade edge with short spines; distal part of shafts provided with minute spines ( Figs 6 View FIGURE 6 B, C). Length of dorsal-most chaetal blades on anterior parapodia and midbody parapodia ca. 30 µm. Posterior compound blades unidentate, ca. 26 µm long, with short spines; shafts distally curved ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 D). Dorsal and ventral simple chaetae not seen. Four straight aciculae in anterior parapodia, three in median and two in posterior, all straight or slightly oblique ( Figs 6 View FIGURE 6 E, F). Pygidium conical ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 G), two anal cirri with about 30 articles. Pharynx through eight segments, similar in length but somewhat narrower than proventricle, tooth long and slender, dagger-shaped, located on midline of pharynx. Proventricle through segment 9 to 14, rectangular to oval, with about 30 rows of muscular cells ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 A). Both specimens from Indonesia developing female stolons (oocytes accumulated in last 22, and 30 segments, respectively).

Remarks. The description above is based on the Indonesian material; the syntypes are longer and exhibit some variations in number of articles of antennae and dorsal cirri (median antenna 26–30 articles, lateral ones 18–22, tentacular cirri 40–45, dorsal cirri of anterior segments 25–35, midbody cirri 30–40 and posterior ones 25–28). A pharyngeal tooth located posteriorly in the pharynx is the principal diagnostic character for Opisthosyllis and is visible, after dissection, in both the types and Indonesian material. The shape of the compound chaetae and presence of an occipital flap in O. flaccida are also other diagnostic characters of Opisthosyllis . Other species with a tooth in the middle of the pharynx are Opisthosyllis laevis Day, 1957 , O. longidentata San Martín, 1991 and O. leslieharrisae . In contrast to O. flaccida , O. laevis have bidentate falcigers; O. longidentata has thin dorsal cirri becoming pseudoarticulated in the posterior part of the body and bidentate blades with long spines and, finally, O. leslieharrisae has papillae over the dorsum and bidentate blades with long spines ( Day, 1957; San Martín, 1991; Aguado et al., 2005).

Distribution. Philippines, Indonesia.

ZMB

Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Zoological Collections)

ZMA

Universiteit van Amsterdam, Zoologisch Museum

MNCN

Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Annelida

Class

Polychaeta

Order

Phyllodocida

Family

Syllidae

SubFamily

Syllinae

Genus

Opisthosyllis

Loc

Opisthosyllis flaccida ( Grube, 1878 )

Aguado, Teresa, Martín, Guillermo San & Ten, Harry A. 2008
2008
Loc

Syllis flaccida

Licher 1999: 246
Grube 1878: 118
1878
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF