WoRMS source details

Tilic, Ekin; Geratz, Alicia; Rouse, Greg W.; Bartolomaeus, Thomas. (2021). Notopodial “spinning glands” of Sthenelanella (Annelida: Sigalionidae) are modified chaetal sacs. Invertebrate Biology. Efirst (06 April 2021): 1-12.
404061
10.1111/ivb.12334 [view]
Tilic, Ekin; Geratz, Alicia; Rouse, Greg W.; Bartolomaeus, Thomas
2021
Notopodial “spinning glands” of Sthenelanella (Annelida: Sigalionidae) are modified chaetal sacs
Invertebrate Biology
Efirst (06 April 2021): 1-12
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb)
Sthenelanella is an unusual genus of tube-dwelling scale worms, with fine fibrous threads that appear on either side of the body. These fibers emerge dorsally in long silvery bundles that are then tightly interwoven to construct the felt-like material of the tube. In the literature, these fibers are described as the products of so-called “spinning glands.” In this article, we investigated the ultrastructure of these notopodial fibers and show that they are annelid chaetae. Three or four dynamic microvilli of a basal chaetoblast form each of these feltage chaetae, making them the thinnest known annelid bristles. Our results show that the spinning glands of Sthenelanella uniformis are additional, highly modified notopodial chaetal sacs. We also show that the follicle cells, by their secretion of the enamel layer, play an active role in shaping the final chaeta. These findings not only increase the known morphological diversity of chaetae but also demonstrate the apparent plasticity of the machinery that form these chitinous structures. Our results are compared with chaetae in other annelids, with a particular focus on similar fibrous chaetae in Aphroditiformia.
California quadrant
Functional morphology
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Date
action
by
2021-04-07 23:55:31Z
created

Holotype USNM 17385, geounit California, identified as Sthenelanella uniformis Moore, 1910
 Classification

Monogeneric subfamily erected for Sthenelanella Moore, 1910 (six valid species). Gonzalez et al (2018) reported ... [details]

 Identification

Tilic et al (2021:11 of 12) and Struck et al (2005: 246) report different molecular sequences for Sthenelanella ... [details]