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Suárez-Morales, E. & S.I. Salazar-Vallejo. (2025). Expanding territories: new host records and four new species of herpyllobiid parasitic copepods (Copepoda: Herpyllobiidae) from Papua New Guinea deep-water polynoid polychaetes (Annelida: Polynoidae). Journal of Natural History. 59(13-16): 1017-1047.
507024
10.1080/00222933.2025.2474196 [view]
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:06F549E4-0B02-4EC8-991C-A9937AAE2AA2 [view]
Suárez-Morales, E. & S.I. Salazar-Vallejo
2025
Expanding territories: new host records and four new species of herpyllobiid parasitic copepods (Copepoda: Herpyllobiidae) from Papua New Guinea deep-water polynoid polychaetes (Annelida: Polynoidae).
Journal of Natural History
59(13-16): 1017-1047.
Publication
Annelidabase, Copepoda
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
The parasitological examination of polynoid polychaetes collected in deep water substrates (333–780 m) off Papua New Guinea allowed us to detect four infected specimens, including two new annelid host species (Harmothoe samadiae sp. n., Eunoe corbariae sp. n.), Lepidasthenia brunnea sensu Knox, and Harmothoe sp. Three of the parasites were identified as members of the mesoparasitic copepod genus Herpyllobius Steenstrup and Lütken, and one of Gottoniella López-González, Bresciani and Conradi, (Herpyllobiidae). Herpyllobius chambardi sp. n., found on L. brunnea, is distinguished from its congeneric species by having a longitudinal constriction dividing its globose ectosoma into two symmetrical hemispheres. The second species, H. hourdezi sp. n., on H. samadiae, shows a depressed intergenital margin, lacks sclerotised dots, and exhibits a large endosoma with several thick lobes. Herpyllobius pabloi sp. n., found on E. corbariae, closely resembles its congeneric species H. polynoes, but differs in the endosomal structure and details of the ectosoma. Herpyllobius species are known to infect at least 14 polynoid genera, to which we can now add Lepidasthenia Malmgren, thus expanding its host range among polynoids. These three Papuan species are additional new records of this chiefly cold-temperate copepod genus to be reported from subtropical latitudes. The discovery of Herpyllobius parasitising a species of Harmothoe confirms its preference for infecting this polynoid genus. The new Gottoniella, also on Harmothoe sp. is the third known species of the genus; it has heavily sclerotised genital swellings, slit-like genital openings, a distinctive fin-like lateral ectosomal process, a short, sclerotised ring, and a pipe-like stalk connecting the endosoma. Both H. chambardi and H. hourdezi are among the deep-living members of Herpyllobius in the Southern Hemisphere, the latter representing the deepest record of the genus (780 m) worldwide.
New Guinea
Systematics, Taxonomy
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2025-03-27 18:06:52Z
created
2025-04-10 11:49:26Z
changed
2025-04-10 22:26:35Z
changed
2025-04-11 11:06:01Z
changed

Holotype MNHN IA 2000-2122, geounit Papua New Guinea, identified as Eunoe corbariae Suárez-Morales & Salazar-Vallejo, 2025
Holotype MNHN NMNHIA 2000-2120, geounit Papua New Guinea, identified as Harmothoe samadiae Suárez-Morales & Salazar-Vallejo, 2025
 Etymology

Eunoe corbariae is named after Dr Laure Corbari, an organiser of the Expedition Papua Niugini during which the type ... [details]

 Etymology

Harmothoe samadiae is named for "Dr Sarah Samadi in recognition of her participation in the Tropical Deep Sea ... [details]

 Homonymy

Unresolved homonym with Lepidasthenia brunnea Day, 1960. Suárez-Morales & Salazar-Vallejo (2025) used the heading ... [details]

 Taxonomy

Suárez-Morales & Salazar-Vallejo (2025: 1025) comment on their identification of a tropical PNG polynoid with ... [details]

 Type locality

In sponges, E Kotakot, Madang, Papua New Guinea, -4.3152, 145.61889 (04° 18' 54.5976” S, 145° 37' 07.9716” ... [details]

 Type locality

On wood (tree stump) off Cape Croisiles, Papua New Guinea, -4.8686, 145.8769 (04° 52ʹ 06.84” S, 145°52ʹ ... [details]