WoRMS name details

Hesperophyllum tectum Chamberlin, 1919

339533  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:339533)

 unaccepted (superseded original combination)
Species
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
recent only
Chamberlin, Ralph V. (1919). New polychaetous annelids from Laguna Beach, California. <em>Journal of Entomology and Zoology of Pomona College.</em> 11(1): 1-23., available online at http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/12263520
page(s): 4-5 [details]  OpenAccess publication 
Holotype  MCZ 26802, geounit Laguna Beach  
Holotype MCZ 26802, geounit Laguna Beach [details]
Note Laguna Beach, southern California, USA,...  
From editor or global species database
Type locality Laguna Beach, southern California, USA, Pacific Ocean (gazetteer estimate 33.5411° -117.7863°). [details]
Type material Holotype 19 mm long, stated to have been deposited in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Cambridge, with the number MCZ 2143 (Chamberlin, 1919: 5). Later, Banse (1972: 196) adds: "A parapod of the holotype, from southern California, MCZ, was examined. The type specimen cannot be found (Dr. H. W. Levi, Harvard University, personal communication)." This mounted parapodium (MCZ 26802) was also studied by Pleijel (1991: 249; "The only type material available is a mounted parapodium without any setae or aciculum present, and in a too poor shape to be of any use") and Kato & Pleijel (2002: 1144, 1171; "The type and the only known specimen of the species includes only a single mounted parapodium, and the flattened nature of the ventral tentacular cirri cannot be re-assessed. [...] The combination of a dorsal acicula and a capillary chaeta, the broad dorsal cirrus, the ventral cirrus with the longitudinal axis obliquely orientated, and the rostrum of chaetal shafts with a large number of teeth, shows that it belongs to Notophyllum." Chamberlin (1919: 5) also refers the existence of a paratype.  [details]
Depth range Not stated. Types dredged.   
Depth range Not stated. Types dredged.  [details]

Distribution Pacific Ocean: Laguna Beach (southern California, USA).  
Distribution Pacific Ocean: Laguna Beach (southern California, USA). [details]

Etymology Not stated by the author. The specific epithet tectum is a Latin noun meaning 'roof', 'ceiling' or 'canopy', and refers...  
Etymology Not stated by the author. The specific epithet tectum is a Latin noun meaning 'roof', 'ceiling' or 'canopy', and refers presumably to the way how the foliaceous notocirri overlap and cover the dorsum, forming a canopy or ceiling: "With very large cirri of which the dorsals widely overlap in the middle and thus completely cover the dorsum, the prostomium normally also being wholly concealed from above. [...] This species suggests Notophyllum imbricatum Moore in the large imbricated notocirri covering the dorsum" (Chamberlin, 1919: 5). [details]

Taxonomic remark The specimen identified by Banse (1972: 195-197, fig. 2B-F; MCZ 19663) as Notophyllum (Hesperophyllum) tectum (Chamberlin,...  
Taxonomic remark The specimen identified by Banse (1972: 195-197, fig. 2B-F; MCZ 19663) as Notophyllum (Hesperophyllum) tectum (Chamberlin, 1919) was later revised by Kato & Pleijel (2002: 1159) and referred to Notophyllum imbricatum Moore, 1906. [details]

Taxonomy Moved to different genus.  
Taxonomy Moved to different genus. [details]
Read, G.; Fauchald, K. (Ed.) (2024). World Polychaeta Database. Hesperophyllum tectum Chamberlin, 1919. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=339533 on 2024-03-29
Date
action
by
2008-03-18 12:55:09Z
created
2008-03-26 11:36:43Z
changed
2020-05-16 14:53:39Z
changed

Creative Commons License The webpage text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License


original description Chamberlin, Ralph V. (1919). New polychaetous annelids from Laguna Beach, California. <em>Journal of Entomology and Zoology of Pomona College.</em> 11(1): 1-23., available online at http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/12263520
page(s): 4-5 [details]  OpenAccess publication 

new combination reference Kato, Tetsuya; Pleijel, Fredrik. (2002). A revision of <i>Notophyllum</i> Örsted, 1843 (Phyllodocidae, Polychaeta). <em>Journal of Natural History.</em> 36(10): 1135-1178., available online at https://doi.org/10.1080/00222930110039954
page(s): 1170-1171; note: as Notophyllum tectum [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 

new combination reference Banse, Karl. (1972). On some species of Phyllodocidae, Syllidae, Nephtyidae, Goniadidae, Apistobranchidae, and Spionidae (Polychaeta) from the Northeast Pacific Ocean. <em>Pacific Science.</em> 26(2): 191-222., available online at http://hdl.handle.net/10125/400
page(s): 195-197, fig. 2B-F; note: as Notophyllum (Hesperophyllum) tectum [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 
 
 Present  Present in aphia/obis/gbif/idigbio   Inaccurate  Introduced: alien  Containing type locality 
   

Holotype MCZ 26802, geounit Laguna Beach [details]
From editor or global species database
Depth range Not stated. Types dredged.  [details]

Distribution Pacific Ocean: Laguna Beach (southern California, USA). [details]

Etymology Not stated by the author. The specific epithet tectum is a Latin noun meaning 'roof', 'ceiling' or 'canopy', and refers presumably to the way how the foliaceous notocirri overlap and cover the dorsum, forming a canopy or ceiling: "With very large cirri of which the dorsals widely overlap in the middle and thus completely cover the dorsum, the prostomium normally also being wholly concealed from above. [...] This species suggests Notophyllum imbricatum Moore in the large imbricated notocirri covering the dorsum" (Chamberlin, 1919: 5). [details]

Habitat Not stated, unknown. [details]

Taxonomic remark The specimen identified by Banse (1972: 195-197, fig. 2B-F; MCZ 19663) as Notophyllum (Hesperophyllum) tectum (Chamberlin, 1919) was later revised by Kato & Pleijel (2002: 1159) and referred to Notophyllum imbricatum Moore, 1906. [details]

Taxonomy Moved to different genus. [details]

Type locality Laguna Beach, southern California, USA, Pacific Ocean (gazetteer estimate 33.5411° -117.7863°). [details]

Type material Holotype 19 mm long, stated to have been deposited in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Cambridge, with the number MCZ 2143 (Chamberlin, 1919: 5). Later, Banse (1972: 196) adds: "A parapod of the holotype, from southern California, MCZ, was examined. The type specimen cannot be found (Dr. H. W. Levi, Harvard University, personal communication)." This mounted parapodium (MCZ 26802) was also studied by Pleijel (1991: 249; "The only type material available is a mounted parapodium without any setae or aciculum present, and in a too poor shape to be of any use") and Kato & Pleijel (2002: 1144, 1171; "The type and the only known specimen of the species includes only a single mounted parapodium, and the flattened nature of the ventral tentacular cirri cannot be re-assessed. [...] The combination of a dorsal acicula and a capillary chaeta, the broad dorsal cirrus, the ventral cirrus with the longitudinal axis obliquely orientated, and the rostrum of chaetal shafts with a large number of teeth, shows that it belongs to Notophyllum." Chamberlin (1919: 5) also refers the existence of a paratype.  [details]