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Polychaeta source details

Watson, Charlotte; Tilic, Ekin; Rouse, Greg W. (2019). Revision of Hyalopale (Chrysopetalidae; Phyllodocida; Annelida): an amphi-Atlantic Hyalopale bispinosa species complex and five new species from reefs of the Caribbean Sea and Indo-Pacific Oceans. Zootaxa. 4671(3): 339-368.
355730
10.11646/zootaxa.4671.3.2 [view]
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:99459D5F-3C35-4F7D-9768-D70616676851 [view]
Watson, Charlotte; Tilic, Ekin; Rouse, Greg W.
2019
Revision of Hyalopale (Chrysopetalidae; Phyllodocida; Annelida): an amphi-Atlantic Hyalopale bispinosa species complex and five new species from reefs of the Caribbean Sea and Indo-Pacific Oceans
Zootaxa
4671(3): 339-368
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb), open access
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
The formerly monotypic taxon, Hyalopale bispinosa Perkins 1985 (Chrysopetalinae), is comprised of a cryptic species complex from predominantly tropical embayments and island reefs of the Western Atlantic and Indo-Pacific Oceans. Hyalopale species are of meiofaunal size (length: 1-2.8mm), but considered non-interstitial, with the majority of species inhabiting a singular habitat of shallow littoral zones among algae and epifauna overlying sediments in rubble. Hyalopale adults exhibit notochaetal fans characterized by the presence of lateral and midline notochaetal spines. Species of Hyalopale can be distinguished by the shape of glass-like notochaetal paleae and the number of densely stacked ribs. Hyalopale bispinosa forms a western and eastern Atlantic species complex, comprising the type species, Hyalopale bispinosa s.s., a comparatively larger form with the highest number of notochaetal paleael ribs from Florida, and Hyalopale cf. bispinosa, from the western and eastern Mediterranean, a smaller form with a similar notochaetal morphology to the latter. Unfortunately, no molecular sequence data is available for Hyalopale bispinosa s.s. Five new species are described, with molecular sequence data provided for three: Hyalopale leslieae sp. nov . , a small form with a comparatively low number of paleal ribs, found from the Florida Keys to Belize, Caribbean Sea, H. zerofskii sp. nov. from southern California and Mexico, eastern Pacific and H. sapphiriglancyorum sp. nov. , a distinctive species with the lowest number of paleael ribs, from Raja Ampat, Indonesia and the Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, western Pacific. Two other species are described from morphology alone: H. angeliensis sp. nov. from Dampier, Western Australia and Seychelle Islands, eastern Indian Ocean and H. furfuricula sp. nov. from the Red Sea and Mozambique, western Indian Ocean, possessing a unique paleal brow shape. While well supported as a clade, support for relationships within Hyalopale is low. Hyalopale cf. bispinosa (Mediterranean) was recovered as sister group to the remaining Hyalopale , with H. leslieae sp. nov. as sister to the Hyalopale Pacific clade, comprising H . zerofskii sp. nov. (eastern Pacific) and H. sapphiriglancyorum sp. nov. (western Pacific). Within Chrysopetalinae, Hyalopale and Paleanotus formed a clade that was the sister group to the other paleate chrysopetalids under maximum likelihood, though Paleanotu s grouped with the other paleate forms under maximum parsimony. The adult morphology of Hyalopale species is compared with that exhibited in the larvae of Paleanotus species; based on these results, including possession of a shared notochaetal character, Hyalopale is considered to contain paedomorphic taxa.  
Caribbean region
Indo West Pacific Region
Systematics, Taxonomy
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BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
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by
2019-09-18 03:22:05Z
created

Holotype AM W.3166, geounit Dampier Archipelago, identified as Hyalopale angeliensis Watson, Tilic & Rouse, 2019
Holotype MZB Poly.00409, geounit Halmahera, identified as Hyalopale sapphiriglancyorum Watson, Tilic & Rouse, 2019
Holotype NTM W.25602, geounit Red Sea, identified as Hyalopale furfuricula Watson, Tilic & Rouse, 2019
Holotype SIO SIO-BIC A8084, geounit San Clemente Island, identified as Hyalopale zerofskii Watson, Tilic & Rouse, 2019
Holotype USNM 097530, original designated paratype Hyalopale bispinosa, geounit Florida Keys, identified as Hyalopale leslieae Watson, Tilic & Rouse, 2019
 Etymology

Hyalopale angeliensis is named after the type locality of Angel Island, Dampier, Australia [details]

 Etymology

authors: Hyalopale furfuricula is named using "a diminutive form of furfur from the Latin and refers to the many ... [details]

 Etymology

Hyalopale leslieae is named after Leslie Harris from the Los Angeles County Museum (LACM) [details]

 Etymology

Hyalopale sapphiriglancyorum is named for the Glancy family, after the endowment support by John and Cynthia ... [details]

 Etymology

Hyalopale zerofskii is named after the collector of the holotype, Phil Zerofski, of Scripps Oceanography. [details]

 Type locality

Angel Island, Dampier, Western Australia, estimated -20.492, 116.794 (authors' incorrect geodata is as 20° 48’ ... [details]

 Type locality

Al Ghurdaqah region, Egypt, Red Sea, no geolocation given, estimated geolocation 27.253, 33.838 is that of ... [details]

 Type locality

reef crest at Looe Key, Florida Keys, estimated geolocation (not given in article) 24.5486, -81.4058, depth unknown.  [details]

 Type locality

Kri Island; Raja Amput, near West Papua, Indonesia, 0.5558, 130.6854, shore shallows [details]

 Type locality

San Clemente Island, California, 32.9164, -118.4641 (32°54’59.25”N, 118°27’50.67”W), 10 m [details]

 Type material

Holotype USNM 097530 was formerly designated a paratype of Hyalopale bispinosa by Perkins (1985) [details]