Read, Geoffrey B. (2001). A first non-tropical Southern Hemisphere occurrence of 'Syllis ramosa,' the rare branching polychaete commensal of sponges, together with its swimming stolons, in a Tasman Sea deep-sea hexactinellid. [Conference Poster, unpublished]. 7th International Polychaete conference, 2-6 July, 2001, Reykjavík Iceland.
487063
Read, Geoffrey B.
2001
A first non-tropical Southern Hemisphere occurrence of 'Syllis ramosa,' the rare branching polychaete commensal of sponges, together with its swimming stolons, in a Tasman Sea deep-sea hexactinellid.
[Conference Poster, unpublished]
7th International Polychaete conference, 2-6 July, 2001, Reykjavík Iceland
Publication
Annelidabase. Not online except here at WoRMS
Available for editors
Biologists have been intrigued by the evolutionary curiosity that is Syllis ramosa ever since 1879, when W. C. McIntosh described a strange Philippines deepwater syllid that had innumerable branches and was growing inside a hexactinellid sponge rather in the manner of a parasitic plant or fungus. There have been only a handful of subsequent records, and only from the equatorial western Pacific or from Japanese seas (to about 35 degrees N). Here I describe the first non-tropical Southern Hemisphere occurrence (35 degrees S) of a similar syllid, possibly identical to Syllis ramosa, present with numerous unattached natatory stolons in a sponge collected from the sea bottom at 1079 m in the mid Tasman Sea between New Zealand and Australia.