WoRMS source details
Nishi, Eijiroh; Hickman Jr., Cleveland P.; Bailey-Brock, Julie H. (2009). Chaetopterus and Mesochaetopterus (Polychaeta: Chaetopteridae) from the Galapagos Islands, with descriptions of four new species. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 158(1): 239-259.
141885
10.1635/053.158.0113 [view]
Nishi, Eijiroh; Hickman Jr., Cleveland P.; Bailey-Brock, Julie H.
2009
<i>Chaetopterus</i> and <i>Mesochaetopterus</i> (Polychaeta: Chaetopteridae) from the Galapagos Islands, with descriptions of four new species.
Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia
158(1): 239-259
Publication
AnnelidaBase. Open access article.
Available for editors [request]
We provide descriptions of five species of Chaetopterus and two species of Mesochaetopterus (Annelida: Polychaeta: Chaetopteridae) based on collections during 2001-2007 and observations from the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador. Chaetopterus galapagensis sp. nov. is a large (ca. 18 cm long) worm that inhabits a U-shaped tube in soft sand substrates. It is characterized by 12 – 14 chaetigers in the anterior region and 7 – 8 teeth on uncini of region A neuropodia. Chaetopterus charlesdarwinii sp. nov. is of intermediate size (2 – 4.5 cm long) with 9 anterior region chaetigers and a characteristic brown band on the lateral side of the ventral shield and posterior side of anterior region notopodia. It inhabits irregularly curved tubes cemented to the underside of rocks. Worms may occur singly or aggregated, with up to 10 worms in a cluster. Chaetopterus aduncus sp. nov. is 8-10 cm in length, and is characterized by 10 – 41 anterior region chaetigers, characteristic J-shaped tube with one blind end, and prominent dorsal bulbous inflations in anterior region chaetigers. Chaetopterus longipes Crossland, 1904 is highly gregarious, frequently forming aggregations of hundreds of worms. It is especially common at the northern islands of Darwin and Wolf. Chaetopterus macropus Schmarda, 1861 is solitary, lives in a U-shaped tube on a sandy bottom, has 9 anterior region chaetigers and no brown bands in region-A. We compared the five Galapagos Chaetopterus species to other Pacific (Japanese and Australian) species of the genus in detail. We confirm the presence of Mesochaetopterus minutus Potts, 1914 in Galapagos, the only chaetopterid previously recorded from the archipelago. Mesochaetopterus ecuadorica sp. nov. is a large (12 – 20 cm long) solitary species with 2 middle region chaetigers, that inhabits a long, nearly straight tube with small perforations at the blind end.
Pacific, East Tropical
Systematics, Taxonomy
Chaetopterus aduncus Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009 (original description)
Chaetopterus charlesdarwinii Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009 (original description)
Chaetopterus galapagensis Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009 (original description)
Chaetopterus longipes Crossland, 1904 (status source)
Chaetopterus macropus Schmarda, 1861 (status source)
Mesochaetopterus ecuadorica Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009 (original description)
Mesochaetopterus minutus Potts, 1914 (additional source)
Mesochaetopterus selangolus [auct. lapsus] accepted as Mesochaetopterus selangorus (Rullier, 1976) (additional source)
Chaetopterus charlesdarwinii Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009 (original description)
Chaetopterus galapagensis Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009 (original description)
Chaetopterus longipes Crossland, 1904 (status source)
Chaetopterus macropus Schmarda, 1861 (status source)
Mesochaetopterus ecuadorica Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009 (original description)
Mesochaetopterus minutus Potts, 1914 (additional source)
Mesochaetopterus selangolus [auct. lapsus] accepted as Mesochaetopterus selangorus (Rullier, 1976) (additional source)
Punta Espinosa for Chaetopterus aduncus Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Punta Espinosa for Chaetopterus charlesdarwinii Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Tagus Cove for Chaetopterus galapagensis Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Tagus Cove for Mesochaetopterus ecuadorica Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Punta Espinosa for Chaetopterus charlesdarwinii Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Tagus Cove for Chaetopterus galapagensis Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Tagus Cove for Mesochaetopterus ecuadorica Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Holotype MCCDRS 3900, geounit Galapagos Islands, identified as Chaetopterus galapagensis Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Holotype MCCDRS 3906, geounit Galapagos Islands, identified as Chaetopterus charlesdarwinii Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Holotype MCCDRS 3922, geounit Galapagos Islands, identified as Chaetopterus aduncus Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Holotype MCCDRS 3933, geounit Galapagos Islands, identified as Mesochaetopterus ecuadorica Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Holotype MCCDRS 3906, geounit Galapagos Islands, identified as Chaetopterus charlesdarwinii Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Holotype MCCDRS 3922, geounit Galapagos Islands, identified as Chaetopterus aduncus Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Holotype MCCDRS 3933, geounit Galapagos Islands, identified as Mesochaetopterus ecuadorica Nishi, Hickman & Bailey-Brock, 2009
Distribution
Pacific Ocean: Australia; Galapapos Islands. [details]
Etymology
aduncus is derived from Latin meaning crooked, referring to the curved tube. [details]
Etymology
named for Charles Darwin, who visited Galapagos in 1835. [details]
Etymology
named for the Galapagos Islands. [details]
Etymology
after the nation of Ecuador. [details]
Type locality
Punta Espinosa, Fernandina, Galapagos, 0.2704 S, 91.4422 W, 6 m. [details]
Type locality
Punta Espinosa, Fernandina, Galapagos, 0.2704 S, 91.4422 W, 12 m. [details]
Type locality
Tagus Cove, Isabela Island, Galapagos Islands, 0.2677 S, 91.3723 W [details]
Type locality
Tagus Cove, Isabela Island, Galapagos, 0.7647 S, 90.3392 W, 1.1 m. [details]