WoRMS source details

Salvo, Flora; Wiklund, Helena; Dufour, Suzanne C.; Hamoutene, Dounia; Pohle, Gerhard; Worsaae, Katrine. (2014). A new annelid species from whalebones in Greenland and aquaculture sites in Newfoundland: Ophryotrocha cyclops, sp. nov. (Eunicida: Dorvilleidae). Zootaxa. 3887(5): 555-568.
194521
10.11646/Zootaxa.3887.5.3 [view]
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:30D2BB9D-7788-444F-9094-E49F32D38273 [view]
Salvo, Flora; Wiklund, Helena; Dufour, Suzanne C.; Hamoutene, Dounia; Pohle, Gerhard; Worsaae, Katrine
2014
A new annelid species from whalebones in Greenland and aquaculture sites in Newfoundland: <em>Ophryotrocha </em><em>cyclops</em>, sp. nov. (Eunicida: Dorvilleidae)
Zootaxa
3887(5): 555-568
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb). Not open access article
A new species of Ophryotrocha was discovered on whalebones in Greenland (120 m depth) and at finfish aquaculture sites in Newfoundland (30–70 m depth), where it is considered to be a bioindicator of aquaculture-related organic enrichment. Phylogenetic analyses based on three genes (COI, 16S mitochondrial and H3 nuclear genes) show close affinities with O. lobifera and O. craigsmithi, two species also found on both whalebones and at aquaculture sites (North Sea), and with O. shieldsi from aquaculture sites in Tasmania. The new species is named Ophryotrocha cyclops sp. nov. due to the juxtaposed, quasi-fused central eyes that give the impression of a single eye in live specimens.
North Atlantic
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Date
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2014-11-27 08:06:26Z
created

 Etymology

authors: cyclops "due to the juxtaposed, quasi-fused central eyes that give the impression of a single eye in live ... [details]

 Habitat

"Known from rocky bottom and on the top layer of flocculent matter beneath fish farms at 30–73 m depth on the ... [details]

 Type locality

Fortune Bay, Newfoundland, Canada, 47.6444 -55.2375, 55 m, underneath salmon cages [details]