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Dysponetus caecus

Dysponetus caecus

(Langerhans, 1880)

GBIF:158884982

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ABOUT

Descriptions(2)

Dysponetus caecus was previously recorded from shallow depths among sponges and kelp holdfasts from the intertidal to 85 m from S Sweden to Madeira Island, including N and W Scotland and N Denmark (Dahlgren & Pleijel 1995) and in similar habitats from the Mediterranean Sea (Alboran Sea and Banyuls-sur-Mer; San Martín 2004). The species was reported from deeper waters (~ 3000 m) at Senghor Seamount, NW Africa, from fine clay sediments (Watson et al. 2014) and from muddy sand with shell and gravel in the Guinea, Angola and Cape Basins (5494 m; Böggemann 2009). The specimens studied here were found in Saint Nazaire Canyon (Bay of Biscay) (Fig. 1), in a cold-water coral environment at a depth of 755 m, and in the Mercator MV (Gulf of Cadiz), in sunken wood colonization experiments densely colonised by Xylophaga dorsalis (W. Turton, 1819) at a depth of 354 m (Cunha et al. 2013 a).
Ravara, Ascensão, Aguado, M. Teresa, Rodrigues, Clara F., Génio, Luciana, Cunha, Marina R. (2019): Description of a new genus and species of Chrysopetalidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the NE Atlantic, with some further records of related species. European Journal of Taxonomy 539: 1-21, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2019.539
Material examined FRANCE • 1 af; Bay of Biscay, Saint Nazaire Canyon; 46 ° 14.22 ′ N, 04 ° 19.56 ′ W; 755 m; St M 84 - 5 _ 690; DBUA 0002277. MOROCCO • 2 af; Gulf of Cadiz, Mercator mud volcano; 35 ° 17.916 ′ N, 06 ° 38.709 ′ W; 354 m; St 64 PE 284 _ 12750 W; DBUA 0001620. Description All three specimens examined are very small and incomplete; longest fragment nearly complete, with 22 chaetigers, 3.6 mm long (DBUA 0001620), in poor condition. Body semi-transparent, with orange intestine. Notochaetae long, bright and translucent, covering dorsum from chaetiger 8 / 9 in smaller fragments. Prostomium sub-quadrangular, without eyes; palps and antennae missing in all specimens. Elongate, single lobe present ventrally on posterior margin of mouth. Pharynx visible through body wall, extending to segment 7; jaws not visible. First segment reduced, with two pairs of tentacular cirri (only cirrophores present). Second segment with uniramous parapodia, notochaetae, dorsal cirri and ventral cirri. Following parapodia biramous, with well-developed chaetigerous lobes, dorsal cirri and ventral cirri. Notopodial lobes low, conical mounds. Neuropodial lobes cylindrical, elongate, much longer than notopodia. Dorsal and ventral cirri tapering to long and filiform tips, almost as long as chaetae; dorsal cirri longer than ventral cirri. Notochaetae spine-like, internally chambered, with two longitudinal rows of long alternating spinelets. Neurochaetae with internally chambered shafts and very finely serrated falcigerous blades with minute bidentate tips. Remarks This species was originally described from Madeira Island (Langerhans 1880) and was later reported from the Mediterranean Sea (Banyuls-sur-Mer; Laubier 1964). In the absence of extant type material, Dahlgren & Pleijel (1995) designated a neotype from the Mediterranean Sea and further extended the geographical distribution of the species to the NW European margin. More recently, Böggemann (2009) and Watson et al. (2014) described the same species from deeper waters off W Africa. Watson et al. (2014) discussed some morphological differences between the NE Atlantic, Mediterranean Sea and Angola Basin abyssal specimens. According to these authors, the Senghor Seamount and Madeira Island specimens have moderate length palps comparing to the longer palps of the Mediterranean Sea specimens. Also, the Senghor Seamount specimens have biramous parapodia on segment 2 without ventral cirri, while the Mediterranean Sea and Angola Basin specimens have uniramous parapodia on segment 2, with notochaetae, dorsal cirri and ventral cirri. Furthermore, a marked increase of notochaetal length between chaetigers 9 and 13 was observed for the first time in Senghor Seamount specimens (Watson et al. 2014). In the specimens examined herein, palps are missing and segment 2 has uniramous parapodia with notochaetae, dorsal and ventral cirri, similar to the Mediterranean Sea specimens. As already mentioned by Watson et al. (2014), this taxon may be a complex of cryptic species and needs further revision, preferably with the inclusion of molecular data. Ecology and distribution
Ravara, Ascensão, Aguado, M. Teresa, Rodrigues, Clara F., Génio, Luciana, Cunha, Marina R. (2019): Description of a new genus and species of Chrysopetalidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the NE Atlantic, with some further records of related species. European Journal of Taxonomy 539: 1-21, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2019.539

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Media Files(1)

Fig. 1. Map with the locations of the sampling sites. CR = Carlos Ribeiro; HAP = Horseshoe Abyssal Plain; JB = Jezus Baraza; MV = mud volcano.

Imageimage/png© Ravara, Ascensão;Aguado, M. Teresa;Rodrigues, Clara F.;Génio, Luciana;Cunha, Marina R.Ravara, Ascensão;Aguado, M. Teresa;Rodrigues, Clara F.;Génio, Luciana;Cunha, Marina R.

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Source Information

Description of a new genus and species of Chrysopetalidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the NE Atlantic, with some further records of related species

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Ravara, Ascensão, Aguado, M. Teresa, Rodrigues, Clara F., Génio, Luciana, Cunha, Marina R. (2019): Description of a new genus and species of Chrysopetalidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the NE Atlantic, with some further records of related species. European Journal of Taxonomy 539: 1-21, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2019.539

Abstract. Five chrysopetalid species are reported from samples collected at bathyal depths in three NE Atlantic regions: the Bay of Biscay, the Horseshoe Abyssal Plain and the Gulf of Cadiz. Arichlidon reyssi (Katzmann et al., 1974), Dysponetus caecus (Langerhans, 1880) and D. profundus Böggemann, 2009 are free-living forms found mainly on biogenic substrates (e.g., coral and sunken wood). A brief description and taxonomical remarks are given for each of these species and their geographical distributions and habitat records were updated accordingly. Natsushima bifurcata Miura & Laubier, 1990 and Craseoschema thyasiricola gen. et sp. nov. are symbionts inhabiting the mantle cavity of chemosynthesis-based bivalves known from four mud volcanoes from the Gulf of Cadiz. Craseoschema thyasiricola gen. et sp. nov. was found inside a thyasirid bivalve and presents mixed morphological characteristics of free-living and symbiotic forms within Calamyzinae Hartmann-Schröder, 1971. A full description of the new species is given together with DNA sequences of the genes COI, 16S and H3 that were used in a phylogenetic analysis to indicate the position of the new genus within the family.

Ravara A, Aguado M T, Rodrigues C F, Génio L, Cunha M R, plazi (2019). Description of a new genus and species of Chrysopetalidae (Annelida: Polychaeta) from the NE Atlantic, with some further records of related species. European Journal of Taxonomy. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2019.539 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-17.

CC0Published 7/26/2019View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
158884982
Dataset Key
839397be-ec67-462e-9095-dd14ea81222f
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2312833
Taxon ID
0389C515FFF0FFD5FDC2B20BFAA4F98E.taxon
Last Crawled
6/10/2026
Last Interpreted
6/10/2026