Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/106235
Título: On the associations between Haplosyllis (Polychaeta, Syllidae) and gorgonians (Cnidaria, Octocorallaria), with the description of a new species
Autores/as: Martín, Daniel
Núñez, J.
Riera, R. 
Clasificación UNESCO: 251005 Zoología marina
Palabras clave: Adaptation
Annelida
Ecology
Gorgonian
Polychaeta, et al.
Fecha de publicación: 2002
Publicación seriada: Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 
Resumen: The present paper includes a morphological, ecological and biological updating of the three gorgonian associated species of Haplosyllis (Polychaeta, Syllidae) known to date: H. chamaeleon (symbiont with Paramuricea clavata in the Mediterranean), H. anthogorgicola (symbiont with Anthogorgia bocki in the Japanese seas) and H. villogorgicola, a new species living symbiotically with Villogorgia bebrycoides which is only known from Tenerife (Canary Islands, Eastern Central Atlantic). The new species is described on the basis of ecological, morphological, morphometric and statistical analysis of relevant characteristics. Each host colony harboured about 15 pale-yellowish worms, whose cryptic colouration mimicked that of the host. They occurred either on the host branches or partly hidden inside cavities formed by the fusion of two branches. The new species is characterized by the presence of simple chaetae with clearly bidentate tips all along the body, the presence of gland pore aggregates distributed in two lateral rows and two ventral patches on each palp and the absence of ciliary tufts on the pharyngeal papillae. H. villogorgicola sp. nov. is closely related to H. chamaeleon. Thus, it is compared with two populations of this species collected in the north-west and south-west Mediterranean. Stolons of H. chamaeleon are re-described as tetracerous and a peculiar posterior end regeneration process occurring in adult worms during the stolon formation is described. H. anthogorgicola is also re-described, with particular emphasis on its appendage and chaetal arrangements. The main features of the three associations are discussed in light of the current knowledge on symbiotic polychaetes, particularly cnidarian-associated syllids.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/106235
ISSN: 0024-4066
DOI: 10.1046/j.1095-8312.2002.00117.x
Fuente: Biological Journal of the Linnean Society [ISSN 0024-4066], v. 77 (4), p. 455–477 (Diciembre 2002)
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