Abstract

Specimens belonging to a new species of Perinereis Kinberg, 1865 were collected fromnatural oyster reefs in an estuarine environmenton Florida’s southwest coast. The genus Perinereis includes more than 70 species, of which, Perinereis aibuhitensis (Grube, 1878), Perinereis brevicirrata (Treadwell, 1920), Perinereis camiguinoides (Augener, 1922), Perinereis jascooki Gibbs, 1972, Perinereis kuwaitensis Mohammad, 1970, Perinereis singaporiensis (Grube, 1878), Perinereis vancaurica (Ehlers, 1868) and the new species have two short bars on Area VI and notopodial dorsal ligules that are not greatly expanded. The most geographically close species is Perinereis brevicirrata. The new species can be distinguished from Perinereis brevicirrata by the absence of a notopodial prechaetal lobe, Area V with 3 cones in a triangle, and Area VII-VIII with two well-defined rows of 33 paragnaths, the basal row having longer paragnaths in relation to the distal ones. The new species resembles Perinereis singaporiensis based on the absence of notopodial prechaetal lobe; however, the two species differ in some morphological characteristics such as tentacular cirri length, shape of dorsal notopodial ligules, and falciger blades. A key to all American species of Perinereis is included.

Highlights

  • Nereididae Blainville, 1818 is probably the most well known family of Polychaeta, with 44 genera and 677 species (Read and Fauchald 2012), the number of species could be over estimated

  • Hutchings et al (1991) created an informal grouping of species belong to Perinereis based on the ornamentation of pharyngeal Area VI, and the development of the dorsal ligule

  • The species described here belongs to group 2A based on the presence of two short bars on Area VI and a dorsal ligule that is not greatly expanded

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Summary

Introduction

Nereididae Blainville, 1818 is probably the most well known family of Polychaeta, with 44 genera and 677 species (Read and Fauchald 2012), the number of species could be over estimated. The importance of this family is manifested by its high diversity and abundance in practically all marine benthic environments, from the supralittoral to the abyssal depth. Perinereis is characterized principally by the ornamentation of pharyngeal paragnaths in Area VI, which may be simple (short or long ribbon-shaped) or fragmented transverse bars It is a genus consisting globally of around 74 species (Read and Fauchald 2012). The latter is reported for the region by many authors, including Fauvel (1919) from French Guiana, Wesenberg-Lund (1958) from Bonaire, Lana (1984) from Pontal do Sul and Pecas Island, Brazil, and Santos and Lana (2000) from Brazil

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