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Maxwell, Jamie; Taboada, Sergi; Taylor, Michelle L. (2022). Gorgoniapolynoe caeciliae revisited: The discovery of new species and molecular connectivity in deep-sea commensal polynoids from the Central Atlantic. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers. 185: 103804, efirst.
428703
10.1016/j.dsr.2022.103804 [view]
Maxwell, Jamie; Taboada, Sergi; Taylor, Michelle L.
2022
Gorgoniapolynoe caeciliae revisited: The discovery of new species and molecular connectivity in deep-sea commensal polynoids from the Central Atlantic
Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
185: 103804, efirst
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyD).
Gorgoniapolynoe caeciliae (Fauvel, 1913) is a deep-sea commensal polynoid that lives in association with several genera of octocorals from the order Alcyonacea. The species has been recorded in the Caribbean and in both Atlantic and Indian Ocean basins. The wide geographic range of G. caeciliae, coupled with it having multiple host coral species and the evolution of its taxonomic description, hints that it could potentially be a species complex. This study investigated the morphological and genetic differentiation in 82 specimens of G. cf. caeciliae, sampled from four seamounts in the Central Atlantic separated by thousands of kilometres. Our combined morphological and molecular analyses, including species delimitation models (ABGD and bPTP) using COI and a phylogenetic approach using four molecular markers (COI, 16S, 28S, and 18S), agreed in identifying three distinct species; two supported by morphological and molecular data and a third species, using molecular data only, from the Indian Ocean which had been previously identified as G. caeciliae. We formally describe a new species in the genus, Gorgoniapolynoe pseudocaeciliae sp. nov., the most common taxa found in our study. Our morphological analyses of some members of the genus Gorgoniapolynoe revealed the presence of elytra with possible photocytes (bioluminescent cells) and conspicuous macropapillae with long cilia emerging from them, whose function is discussed here. Our demographic analysis using COI for two Gorgoniapolynoe sp. detected a high potential for dispersal for G. pseudocaeciliae sp. nov., with sites approximately 3000 km apart being well connected. Unusually there was also no genetic differentiation across their bathymetric range of over 1500 m. All in all, our study highlights the importance of applying integrative taxonomy to poorly studied deep-sea species.
Atlantic Ocean (without specification)
Abyssal, Deep-Sea
Molecular systematics, Molecular biology
Systematics, Taxonomy
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
action
by
2022-05-22 03:33:33Z
created

Holotype USNM 133356, geounit Portugal, identified as Gorgoniapolynoe pseudocaeciliae Maxwell, Taboada & Taylor, 2022
 Diagnosis

Maxwell et al (2022: 12 of 16) "Gorgoniapolynoe pseudocaeciliae sp. nov. was previously illustrated by Pettibone ... [details]

 Etymology

authors: " ... named G. pseudocaeciliae due to its morphological resemblance to G. caeciliae." [details]

 Type designation

Maxwell et al (2022) do not have normal type designation and type locality statements. Instead they include two ... [details]

 Type locality

offshore Portugal, RV Thalassa, station Y405, 40.55 N, -9.4333 W, (40 33' N, 9 26'W), , 1170 m, 1st Sept 1972, on ... [details]

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