Description of six new species of Mesonerilla (Nerillidae, Annelida) and an emended description of M. intermedia Wilke, 1953, from marine and cave environments

Katrine Worsaae*, Maria Damsgaard Mikkelsen, Alejandro Martínez

*Corresponding author for this work
7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Nerillidae is a species-rich family of meiofaunal, mainly interstitial annelids. The genus Mesonerilla previously contained eight described species. We here describe six new species of Mesonerilla based on detailed morphological light and scanning electron microscopy studies. The new species were collected from coastal subtidal and tidal sediments, as well as from anchialine caves, in the Mediterranean, Canary Islands, Panamá, Trinidad and Tobago and the USA. All species of Mesonerilla contain nine segments, two-three antennae, two club-shaped palps, parapodial cirri and compound chaetae in most segments. New species are diagnosed by unique character traits and/or a unique combination of characters involving differences in shape of appendages, reproductive characters and glandular and ciliary patterns. Their validation is further supported by a molecular phylogeny including these and the majority of described species of Mesonerilla. With most of the diagnostic characters of the described species being hardly discernible, and with potential additional molecular identifiable species left undescribed, the genus Mesonerilla, as many other interstitial groups, show a high degree of cryptic diversity.

Original languageEnglish
JournalMarine Biodiversity
Volume49
Issue number5
Pages (from-to)2141-2165
Number of pages25
ISSN1867-1616
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • Anchialine fauna
  • Interstitial
  • Meiofauna
  • Microscopy
  • Molecular phylogeny

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