Chaetozone corona Berkeley & Berkeley 1941
- Dataset
- Bitentaculate Cirratulidae (Annelida, Polychaeta) collected chiefly during cruises of the R / V Anton Bruun, USNS Eltanin, USCG Glacier, R / V Hero, RVIB Nathaniel B. Palmer, and R / V Polarstern from the Southern Ocean, Antarctica, and off Western South America
- Rank
- SPECIES
Classification
- kingdom
- Animalia
- phylum
- Annelida
- class
- Polychaeta
- order
- Terebellida
- family
- Cirratulidae
- genus
- Chaetozone
- species
- Chaetozone corona
distribution
Distribution. Eastern Pacific, California to Ecuador, 24 – 120 m; Brazil, shallow water; Bay of Biscay, 12 – 33 m; Mediterrean Sea, 2.5 – 90 m.
materials_examined
Material examined. Off Ecuador, SEPBOP, R / V Anton Bruun Cr. 18 B, Sta. 768 - D, 10 Sep 1966, 03 ° 36 ʹS, 80 ° 38 ʹW, ca. 50 m (1, USNM 1490770). Descriptive remarks. The single specimen is complete, 16 mm long, 1 mm wide, and with about 60 setigerous segments. The pre-setigerous region is short and thick with a triangular-shaped prostomium and thick peristomium with a rounded dorsal crest. The characteristic eyespots are not visible, possibly having faded after 50 years in preservative. Three neuropodial spines are present from setiger 1; a single notopodial spine is present from setiger 4. Posterior segments contain partial cinctures with three notopodial acicular spines and five neuropodial spines. The spines alternate with capillaries. Long natatory-like capillary setae arise from anterior and middle-body notopodia. Small oocytes are present in the coelom. General remarks. This single specimen is the first record of Chaetozone corona from the SE Pacific off South America. Previous Pacific records are from California to Costa Rica (Blake 1996; Dean & Blake 2007). Other records of the species are from Brazil, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Bay of Biscay; these records are summarized by La Garrec et al. (2017). The widespread occurrence of C. corona outside the Pacific Ocean suggests it may be an introduced species in those sites (Le Garrec et al. 2017).