Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Articles
Published: 2005-06-14
Page range: 1–11
Abstract views: 53
PDF downloaded: 50

Waminoa brickneri n. sp. (Acoela: Acoelomorpha) associated with corals in the Red Sea

Department of Biological sciences, The University of Maine, 5751 Murray Hall, Orono, ME 04469-5751, USA
Department of Biological sciences, The University of Maine, 5751 Murray Hall, Orono, ME 04469-5751, USA
Department of Systematic Zoology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Upsala University, Norbyvägen 18D, SE-752 36 Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Zoology, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel
Department of Zoology, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel
Department of Biological sciences, The University of Maine, 5751 Murray Hall, Orono, ME 04469-5751, USA
Platyhelminthes turbellarians endosymbionts Haplodiscus

Abstract

While the majority of acoels live in marine sediments, some, usually identified as Waminoa sp., have been found associated with corals, living closely appressed to their external surfaces. We describe a new species collected from the stony coral Plesiastrea laxa in the Red Sea. Waminoa brickneri n. sp. can infest corals in high numbers, often forming clusters in non-overlapping arrays. It is bronze-colored, owing to the presence of two types of dinoflagellate endosymbionts, and speckled white with small scattered pigment spots. Its body is disc-shaped, highly flattened and circular in profile except for a small notch at the posterior margin where the reproductive organs lie. The male copulatory organ is poorly differentiated, but comprises a seminal vesicle weakly walled by concentrically layered muscles, and a small penis papilla with serous glands at its juncture with the male pore. The female system comprises a separate female pore, ciliated vagina, seminal bursa, 4–8 weakly sclerotized nozzles, and paired ovaries. Similarities with Haplodiscus spp. as well as features characteristic of the Convolutidae, including similarity in 18S rDNA sequence, warrant reassigning Waminoa to the Convolutidae.

References

  1. Anonymous (2004) Invertebrates / Invertebrate and Marine Fish Articles / Worms. The Goldfish Bowl. Available from www.thegoldfishbowl.co.uk. (Accessed 10 February, 2005).

    Baguñà, J, Ruiz-Trillo, I., Paps, J., Loukota, M., Ribera, C., Jondelius, U., Riutort, M. (2001) The first Bilaterian organisms: simple or complex? New Molecular evidence. International Journal of Developmental Biology, 45, S133ñS134 Suppl. 1.

    Barneah, O., Brickner, I., LaJeunesse, T. & Benayahu, Y. (2004) Acoel flatworm-coral interactions in Eilat (Red Sea): A study of zooxanthellae diversity in worms and their coral hosts. 10th International Coral Reef Symposium Okinawa, Japan. Abstracts pp. 19.

    Bartolomaeus, T. & Balzer, I. (1997) Convolutriloba longifissura nov. spec. (Acoela) - the first case of longitudinal fission in Plathelminthes. Microfauna Marina, 11, 7ñ18.

    Dörjes, J. (1970) Haplodiscus bocki spec. nov., eine neue pelagische Turbellarie der Ordnung Acoela von der Molukken-See mit einer Diskussion der Gattung. Arkiv für Zoologi, 23, 255ñ266.

    Giberson, R.T. & Demaree Jr., R. S. (1995) Microwave fixation: understanding the variables to achieve rapid reproducible results. Microscopy Research and Technology, 32, 246ñ254.

    Hendelberg, J. & Åkesson, B. (1988) Convolutriloba retrogemma gen. et sp. n., a turbellarian (Acoela, Platyhelminthes) with reversed polarity of reproductive buds. Fortschritte der Zoologie, 36, 321ñ327

    Hooge, M.D., Haye P.A., Tyler, S., Litvaitis M.K., & Kornfield, I. (2002) Molecular systematics of the Acoela (Platyhelminthes) and its concordance with morphology. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 24, 333ñ342.

    Hooge, M.D. & Tyler S. (2005) New tools for resolving acoel phylogenies: A systematic revision of the Convolutidae (Acoelomorpha, Acoela). Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research, 43, 100–113.

    Norén, M. & Jondelius, U. (1999) Phylogeny of the Prolecithophora (Platyhelminthes) inferred from 18S rDNA sequences. Cladistics, 15, 103ñ115.

    Ruiz-Trillo, I., Riutort M., Littlewood, D.T.J., Herniou, E.A. & Baguñá, J. (1999) Acoel flatworms: earliest extant bilaterian metazoan, not members of Platyhelminthes. Science, 283, 1919ñ1923.

    Smith, J.P.S. & Tyler, S. (1984) Serial sectioning and staining of resin-embedded material for light microscopy: recommended procedures for micrometazoans, Mikroskopie, 41, 259ñ270.

    Trench, R.K. & Winsor, L. (1987) Symbiosis with dinoflagellates in two pelagic flatworms, Amphiscolops sp. and Haplodiscus sp. Symbiosis, 3, 1ñ22.

    Tyler, S., Schilling, S., Hooge, M. & Bush, L.F. (comp.) (2005) Turbellarian taxonomic database. Version 1.4. Bio New Media Laboratory. Available from http://devbio.umesci.maine.edu/styler/turbellaria/ (Accessed 15 February, 2005).

    Winsor, L. (1990) Marine Turbellaria (Acoela) from North Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 28, 785ñ800.

    Zubi, T. (2004) Starfish; Marine Worms. Available from http://www.starfish.ch/collection/wuermer.html#acoel. (Accessed 18 February 2005).