Description:
As with all members of
family Hesionidae, this species is a small to moderate-sized worm wich
has most segments wider than long. Its capillary
setae are not cross-barred. Its notosetae
do not extend nearly to the dorsal midline. The prostomium
does not extend back dorsally onto posterior segments as a caruncle.
It does not have a cluster of tentacles around the mouth, though it
does
have prostomial palps and 2-3 pairs of antennae on the
prostomium
as well as tentacular cirri on the peristomium. Both the
prostomial
and the peristomial appendages can detatch, and the worm fragments
readily.
They have 1-2 pairs of eyes Compound setae are
present. Ophiodromus
pugettensis has 2 pairs of eyes, 3 prostomial anetnnae,
and 6 pair
of tentacular cirri which hook to the peristomium laterally and
ventrally.
The ventral cirri are shorter than the lateral ones. It has
no jaws
or teeth on the eversible pharynx. The parapodia
are biramous,
and the notopodia have setae of two or more kinds in distinct
fascicles.
The first notosetae are on setiger 3 or 4. The color of the
animal
is dark brown, reddish brown, purple, or black; sometimes pale. The
pygidium
is usually white. Length to 4 cm.
How to Distinguish from Similar Species: Podarkeopsis bervipalpa has 8 pairs of tentacular cirri. Micropodarke dubia and Kefersteinia cirrata have only 2 prostomial antennae.. Geographical Range: Japan, southern Alaska to Gulf of California (Mexico); Peru. Depth Range: Intertidal and subtidal Habitat: Free-living on muddy bottoms or commensal on the ambulacral grooves of seastars such as Patiria miniata. Less common seastar hosts include Luidia foliata, Pteraster tesselatus, and Oreaster occidentalis. It may also be found on moon snail shells occupied by hermit crabs. Biology/Natural History:
This species
is attracted to sea stars by chemoreception. Up to 20 can be
found
on a seastar host, and coexist peacefully with each other.
They reside
in the ambulacral groove or crawl over the oral surface. They
readily
crawl onto another host if it is nearby, or can often be found on the
mud
bottom without a host. Freeliving individuals do not seem interested
when
presented with a seastar host. The worms eat diatoms, harpactacoid
copepods,
and other small benthic invertebrates. They can live in polluted water
low in oxygen but are most common in clean water. This
individual
was found by Michael Kutzner when it exited a Mycale
adhaerens sponge from Padilla Bay.
References:Dichotomous Keys:Carlton, 2007 Kozloff 1987, 1996 General References:
Scientific Articles:
Lande, R. and D.J. Reish, 1968. Seasonal occurrence of the commensal polychaetous annelid Ophiodromus pugettensis on the starfish Patiria miniata. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences 67: pp 104-111 Schaffer, P.L., 1979. The feeding biology of Podarke pugettensis (Polychaeta: Hesionidae). Biological Bulletin 156: pp 343-355 Pettibone, M.H., 1953. Some scale-bearing polychaetes of Puget Sound and adjacent waters. University of Washington Press, Seattle, WA. 89 pp. Web sites:
General Notes and Observations: Locations, abundances, unusual behaviors: A closeup of the head. Note the prominent eyes, the
5 antennae
from the prostomium,
the tentacular
cirri from the first few segments, and the very long dorsal cirri
which extend from the parapodia.
A piece of debris is attached to one of the tentacular
cirri. Photo by Dave Cowles
Authors and Editors of Page: Dave Cowles (2010): Created original page CSS coding for page developed by Jonathan Cowles (2007) |