Abstract
Marine annelids in the subfamily Calamyzinae (family Chrysopetalidae) are either symbiotic or free-living forms that have been mainly reported from deep-sea chemosynthetic systems. Symbiotic calamyzines mainly live in the mantle cavity of bivalves in hydrothermal vents or cold seeps, but one species is also found to be inserted into the epidermis of polychaetes. We found a single specimen of calamyzine polychaete on the body surface of Octopus sp. collected in the Sea of Kumano (Japan), which represents the first known record of symbiotic association between polychaetes and octopuses. We described the specimen as Spathochaeta octopodis gen. et sp. nov. Spathochaeta gen. nov. can be discriminated from other genera in Calamyzinae by the presence of spatula-shaped notochaetae and dorsal chaetal lobes. We also provided the phylogenetic position of S. octopodis gen. et sp. nov. within Chrysopetalidae based on four gene markers (COI, 16S, 18S, H3). www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A8FB15C1-31A7-4487-966B-13F10E19A373.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Jinsho Co., Ltd, as well as the crew of the trawler Jinsho-maru XVIII, for collecting the material and to Dr Hidetaka Furuya for preliminarily identifying the octopus specimen.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Supplemental data
Supplemental material for this article can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1080/14772000.2018.1520753
Associate Editor: Adrian Glover