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Ophelina acuminata

provided by wikipedia EN

Ophelina acuminata is a species of marine annelids, found in the sublittoral mud and sand bottom.

Morphology

Body slender and 25–60 mm long, with 50 chaetae bearing segments. Colour yellowish or pearly grey with bright red gills, and all segments finely multi-annulated. The prostomium is conical, ending in a median progress with a slightly swollen tip and two big dorsolateral nuchal-crevasses. Except first, and two to three last segments, all chaetigers has long cirriform gills, and ventral cirri. Anus surmounted by a spoon shaped hood with a ventral opening, 20 fine annular rings and 14-20 long papillae along edge. On the ventral side of basis, two long cirrus, behind one unpaired longer cirri. .[1][2]

Ecology

Found marine, in the shallow sublittoral. Mostly on sand, but as well seen on mixed muddy bottoms, from 10 to 1200 m.[1][3] From Northern Atlantic, along the African west coast to South Africa, northern part of the Pacific, and in the Indian Ocean. Swims snake-like, or are digging in the upper part of the bottom. Substrate surface deposit feeder, reproduction unknown.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Kirkegaard, J. B. Danmarks Fauna 86, Havbørsteorme II. Copenhagen. Danmarks Naturhistoriske Forening, 1996.
  2. ^ Hayward, P. J. & Ryland, J. S. Handbook of the Marine Fauna of North- West Europe. Oxford. Oxford University Press, 2010.
  3. ^ Køie, M., Kristiansen, A., Weitemeyer, S. Havets dyr og planter. København. Gads Forlag, 2000.
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Ophelina acuminata: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Ophelina acuminata is a species of marine annelids, found in the sublittoral mud and sand bottom.

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Depth range

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Subtidal.

Reference

4. Animal Diversity Web (November, 2002) http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/budorcas/b._taxicolor$narrative.html

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João Gil [email]

Distribution

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Gulf of St. Lawrence (unspecified region), northern Gaspe waters, southern Gaspe waters (Baie des Chaleurs, Gaspe Bay to American, Orphan and Bradelle banks; eastern boundary: Eastern Bradelle Valley), downstream part of Middle St. Lawrence estuary, Magdalen Islands (from Eastern Bradelle valley to the west, as far as Cape North, including the Cape Breton Channel), lower St. Lawrence estuary, Prince Edward Island (from the northern tip of Miscou Island, N.B. to Cape Breton Island south of Cheticamp, including the Northumberland Strait and Georges Bay to the Canso Strait causeway), and the Laurentian Channel (bathyal zone)(=Honguedo Strait); Cobscook Bay

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Kennedy, Mary [email]

Habitat

provided by World Register of Marine Species
bathyal, infralittoral and circalittoral of the Gulf and estuary

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

license
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copyright
WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
Kennedy, Mary [email]

Habitat

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Subtidal rocky bottom.

Reference

4. Animal Diversity Web (November, 2002) http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/budorcas/b._taxicolor$narrative.html

license
cc-by-4.0
copyright
WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
João Gil [email]