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A new record of Lamellibrachia columna (Siboglinidae, Annelida) from cold seeps off New Zealand, and an assessment of its presence in the western Pacific Ocean

Abstract

Lamellibrachia columna Southward was originally described from hydrothermal vents of the Lau Basin, between Fiji and Tonga. This study utilizes phylogenetic and morphological analyses to confirm the collection of Lamellibrachia columna from cold seeps on the Hikurangi Margin off New Zealand, thereby extending its geographic range southward by approximately 1900 km. We also propose, based on molecular evidence, that specimens previously reported from vents in the Nankai Trough, Japan and seeps off southern and eastern Japan are L. columna. Furthermore, we suggest that Lamellibrachia sagami Kobayashi et al. described from cold seeps off southern and eastern Japan is a junior synonym of Lamellibrachia columna. Our work confirms that L. columna is found at two types of chemosynthetic habitat over a wide geographic range in the western Pacific Ocean.

Background

Members of Vestimentifera (originally introduced by Jones (1985), and now one of four informal lineages within Siboglinidae Caullery, 1914 [Hilário et al. 2011; Pleijel et al. 2009]) live in chemosynthetic environments such as hydrothermal vents (Bright and Lallier 2010; Jones 1980; Shank et al. 1998), cold seeps (Bright and Lallier 2010; Levin et al. 2012; Webb 1969), and whale falls (Bright and Lallier 2010; Feldman et al. 1998), where they subsist off endosymbiotic chemoautotrophic bacteria (Bright and Lallier 2010). Lamellibrachia Webb, 1969 is one of the few vestimentiferan genera with a broad geographic and habitat distribution, having been reported from seeps, vents, and whale bones in the Pacific, Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf of Mexico (Bright and Lallier 2010; Feldman et al. 1998; Kobayashi et al. 2015; Nishijima et al. 2010; Watanabe et al. 2010). Of the nine Lamellibrachia species described to date, Lamellibrachia columna Southward, 1991 was the first to be described from the southwestern Pacific, at 1870 m in an area of diffuse venting at the Lau Back-arc Basin (Southward 1991). Since its initial discovery, L. columna has been reported at diffuse vents from the southwestern Pacific back-arc basin at Lau from 1832 to 1914 m (Black et al. 1997; Kojima et al. 1997, 2001; Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011) (Fig. 1). To date, Lamellibrachia columna is most easily differentiated from other Lamellibrachia species by its numbers of sheath and branchial lamellae (Southward 1991). Other diagnostic characteristics such as obturaculum dimensions and plaque size are quite variable and overlap with those of other Lamellibrachia species, making DNA data and phylogenetic analyses an important part of the identification process (Kobayashi et al. 2015; McCowin and Rouse 2018; Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011). The Japanese samples identified as Lamellibrachia sp. L1 and Lamellibrachia sp. L2 (Kojima et al. 2001) were noted as being very close to a published sequence (Black et al. 1997) of Lamellibrachia columna from the type locality, with L2 as the sister taxon to L. columna. Kojima et al. (2001) even noted that “L1 and L2 might be conspecific with L. columna”.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Distribution of Lamellibrachia columna (Braby et al. 2007; Kojima et al. 2003; Kojima et al. 2001), Lamellibrachia sagami (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 2003; Kojima et al. 2001), and Lamellibrachia sp. L2 (Kojima et al. 1997; Kojima et al. 2001). Squares represent L. columna localities, circles represent L. sagami localities, and diamonds represent L. sp. L2 localities. Symbols that are white represent localities with supporting molecular data, while symbols that are grey represent localities without molecular data. Black square represents the newly sampled L. columna with molecular data from this study. Star and triangle represent type localities for L. columna and L. sagami, respectively

The samples identified as Lamellibrachia sp. L1 in Kojima et al. 2001 were subsequently described as Lamellibrachia sagami Kobayashi et al 2015, with the type locality being a cold seep at 853 m in Sagami Bay, Japan. Lamellibrachia sagami was differentiated from other Lamellibrachia species by its sheath and branchial lamellae and the sizes of its vestimental and trunk plaques (Kobayashi et al. 2015). It has also been reported from other cold seeps along the eastern coast of Japan (Fig. 1) at depths of 290–2180 m (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 1997; Miura and Fujikura 2008). Lamellibrachia sagami has been found sympatrically with its close genetic relative L. sp. L2 (Kojima et al. 2001; Kojima et al. 1997) off the east coast of Japan at the Nankai Trough (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 2003; Kojima et al. 2001; Kojima et al. 1997).

Here we report a new record of Lamellibrachia columna collected from cold seeps of the Hikurangi Margin off New Zealand. Phylogenetic and morphological analyses confirm the identification of specimens collected at this locality as L. columna, thereby extending its range southward by approximately 1900 km. We explore other records of closely-related Lamellibrachia species from Japan, and discuss the resulting biogeographical implications for Lamellibrachia columna.

Methods

Samples (NIWA 27133) were loaned to Scripps Institution of Oceanography by New Zealand’s National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA). These samples were from among other samples of unidentified Lamellibrachia specimens originally collected in 2006 from cold seeps off the east coast of the North Island of New Zealand (see Baco et al. 2010 and Bowden et al. 2013 for a full description of the habitat and locations where the tube worms were found, and their densities). The anterior and a portion of the trunk of the specimens examined here for DNA analysis, were originally fixed in 99% ethanol and later frozen (− 20 °C). These three specimens were collected from the Builder’s Pencil seep site, between 810 and 817 m (NIWA 27133A, NIWA 27133B, SIO-BIC A9468). Whole specimens were photographed prior to preservation using a Nikon D70S with 90 mm Nikkor lens mounted on a fixed copy stand column. Ten plaques from the vestimentum and ten plaques from the trunk of each specimen were measured by cutting thin pieces of epidermis from the vestimentum and trunk and placing them on a glass slide with a 5% sodium hydroxide solution prior to observation. Analysis of morphological features of whole specimens was completed post-preservation and compared to morphological records of L. columna published by Southward (Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011).

DNA was extracted from the vestimentum of the New Zealand specimens with the Zymo Research DNA-Tissue Miniprep kit, following the protocol supplied by the manufacturer. Approximately 1275 base pairs (bp) of mitochondrial cytochrome subunit I (COI) were amplified using the vestimentiferan mtCOI primer set COIf and COIr (Nelson and Fisher 2000) and up to 600 bp of 16S rRNA (16S) were amplified using the primer set 16SbrH and 16sArL (Palumbi 1996). Amplification was carried out in a thermal cycler (Eppendorf) with 12.5 μL Apex 2.0x RED DNA Polymerase Master Mix (Genesee Scientific), 1 μL each of the appropriate forward and reverse primers (10 μM), 8.5 μL water, and 2 μL eluted DNA. The vestimentiferan COI temperature profile was as follows: 95 °C/300 s – (94 °C/60s – 55 °C/60s – 72 °C/120 s) * 35 cycles – 72 °C/420 s. The 16S temperature profile was as follows: 95 °C/180 s – (95 °C/40s – 50 °C/40s – 72 °C/50s) * 35 cycles – 72 °C/300 s. The PCR products were purified with the ExoSAP-IT protocol (USB, Affymetrix), and sequencing was performed by Eurofins Genomics (Louisville, KY).

Alignments of the newly generated sequences and available sequence data from GenBank for COI and 16S (Table 1) published in the most recent siboglinid phylogenies (Black et al. 1997; Braby et al. 2007; Cowart et al. 2014; Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 2001; Li et al. 2017; Li et al. 2015; McCowin and Rouse 2018; McMullin et al. 2003; Miglietta et al. 2010; Sun et al. 2018), including sequences for Lamellibrachia columna from the type locality (Lau Back Arc Basin), were performed using MAFFT with default settings (Katoh and Standley 2013) and concatenated with SequenceMatrix v.1.6.7 (Gaurav et al. 2011). For species that showed very little variation in COI (L. anaximandri, L. cf. luymesi, L. satsuma, L. barhami), a single individual was chosen to represent each lineage in the phylogenetic analyses. Lamellibrachia juni also showed little intraspecific variation in COI, but multiple individuals were chosen to represent the lineage for comparison with the other analyses conducted in this study. This species has also been recorded in the closest geographic proximity to the species of Lamellibrachia examined here (i.e., hydrothermal vents of the Kermadec Arc, to the north of New Zealand – 524 km distant) (Miura and Kojima 2006). Maximum likelihood (ML) analyses were conducted on the concatenated dataset using RAxML v.8.2.19 (Stamatakis 2014) with each partition assigned the GTR + G + I model by the Akaike information criterion (AIC) in jModelTest 2 (Darriba et al. 2012; Guindon and Gascuel 2003). Node support was assessed via a thorough bootstrapping (1000 replicates). Bayesian Inference (BI) analyses were also conducted using MrBayes v.3.2.5 (Ronquist et al. 2012) with the same best-fit models assigned to their respective partitions. Maximum parsimony (MP) analyses were conducted using PAUP* v.4.0a (Swofford 2002), using heuristic searches with the tree-bisection-reconnection branch-swapping algorithm and 100 random addition replicates. Support values were determined using 100 bootstrap replicates. Uncorrected pairwise distances were calculated for the COI dataset (~ 1275 bp) with PAUP* v.4.0a (Swofford 2002). A model-corrected distance analysis for a reduced COI dataset containing the New Zealand specimens (NIWA 27133/SIO-BIC A9468), L. columna, L. sp. L2, and L. sagami (selection supported by all molecular analyses) was also conducted with the best-fit model, HKY (Hasegawa and Kishino 1985), selected via AIC in jModelTest 2. An additional model-corrected distance analysis (best-fit model HKY selected via AIC) was conducted for the L. juni COI dataset (all terminals available on GenBank) for comparison with the L. columna/L. sp. L2/L. sagami dataset. A haplotype network of the New Zealand specimens, L. columna, L. sp. L2, and L. sagami COI dataset was created with PopART v.1.7 (Bandelt et al. 1999) using the median-joining option and epsilon set at 0.

Table 1 Origin of sequenced terminals, vouchers, and GenBank accession numbers. New sequences are set in bold. GM Gulf of Mexico, CR Costa Rica, NZ New Zealand, SP South Pacific

Results

The ML, BI, and MP analyses (Fig. 2) were congruent, with strong support for the inclusion of the Lamellibrachia specimens from New Zealand within L. columna. An uncorrected pairwise distance analysis and an HKY-corrected distance analysis based on COI sequences showed a maximum distance of 0.50% between the L. columna specimens from the type locality and L. columna specimens from New Zealand (Table 2). The haplotype network revealed a two-base-pair divergence between the same samples (Fig. 3). Morphological analyses of the L. columna specimens from New Zealand revealed (Table 3) that all characteristics except the obturaculum and plaque dimensions fell within or near the expected range for L. columna established by Southward 1991. The number of sheath lamellae ranged from 14 to 16 (expected range 8–16 [Southward 1991]), while the number of branchial lamellae ranged from 20 to 22 (expected 21 [Southward 1991]) for each specimen. The obturaculum lengths ranged from 7 to 13 mm (expected range 15–42 mm [Southward 1991]), while obturaculum widths ranged from 5 to 8 mm (expected range 8–13 mm [Southward 1991]). The diameters of the vestimental plaques ranged from 59 to 60 μm (expected range 65–90 μm [Southward et al. 2011]), and the diameters of the trunk plaques ranged from 67 to 75 μm (expected range 70–120 μm [Southward et al. 2011]).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Maximum likelihood trees of the combined analysis from two mitochondrial genes (16S, COI) aligned with MAFFT and then concatenated (rooted with Riftia pachyptila). Bootstrap support percentages from Maximum Likelihood and Maximum Parsimony analyses (separated by slashes) are followed by Bayesian posterior probabilities. Support values of 95%/0.95 or greater for each analysis are indicated by asterisks. Nodes not recovered in one of the analyses are indicated by a hyphen

Table 2. Uncorrected pairwise distances for COI data (all L. columna and L. sagami terminals included, non-identical L. juni terminals included, duplicates of other species removed), generated with PAUP*. SB Sagami Bay, NT Nankai Trough, MA Mariana Arc, MB Manus Basin, NZ New Zealand. Terminals comparing L. columna, L. sagami, and L. sp. L2 are set in bold.
Fig. 3
figure 3

Haplotype network from COI data for Lamellibrachia columna, L. sp. L2, and Lamellibrachia sagami sampled from New Zealand to Japan. Numbers in parentheses next to each haplotype represent the number of specimens with that haplotype

Table 3 Morphological characters of Lamellibrachia columna and Lamellibrachia sagami. OL Obturaculum length, OW Obturaculum width, BL Number of branchial lamellae, SL Number of sheath lamellae, VP diameter of vestimental plaques, TP diameter of trunk plaque

The phylogenetic tree also showed strong support for referring Lamellibrachia sp. L2 as L. columna. There was a maximum uncorrected distance of 0.33% in COI sequences between the L. columna specimens from the type locality and L. sp. L2 (Table 2). In addition, an HKY-corrected distance analysis based on COI sequences showed a maximum distance of 0.5% between the L. sp. L2 specimens from Japan and the specimens from New Zealand. The haplotype network also revealed minimal divergence between L. sp. L2 and L. columna. Lamellibrachia sp. L2 was found to differ by only two base pairs from L. columna (from the type locality) and shared a haplotype with the New Zealand specimens (Fig. 3).

The phylogenetic tree and both distance analyses also revealed a close relationship between Lamellibrachia columna and L. sagami (Fig. 2, Table 2). Both the uncorrected and corrected analyses based on COI sequences revealed a minimum distance of 0.95–0.98% between L. sagami and the L. columna from the type locality, 0.67–0.69% between L. sagami and the L. columna from New Zealand, and 0.64% between L. sagami and the L. sp. L2 from Japan. The HKY-corrected analysis showed a maximum distance of 1.35% between L. sagami and L. columna from their respective type localities, 0.99% between L. sagami and L. sp. L2, and 1.24% between L. sagami and L. columna from New Zealand. An HKY-corrected analysis of L. juni Miura and Kojima, 2006 (Miura and Kojima 2006) generated for comparison revealed a maximum distance of 1.39% among L. juni specimens from various localities. The minimum uncorrected COI distance between L. juni from the Kermadec Arc, New Zealand and the New Zealand L. columna specimens was 7.28%. Haplotype networks generated for the COI data from L. columna (type locality), the New Zealand specimens, L. sp. L2, and L. sagami (Fig. 3) showed minimal divergence between specimens (at most two base pairs between haplotypes).

The morphological characteristics of Lamellibrachia sagami also fall within or very close to the accepted range for L. columna (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011) and exhibited by the New Zealand L. columna specimens, including obturaculum length (L. sagami measures 5.8–22.5 mm [Kobayashi et al. 2015]), obturaculum width (4.4–10.8 mm [Kobayashi et al. 2015]), number of branchial lamellae (19–26 [Kobayashi et al. 2015]), and vestimental and trunk plaque diameters (59–101 μm and 67–130 μm, respectively [Kobayashi et al. 2015]), Table 3. The number of sheath lamellae is the only characteristic that is not partially or completely shared by L. sagami and L. columna (ranges of sheath lamellae reported are 3–6 for L. sagami [Kobayashi et al. 2015] and 8–16 for L. columna [Southward 1991]).

Discussion

All phylogenetic analyses (Figs. 2 and 3) clearly support the inclusion of the specimens collected off New Zealand within Lamellibrachia columna. The minimal base pair differences shown in the haplotype networks (Fig. 3), and the low pairwise distances (corrected and uncorrected) between sequences from L. columna and the New Zealand specimens provide strong support for this result. Morphological measurements of the New Zealand specimens fell within or very close to the accepted ranges for diagnostic characters of L. columna (Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011). This morphological similarity can be seen clearly when comparing specimens from New Zealand and Lau in Table 3 and Fig. 4. However, the measurements made of the obturaculum for the New Zealand specimens do show a slight reduction from the previous ranges recorded for this species of 15–42 mm length and 8–13 mm width (Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011). The New Zealand specimens were below this range (7–13 mm length, 5–8 mm width) and also exhibited some variation in number of branchial lamellae, which has not been previously reported for this species. However, phenotypic plasticity is common in other Vestimentifera, such as Ridgeia Jones, 1985 (Southward et al. 1995), and has often been a source of past confusion in differentiation of vestimentiferan species (e.g., Ridgeia piscescae Jones, 1985 and its junior synonym R. phaeophiale Jones 1985, which exhibited stark morphological differences but no genetic differentiation [Southward et al. 1995]). Furthermore, Southward et al. (1995) suggested that phenotypic plasticity within vestimentiferan species may be a response to physical variation in their environment, and recounted major variation in tubes and various size measurements of R. piscescae with environmental differences (Southward et al. 1995). Phenotypic plasticity is clearly present within Lamellibrachia as well, as is made apparent by the already wide ranges of morphological characters previously established for various Lamellibrachia species (Gardiner and Hourdez 2003; Jones 1985; Kobayashi et al. 2015; McCowin and Rouse 2018; Miura et al. 1997; Miura and Kojima 2006; Southward 1991; Webb 1969). Thus, a slight widening of the range for a few morphological traits of L. columna is not surprising. We therefore designate the New Zealand Lamellibrachia specimens as L. columna, which will extend the geographic range of L. columna southward by approximately 1900 km and the depth range of L. columna by approximately 1000 m (for a new depth range of 810–1914 m).

Fig. 4
figure 4

In situ photographs of Lamellibrachia columna (New Zealand NIWA 27133/SIO-BIC A9468 and Lau specimens). a Ventral (top) and dorsal (bottom) anterior of two L. columna specimens (New Zealand, NIWA 27133/SIO-BIC A9468), scale bar represents 10 mm. b Ventral anterior of L. columna (New Zealand, NIWA 27133/SIO-BIC A9468), scale bar represents 5 mm. c Dorsal anterior of L. columna (Lau [Vrijenhoek et al. 2009]). d L. columna tube anterior (Lau [Vrijenhoek et al. 2009])

All phylogenetic analyses also supported the inclusion of Lamellibrachia sp. L2 within L. columna (Fig. 2). The phylogenetic tree (Fig. 2) shows a very short branch length between L. columna and L. sp. L2 that is comparable to the branch lengths within L. juni (Kojima et al. 2003; Kojima et al. 2001). The haplotype network (Fig. 3) and distance analyses (Table 2) also clearly show that there are few genetic differences between L. columna from the type locality and L. sp. L2. This similarity has been noted before by Kojima et al. (2001). It was reported in that study that the genetic distance between L. columna and L. sp. L2 was approximately 0.3% (Kojima et al. 2001), which is consistent with the uncorrected distances calculated in this study (Table 2). Based on the previously accepted variation within the L. juni clade (Kojima et al. 2003; Kojima et al. 2001) represented numerically by the small corrected and uncorrected pairwise distances of up to 1.39% between L. juni specimens from various localities (Table 2), L. sp. L2 should be considered conspecific with L. columna, as it exhibits similarly minute corrected and uncorrected pairwise distances (0.31–0.34%, Table 2) from L. columna specimens from the type locality. There is no morphological data published for L. sp. L2 (Kojima et al. 2003; Kojima 2002; Kojima et al. 2001), but the molecular evidence overwhelmingly supports the referral of L. sp. L2 sequences to L. columna. This will extend the depth range of L. columna to 3270 m (Kojima et al. 2001; Kojima et al. 1997) and its geographic range to southeastern Japan. As a result, L. columna will represent the most broadly distributed Lamellibrachia species to date, with a geographic range spanning approximately 9000 km from the coast of New Zealand to the coast of Japan and a depth range of 810–3270 m. This range extension will also result in the putative geographic sympatry of L. columna and L. sagami, since both L. sp. L2 and L. sagami have been sampled from the Nankai Trough (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 2001).

Our results (Fig. 2), and those previously published (Kojima et al. 2001), showed high support for the close sister relationship between L. sagami and L. columna/L. sp. L2. This topology is reminiscent of the level of variation within the L. juni clade, which has a similar topology, suggesting that the L. sagami/L. columna/L. sp. L2 clade should also represent a single species. The uncorrected and corrected pairwise distances between L. sagami and L. columna provide additional support for this potential revision. The maximum HKY-corrected distance was 1.35% between L. columna and L. sagami from their respective type localities, 0.99% between the sympatric L. sp. L2 (L. columna) and L. sagami sequences, and 1.24% between L. sagami from Japan and L. columna from New Zealand (all uncorrected distances were smaller, Table 2). The small distances between L. columna and L. sagami and L. sp. L2 (L. columna) recovered in this study have been previously noted, and L. sagami (called “L. sp. L1” prior to its formal description in 2015) and L. sp. L2 (now L. columna) were reported as potentially “conspecific with L. columna” due to their small genetic distances (0.5–1.1%) from L. columna (Kojima et al. 2001). Other Lamellibrachia species in Japan and New Zealand that are geographically close to or sympatric with L. columna and L. sagami, such as L. juni and L. satsuma, are clearly genetically distinct, with uncorrected distances ranging between 5.44 and 8.48% (Table 2). The distance between L. sagami and L. columna is comparable to distances calculated within the single species L. juni (0–1.38% uncorrected, 0–1.39% HKY-corrected). The haplotype network (Fig. 3) of L. sagami, L. columna, and L. sp. L2 provides a visual representation of this close relationship (two base-pair distances between haplotypes) which also supports their synonymy. The referral of L. sp. L2 to L. columna in this paper also results in the sympatry of L. columna and L. sagami off the eastern coast of Japan, with records from each at the Nankai Trough (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 2001, 2003; Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011). The morphological data also reveals similarities between L. sagami and L. columna. Nearly all of the morphological characters of L. sagami (obturaculum length and width, plaque diameters, branchial lamellae) closely overlap with the ranges accepted for L. columna (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Southward 1991; Southward et al. 2011) (Table 3), except for the number of sheath lamellae, which falls in a smaller range for L. sagami (3-6 [Kobayashi et al. 2015]) than for L. columna (8–16 [Southward et al. 2011; Southward 1991]). As was made evident by Southward et al. (Southward et al. 1995), phenotypic plasticity is not uncommon in Vestimentifera and has resulted in past confusion regarding species descriptions based heavily on morphology. The molecular analyses, morphological analyses, and geographic sympatry support the synonymy of L. sagami with L. columna. Past studies have shown low levels of variation in the mitochondrial genes 16S and COI in Vestimentifera (Cowart et al. 2014; Cowart et al. 2013; McMullin et al. 2003), so further genetic data is required to elucidate more detailed patterns of gene flow in widely distributed species like L. columna. However, present evidence, especially the small number of base pair variations and the distance comparison with L. juni and other Lamellibrachia species, justifies the synonymy of L. sagami with L. columna. We synonymize the two here and amend the diagnosis of L. columna to include the additional morphological variation represented by its junior synonym L. sagami (see below).

Biogeographies of hydrothermal vent fauna indicate that vent fauna of the western Pacific are generally distinct from those of the eastern Pacific (Van Dover et al. 2002; Moalic et al. 2012), but also indicate various levels of latitudinal sub-division among the vent fauna of the western Pacific (Bachraty et al. 2009; Rogers et al. 2012). These sub-divisions presumably represent evolutionary and modern-day processes that influence population connectivity (Mitarai et al. 2016), and while our finding of a high degree of relatedness among Lamellibrachia columna from off Japan and New Zealand does not refute the proposed sub-divisions of the overall vent faunal assemblages of the western Pacific, it provides an interesting example of at least one species of chemosynthetic environments that maintains a population across almost the entire latitudinal range of the region. Our study now confirms that L. columna is found at both vents and cold seep habitats, and that at the southernmost extent of its range off New Zealand it occurs at seeps, but apparently does not occur at vents off New Zealand. It is possible that environmental conditions at vent sites off New Zealand are not suitable for L. columna, where L. juni is found (Miura and Kojima 2006), or that the species is yet to be discovered at these sites. Whatever the reason may be for the apparent lack of L. columna at vents off New Zealand, our finding of the species at seeps is useful in terms of documenting the extent of the habitat flexibility of Lamellibrachia, and for developing a biogeography of cold seep fauna which is much less well-understood than for vent fauna.

Taxonomy

Siboglinidae Caullery, 1914.

Lamellibrachia Webb, 1969.

Lamellibrachia columna Southward, 1991

Lamellibrachia sp. L1 (Sagami Bay, Nankai Trough): Kojima et al. 1997 (L. sp. La1-4, Lc1-4, Ld1, Ld2-3, Ld4), p. 509; Kojima et al. 2001, p. 211; Kojima 2002, p. 57; Kojima et al. 2003, p. 625; Kojima et al. 2006, p. 1357; Miura and Kojima 2006, p. 209; Miura and Fujikura 2008, p. 57; Miura and Fujikura 2008, p. 153, Fig. 9.3 A–C.

Lamellibrachia sp. L2 (Nankai Trough): Kojima et al. 1997 (L. sp. Le1, Le2), p. 509; Kojima et al. 2001, p. 213; Kojima 2002, p. 346; Kojima et al. 2003, p. 631.

Lamellibrachia sagami new synonym (Sagami Bay): Kobayashi et al. 2015, p. 99. Figs. 2-5.

Material examined: Three specimens were collected from the Builder’s Pencil seep site off the east coast of the North Island of New Zealand, between 810 and 817 m, using an epibenthic sled (Station TAN0616/32; 39o 32.4′ S, 178o 20.4′ W). Two of these specimens are deposited at NIWA (NIWA 27133A, NIWA 27133B), and one specimen is deposited at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography Benthic Invertebrates Collection (SIO-BIC A9468).

Diagnosis (emended): The obturaculum width ranges from 4.4–13 mm (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Southward 1991) and its length ranges from 5.8–42 mm; it is surrounded by the branchial plume (1,8), Fig. 4a–c. There are 19–26 pairs of branchial lamellae surrounding the obturaculum (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Southward 1991). There are 3–16 pairs of sheath lamellae which enclose the crown region and vary in size but are all shorter than the obturaculum, Fig. 4a–c. The smallest lamellae are near the mid-ventral line (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Southward 1991). The anterior edge of the vestimentum forms a collar with a central split (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Southward 1991). Paired dorsal ciliated genital grooves with epidermal folds occur in males (Fig. 4a, c), while females lack epidermal folds and grooves appear less obvious (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Southward 1991). Tubes are fairly straight and smooth, with an anterior diameter ranging from 14 to 20 mm (Southward 1991) (Fig. 4d). Vestimental plaques range in diameter from 58 to 101 μm, while trunk plaques range from 67 to 130 μm in diameter.

Distribution: Lamellibrachia columna is known from vents at the Lau Back-arc basin (Black et al. 1997; Braby et al. 2007; Southward 1991), vents and seeps along the middle Honshu coast of Japan (including, but not limited to, the Sagami Bay, Nankai Trough, and Okinawa Trough) (Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 2001; Kojima et al. 1997), and seeps on the Hikurangi margin east of New Zealand, at depths between 270 and 3270 m (Baco et al. 2010; Black et al. 1997; Bowden et al. 2013; Braby et al. 2007; Kobayashi et al. 2015; Kojima et al. 1997, 2001; Southward 1991).

Remarks: Southward’s 1991 diagnosis of Lamellibrachia columna has been amended to accommodate the inclusion of specimens from New Zealand (NIWA 27133, SIO-BIC A9468), Japan (L. sp. L2), and its new junior synonym L. sagami. Phylogenetic and morphological evidence suggests that L. columna exhibits wider ranges of lamellae counts, plaque diameters, and obturaculum sizes than previously reported.

Availability of data and materials

Sequence data generated and/or analyzed during this study are available on GenBank (accession numbers provided in Table 1) (Benson et al. 2005).

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Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Sadie Mills and Caroline Chin (NIWA) for their curation of the samples, and for sending preserved samples to SIO, and David Bowden (NIWA) and Fredrik Pleijel (University of Gothenburg) for providing photographs of L. columna specimens from New Zealand and Lau, respectively. We would also like to thank the crew and scientific party of the RENEWZ I voyage (TAN0616) made using the R/V Tangaroa. Amy Baco (Florida State University) helpfully provided the results of her preliminary genetic investigation of Lamellibrachia samples from the New Zealand cold seeps.

Funding

US National Science Foundation (NSF OCE-1634172); NOAA Ocean Exploration. Grants #NA05OAR4171076 and #NA17RJ1231/58; NIWA Science Capability Development Fund projects CRFH073 and CDSB1601.

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GWR, AR conceived the paper. AR provided specimens from New Zealand, collection data, and input regarding the manuscript. MM performed DNA extraction and amplification and morphological examination of New Zealand specimens, conducted the molecular and phylogenetic analyses, generated the figures and drafted the manuscript. GWR, AR, and MM then finalized the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Correspondence to Marina F. McCowin.

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McCowin, M.F., Rowden, A.A. & Rouse, G.W. A new record of Lamellibrachia columna (Siboglinidae, Annelida) from cold seeps off New Zealand, and an assessment of its presence in the western Pacific Ocean. Mar Biodivers Rec 12, 10 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41200-019-0169-2

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