Description
The Catalogue includes the images of mainly dorsal, but also ventral and lateral views of the pogonophorans, including their tubes; survey drawings of species main morphological features composed of views of holotype and other specimens as well; views of deposit units (pots and mounts); label and collection data; maps showing type localities; references to original descriptions for primary and secondary types of 75 species of the pogonophorans of the subclasses Frenulata Webb, 1969 [24] and Monilifera Ivanov, 1991 [15] (Annelida; or family Siboglinidae Caullery, 1914 [3] comprised all pogonophoran high level taxa). For some type specimens additional details, among them cuticular structures of the body and details of the tubes, are given as well.
Pogonophorans are sedentary marine worms that lack an intestine. They live in tubes made from protein and chitin, which they secrete. Pogonophorans occur in all oceans and many of the marginal seas at depths from 22 to more than 8000 m. They generally prefer cold waters. About 80 % of the species occur at depths between 200 and 4000 m. Pogonophorans live primarily on soft silty bottoms, especially in reducing sediments, burrowing deeply (subclass Frenulata). Some prefer to live in decaying organic matter, or sediments rich in methane and sulfide (subclass Monilifera), others in warmer hydrothermal vent conditions or cold seeps (subclass Vestimentifera Land et Nørrevang, 1977 [17]). There are currently about 170 species of Pogonophora, 90 % of which belong to the subclass Frenulata.
Pogonophorans get their energy primarily from chemoautotrophic methane- or sulfur-oxidizing bacteria, living endosymbiotically in a specialized organ called the trophosome. They also get some nourishment from dissolved organic matter in the sediment pore water. The morphological body plan of Pogonophora is very peculiar because of an original multilevel regionation of the body, which firstly originates on the base of elongation of some segments (but not of fusion of segments like in many sedentary polychaetes), following by the irregular growth of different parts of the trunk accompanied with metamerism of different epidermal organs. The pinnules, separate cells in the epithelium of the tentacles in Frenulata with internal blood capillaries, are unique stuctures demonstrating extremely deep specialization of the pogonophoran circulatory system for respiration and transport of some matters (methane, hydrogen sulfide) dissolved in water to endosymbiothic chemoautotrophic bacteria. The absence of the gut in pogonophoran adults (and in early embryonic stages in some species) is a striking example of specialization of nonparasitic animals. In addition, the heart and the chitin-protein tube are also synapomorphic peculiarities of Pogonophora.
The collection of Pogonophora of the Zoological Institute RAS has been gathered by trouble of dozen of researchers for many decades, first of all by efforts of prominent Russian zoologist, first-rate specialist in pogonophores and their actual discoverer academician Artemij Vasilevich Ivanov (1906–1992), creator and long-term head of Laboratory of evolutionary morphology of the Zoological Institute RAS. That is the very name which is associated with the detailed comparative anatomical description of Pogonophora and the erection of it to a separate phylum — one of the most striking event in zoology of XX century.
First pogonophorans got known to science in 1914 owing to findings of the Netherlands “Siboga” expedition in the seas of the Malayan Archipelago. First pogonophoran material in the collection of the Zoological Institute RAS came from P.V. Ushakov in 1932 from the Sea of Okhotsk. In 1949 A.V. Ivanov found a third representative of Pogonophora from the Arctic (Laptev Sea). Then the number of known species and volume of materials in the collection of the Zoological Institute began to grow rapidly, due mainly to the investigations of the soviet expeditions onboard the research vessel “Vityaz” (1949–1960) in the western part of the Pacific Ocean. In that period of time prof. L.A. Zenkevitch and prof. V.G. Bogorov (P.P. Shirshov’s Institute of Oceanology RAS) considerably contributed to the quick supplement of the pogonophoran collection.
Later on the pogonophoran materials came in less quantity but regularly from various parts of the World Ocean. Great contribution to this process was made by the colleagues from Institute of Oceanology RAS and Zoological Institute RAS Z.A. Filatova, G.M. Belyaev, A.V. Neelov, I.S. Smirnov, V.V. Potin, V.N. Romanov, etc. The most part of the material corresponds to coastal seas and regions off the coasts of continents and large islands, also deep-water trenches and basins throughout the World Ocean are well represented. The floors of the open ocean are less rich in pogonophorans. The materials came mostly from the Pacific Ocean, mainly from its north-western and north-eastern parts, due to great number of expedition which took place in these regions in various years. In general, pogonophoran biodiversity depends considerably of how some region of the World Ocean is well studied or not. For example, there had only two species of Pogonophora been known from the whole Antarctic Ocean for a long time, until regular investigation of Antarctic benthos allowed increasing their number in 7 times recently [20–23].
At present the collection of pogonophorans of the Zoological Institute RAS (both the collection of types with systematic part and undetermined materials) is the largest in the world and unique by its representativeness. The collection involved now 95 of 171 species of worldwide fauna of Pogonophora and about 3500 deposit units. The collection is well structured and consists of three parts.
The systematic (determined) part contains more than 3000 deposit units, undetermined part contains more than 200 units. The completely digitized collection of types now comprises of 155 deposit units containing 329 typical specimens, mainly holotypes and paratypes, but also several syntypes, which were collected on 63 hydrobiological stations throughout the World Ocean. These specimens belong to 75 pogonophoran species that is about 44 % of the whole species volume of Pogonophora. Deposit units are represented by pots and mounts. Pots fill two cabinets (cabinet 1, shelfs 1,2,3,5 in upper part and shelfs 1,2 in lower part, cabinet 2, shelf 2 in lower part — collection of types and systematic collection; cabinet 1, shelfs 4,5 in upper part — undetermined collection). Histological mounts are stored separately.
All main taxonomic units of Pogonophora, subclasses Frenulata, Vestimentifera and Monilifera are represented in the collection. Frenulates are represented mostly complete — the both orders, all five families and 16 of 20 genera. Vestimentiferans are represented only by two species from two genera. Moniliferans are two species from both the known genera. The collection continues to grow due to materials of Russian and foreign expeditions and complex investigation projects, mainly in the Arctic Ocean, both its open part and coastal seas, mainly in Russian Arctic.
Maintenance of the general collection, mounting and identification of the material have been performed by the preparators and researchers A.V. Ivanov, M.A. Gureeva, R.V. Selivanova, O.V. Bubko, R.V. Smirnov. General collection comprises the primary types (holotypes) of 30 species of pogonophorans (synonyms included) represented in a great part by the Frenulata species, as well as the secondary types (paratypes and syntypes) of 57 species. Some species are represented by both categories of types. Primary and secondary types belong chiefly to the species described by A.V. Ivanov [6–16], R.V. Smirnov [18–23], M.A. Gureeva [4,5,16], O.V. Bubko [1,2], and some other specialists [25].
Digitizing of research collections of the Zoological Institute is performed within the framework of RFBR №15-29-02457 (competition of oriented basic research on important interdisciplinary themes 2015) «The collections of the Zoological Institute as an important tool and information basis of fundamental biological research» (project leader Dr. N.B. Ananjeva). Special thanks are due to A.N. Shumeev for his assistance in imaging of views of the pogonophorans.
Data Records
The data in this checklist resource has been published as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), which is a standardized format for sharing biodiversity data as a set of one or more data tables. The core data table contains 75 records.
1 extension data tables also exist. An extension record supplies extra information about a core record. The number of records in each extension data table is illustrated below.
This IPT archives the data and thus serves as the data repository. The data and resource metadata are available for download in the downloads section. The versions table lists other versions of the resource that have been made publicly available and allows tracking changes made to the resource over time.
Versions
The table below shows only published versions of the resource that are publicly accessible.
How to cite
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
Smirnov R, Golikov A, Khalikov R (2024). Catalogue of the type specimens of Pogonophora (Annelida; seu Polychaeta: Siboglinidae) from research collections of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences. Version 1.38. Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg. Checklist dataset. https://doi.org/10.15468/1mlkdp
Rights
Researchers should respect the following rights statement:
The publisher and rights holder of this work is Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY 4.0) License.
GBIF Registration
This resource has been registered with GBIF, and assigned the following GBIF UUID: c05b97bc-e172-40e9-9d42-9df0f93a6e65. Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg publishes this resource, and is itself registered in GBIF as a data publisher endorsed by Society for the Management of Electronic Biodiversity Data.
Keywords
Checklist; Inventorythematic; Specimen; Occurrence; Checklist
Contacts
- Metadata Provider ●
- Originator ●
- Point Of Contact
- Originator
- Metadata Provider ●
- Originator
Geographic Coverage
Sampling was carried out all over the World Ocean.
Bounding Coordinates | South West [-90, -180], North East [90, 180] |
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Taxonomic Coverage
Pogonophora (Annelida; seu Polychaeta: Siboglinidae) collection identified to species.
Class | Pogonophora (Beard worms) |
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Temporal Coverage
Start Date / End Date | 1914-01-01 / 2016-01-01 |
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Sampling Methods
Sampling was carried out using different collecting gears — Agassiz and Sigsby trawls, grabs of various constructions.
Study Extent | Sampling was carried out throughout the World Ocean, during the period from 1914 to present using different collecting gears. |
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Method step description:
- Collected materials on Pogonophora (mainly wet: alcohol, formalin, occasionally dry: tubes) were identified to species level and deposited in the collections of the Zoological Institute RAS.
- Photo images were gained with Leica DM4000B microscope with camera Leica DFC300 FX and stereomicroscope Opton DRC with visualization system MC63 on the base of camera Canon 600D and opto-fiber illuminator HGY3.
Collection Data
Collection Name | Pogonophora collections of the Laboratory of Evolutionary Morphology, Zoological Institute RAS |
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Specimen preservation methods | Alcohol, Formalin, Dried, Microscopic preparation |
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Curatorial Units | Between 75 and 75 species |
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Bibliographic Citations
- Bubko O.V. 1965. A new representative of Pogonophora — Choanophorus indicus gen. n., sp. n. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 1965. 44: 1670–1677 [In Russian].
- Bubko O.V. 1967. Siboglinum modestum sp. nov. — a new representative of Pogonophora from the west Indian Ocean. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 1967. 46: 1264–1269 [In Russian].
- Caullery M. 1914. Sur les Siboglinidae, type nouveau d'Invertébrés recueilli par l'expedi-tion du Siboga. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Paris, 1914. 153: 2014–2016.
- Gureeva M.A. 1975. A new Spirobrachia species (Pogonophora) from the South-Sandwich Trench. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii, 1975. 103: 307–312 [In Russian].
- Gureeva M.A. 1981. Pogonophora of the Caribbean Sea. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii, 1981. 115: 183–194 [In Russian].
- Ivanov A.V. 1949. A new representative of the class Pogonophora. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 1949. 28: 79–84 [In Russian].
- Ivanov A.V. 1952. New Pogonophora from the far-eastern seas. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 1952. 31: 372–391 [In Russian].
- Ivanov A.V. 1957. Neue Pogonophora aus dem nord-westlichen Teil des Stillen Ozeans. Zoologische Jahrbücher. Abteilung für Systematik Ökologie und Geographie der Tiere, 1957. 85: 431–500.
- Ivanov A.V. 1960. Pogonophores. Fauna S.S.S.R., 1960. N.S. 75: 271 pp [In Russian].
- Ivanov A.V. 1961a. Deux genres nouveaux de Pogonophores diplobrachiaux Nereilinum et Siboglinoides. — Cahiers de Biologie Marine, 1961. 2: 381–397.
- Ivanov A.V. 1961b. New pogonophores from the eastern part of the Pacific Ocean. I. Galathealinum brachiosum sp. n. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 1961. 40: 1378–1384 [In Russian].
- Ivanov A.V. 1962. New pogonophores from the eastern part of the Pacific Ocean. II. Heptabrachia ctenophora sp. n. and H. canadensis sp. n. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 1962. 41: 893–900 [In Russian].
- Ivanov A.V. 1963. Pogonophora. London, Academic Press 1963. 479 pp. https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.10169
- Ivanov A.V. 1971. New Pogonophora from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Journal of Zoology, 1971. 164(3): 271–304. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7998.1971.tb01320.x
- Ivanov A.V. 1991. Monilifera — a new subclass of Pogonophora. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences of USSR, 1991. 319: 505–507 [In Russian].
- Ivanov A.V., Gureeva M.A., 1973. Notes on pogonophores fauna of the Northern Pacific. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii, 1973. 91: 248–255 [In Russian].
- Land J. v. d., Nørrevang A. 1977. Structure and relationship of Lamellibrachia (Annelida, Vestimentifera). Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab Skrifter, 1977. 21(3): 1–102.
- Smirnov R.V. 1999. A new genus and two new species of Pogonophora from the Arctic Ocean. Russian Journal of Marine Biology, 1999. 25(4): 312–319.
- Smirnov R.V. 2000a. Two new species of Pogonophora from the arctic mud volcano off northwestern Norway. Sarsia, 2000. 85(2): 141–150. https://doi.org/10.1080/00364827.2000.10414563
- Smirnov R.V. 2000b. A new species of Spirobrachia (Pogonophora) from the Orkney Trench (Antarctica). Polar Biology, 2000. 23(8): 567–570. https://doi.org/10.1007/s003000000122
- Smirnov R.V. 2005a. New species of the genus Polarsternium (Pogonophora) from the Scotia Sea and adjacent waters of the Antarctic. Russian Journal of Marine Biology, 2005. 31(3): 146–154. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11179-005-0059-9
- Smirnov R.V. 2005b. Two new species of abyssal pogonophores from the Antarctic Ocean. Russian Journal of Marine Biology, 2005. 31(4): 251–255. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11179-005-0082-x
- Smirnov R.V. 2015. New species of Siboglinum (Annelida: Pogonophora) from the Antarctic Ocean. Proceedings of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2015. 319(1): 57–80. https://doi.org/10.31610/trudyzin/2015.319.1.57
- Webb M. 1969. Lamellibrachia barhami gen. nov. sp. nov. (Pogonophora) from the northeast Pacific. Bulletin of Marine Science, 1969. 19(1): 18–47.
- Ushakov P.V. 1933. Eine neue Form aus der Familie Sabellidae (Polychaeta). Zoologischer Anzeiger, 1933. 104: 205–208.
Additional Metadata
Alternative Identifiers | c05b97bc-e172-40e9-9d42-9df0f93a6e65 |
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https://ipt.zin.ru/resource?r=zin_pogonophora |