The genus Potamilla Malmgren is particularly characterized by dorsal lips which lack any radiolar midrib; Pseudopotamilla Bush by compound radiolar eyes, dorsal collar lappets and flanges alongside the bases of the most dorsal radioles; Demonax Kinberg by a wide dorsal collar gap and companion se:ae with big heads and narrow blades; and Potamethus Chamberlin by an elongated first segment, enlarged ventral sacs, very long shafts to the thoracic uncini, and inferior abdominal setae much shorter than the superior ones. Perkinsiana gen. nov. lacks most of these characters, but the type species 'Potamilla' rubra Langerhans is remarkable in having red blood. It bores into limestone abundantly off S Wales and is here redescribed. Oriopsis hyncnsis sp. nov. from SW Ireland has a smooth collar set low on the first segment, with its ventral margin entire and free from the apex of the peristome. The new name Demonax langerhnsi is proposed for Sabella (Potamilla) incerta Langerhans non Demonax incertus Kinberg.
Sabella is rediagnosed to include only species that have spiralled fascicles of abdominal chaetae, first thoracic shield with straight anterior border and radioles that lack composite eyes and flanges. Spirographis spallanzanii is synonymous with Sabella penicillus. The type of the genus is discussed and a neotype designated. The only other species retained in Sabella are S. pavonina and S. discifera (= Branchiomma linaresi, once misplaced in Megalomma, but abdominal fascicles of Megalomma form transverse rows). Most species formerly placed in Sabella are transferred to Bispira, having C‐shaped fascicles of abdominal chaetae, first thoracic shield with a ‘W‐shaped anterior border and, in most species, radioles with paired composite eyes and flanges. Bispira, with B. volutacornis as the type species, is rediagnosed to include B. crassicomis, B. fabricii, B. melanostigma, B. tricyclia, B. viola, B. manicata, B. poricfera, B, mariae, B. elegans, B. brunnea, B. guinensis, B. secusolutus, B. wireni, B. oatesiana, B. spirobranchia, B. pacifica, B. monroi, and B. turneri, many of which are described fully for the first time. Only five of these form bispiral crowns (bispirality is useful only specifically and occurs in other genera) and one, B. tricyclia, has a unispiral crown. Sabella palmata Quatrefages, the type of Stylomma is redescribed and its synonyms discussed. This genus has abdominal fascicles like those of Bispira, but radiolar eyes like those of Megalomma. The relative advantages of chaetal arrangement and eye position are discussed.
The path taken by the faecal groove, following two right angle bends, appears inefficient in Sabellidae. It fits well with the thoracic folds of serpulids and follows a gentle spiral in caobangiids, but only in spirorbids is it of obvious adaptive value, being suited to life in a coiled tube. The associated setal inversion is not necessary for locomotion, which does not depend wholly on setal leverage, except in the smaller Fabriciinae where long‐shafted uncini also thrust actively against the elastic tube wall. The collar setae of spirorbids and some serpulids thrust anteriorly, giving some backward movement, but such motion is mainly by body contraction. Short uncini are virtually passive, engaged by opposing setae acting as distance pieces. Some broad bladed setae have a hollow structure around a central core. Pick‐axe setae of Sabellinae may have developed to counteract the thrust of respiratory peristalsis. This is not seen in spirorbids and serpulids, the thoracic folds of which are a sufficient respiratory supplement to the tentacles. — Numbers of thoracic segments in Sabellidae range from 1 to 16, and the abdomen becomes vestigial in some Fabriciinae. Abdominal inversion is important to spirorbids but not to sabellids, which are more varied. It seems that the former are archaic and the latter had a coiled ancestry. Sabellariids also show abdominal inversion suggesting a distant relationship with Sabellida.
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