Hi Eduardo,
Congratulations for your nice paper. Here you will fins some references where assexual reproduction by regeneration is mentioned for Haplosyllis (see H. aplysinicola) and Polydorella:
Lattig P. and Martin D. (2011) Sponge-associated Haplosyllis (Polychaeta: Syllidae: Syllinae) from the Caribbean Sea, with the description of four new species. Scientia Marina, 75(4), 733-758.
Williams J.D. (2004) Reproduction and morphology of Polydorella (Polychaeta: Spionidae), including the description of a new species from the Philippines. Journal of Natural History, 38, 1339-1358.
Radashevsky V.I. (1996) Morphology, ecology and asexual reproduction of a new Polydorella species (Polychaeta: Spionidae) from the South China Sea. Bulletin of Marine Science, 58(3), 684-693.
Best
——
Dr. Daniel Martin
Scientific Researcher
Centre d’Estudis Avançats de Blanes (CEAB - CSIC)
- Carrer d'accès a la Cala Sant Francesc 14
- 17300 Blanes (Girona), Catalunya (Spain)
- Tel: (34) 972336101
- Fax: (34) 972337806
- WWW Institutional: http://www.ceab.csic.es
- WWW Personal: http://www.ceab.csic.es/personal/daniel-martin-sintes/
> El 16 nov 2016, a les 3:05, Eduardo Zattara <ezattara from gmail.com> va escriure:
>> Dear annelidians,
>> Our article describing an analysis of the phylogenetic distribution of
> regeneration and asexual reproduction throughout the Annelida has just been
> published in Invertebrate Biology, and can be read at the link below:
>>http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ivb.12151/full>> The article is open access and should be accessible to everyone.
>> Despite the large number of references collected for this work, we are
> convinced that there is plenty of knowledge out there, in publications we
> missed, gray literature, or the unpublished experiences of the many people
> who work with segmented worms. I would love to hear from you about species
> we have no data for in the current database. Feedback on the article and
> analyses therein are also wormly welcome. As we mention there, the data
> available covers less than 2% of the total species diversity of the phylum,
> meaning there is a lot of work ahead!
>> Thanks!
>> -Ed-
>>> "Only in silence the word,
> only in dark the light,
> only in dying life :
> bright the hawk's flight on the empty sky"
>> --------------
> Dr. Eduardo E. Zattara
>> Research Collaborator | Research Fellow
> Department of Invertebrate Zoology | Department of Biology
> National Museum of Natural History | Indiana Molecular Biology Institute
> Smithsonian Institution | Indiana University,
> Bloomington
>> email: ezattara from gmail.com <ezattara from umd.edu>
> phone: +1 (812) 369 9301
> mail address: Indiana University, 915 E. Third Street, Myers Hall 150,
> Bloomington, IN 47405-7107
>http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Eduardo_Zattara>http://invertebrates.si.edu/zattara.htm> _______________________________________________
> Annelida mailing list
> Post: Annelida from net.bio.net> Help/archive: http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/annelida> Resources: http://www.annelida.net