On some new species of Canuelloida Khodami, Vaun MacArthur, Blanco-Bercial & Martinez Arbizu, 2017 (Crustacea: Copepoda) from a shallow coastal lagoon in north-western Mexico
Author
Gómez, Samuel
Laboratorio de Sistemática y Ecología de Meiofauna, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Unidad Académica Mazatlán, Joel Montes Camarena s / n, 82040, Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México
Author
Yáñez-Rivera, Beatriz
Laboratorio de Sistemática y Ecología de Meiofauna, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Unidad Académica Mazatlán, Joel Montes Camarena s / n, 82040, Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México
Author
García-Vázquez, Leonardo
Laboratorio de Sistemática y Ecología de Meiofauna, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Unidad Académica Mazatlán, Joel Montes Camarena s / n, 82040, Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México
Author
Armenteros, Maickel
Laboratorio de Sistemática y Ecología de Meiofauna, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Unidad Académica Mazatlán, Joel Montes Camarena s / n, 82040, Mazatlán, Sinaloa, México
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-12-20
5555
4
497
534
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5555.4.2
journal article
307455
10.11646/zootaxa.5555.4.2
c5d47728-3501-49b9-8c22-b5dadaf0b5c3
1175-5326
14594848
C226D1ED-7EDC-490F-86E2-4A897306116F
The genus
Canuellina
and justification of
C. pacifica
sp. nov.
Sewell (1940)
proposed
Ellucana
as a new subgenus of
Canuella
Scott T. & Scott A., 1893
for
Canuella (Ellucana) longicauda
Sewell, 1940
found in weed-washings at Nicobar Island.
Coull (1971)
gave the subgenus
Ellucana
full genus rank, and described
E. secunda
from the North Carolina continental shelf. Additionally, he commented on the presence of this species in
Barbados
(
Coull 1970
).
Coull (1971)
believed that
Ellucana
and
Canuellina
were closely related by the reduction in setation of P2 and P3, and by the similar genital fields.
Coull (1971)
gave an ample list of differences between
E. longicauda
and
E. secunda
from which he separated both species, but probably driven by
Sewell’s (1940)
brief description of
E. longicauda
, he suspected that, if rediscovered, the latter would prove to be conspecific with
E. secunda
. In his redescription of
E. longicauda
,
Fiers (1982)
rediagnosed the genus
Ellucana
and commented on the similarity between that genus and
Canuellina
.
Fiers (1984)
partially redescribed the female of
E. secunda
found in washings of coarse coral sand from
Curaçao
, and despite his list of differences, he concluded that
E. secunda
and
E. longicauda
were closely related. In his brief diagnosis of
Canuellina
,
Por (1984)
gave a list of species of that genus in which he included, without any reasoning,
Canuellina secunda
. By 1984,
E. secunda
was known to be distributed in
Barbados
, North Carolina, and
Curaçao
(
Coull 1970
,
1971
;
Fiers, 1984
), and
Yucatan
,
Mexico
(
Fiers 1984
).
Huys (2016)
detected two lineages amongst the species included in
Ellucana
and
Canuellina
and he transferred
C. onchophora
Por, 1967
and
C. nicobaris
Wells & Rao 1987
to
Ellucana
, and
E. secunda
to
Canuellina
. These moves were based on i) the presence of normal outer spines on P4EXP2 and EXP
3 in
Ellucana
, but elongated outer elements in
Canuellina
, ii) the shape of the male genital field with triangular opercula bearing a long basal styliform element and an inner uncinate spine, and a slender apical seta in
Ellucana
, but with several chitinized areas and lack of triangular opercula in
Canuellina
, and iii) male P4EXP3 sexually dimorphic in
Ellucana
, but P4EXP3 not modified in the males of
Canuellina
(
Huys 2016
)
. The male genital field is very similar in a core of species of
Canuellina
, viz.
C. canalis
,
C. femur
, and
C. tuba
(the male of
C. insignis
remains unknown). The opercula in
C. canalis
,
C. femur
, and
C. tuba
is reduced to a small plate with a distal short seta, and the inner uncinate spine and the basal styliform element are larger than in
Ellucana
. The male genital field in
C. secunda
is radically different. It is composed of P6 bearing four setae (one inner minute, one middle inner long, one middle outer half as long as the previous seta, and one outer element).
The Mexican material is clearly related to
C. secunda
. It fits all previous descriptions of the latter, but some differences were detected. These are: i) P5-bearing somite with dorsal pattern of chitinized plates in the new species, absent in
C. secunda
, ii) female and male caudal ramus with seven setae of which six unmodified, and one transformed into triangular blunt, hyaline spiniform dorsal element close to outer subdistal margin, but caudal ramus with six unmodified setae in
C. secunda
, iii) antennary basis with one seta in the new species, but basis unarmed in
C. secunda
, iv) relative length of the distal inner seta on the P3EXP3 (nearly half as long as the distal outer seta in
C. pacifica
sp. nov.
, but distal inner seta only slightly shorter than the distal outer element in
C. secunda
, v) relative length of the distal inner element on P3ENP3 (shorter than distal outer seta in
C. pacifica
sp. nov.
, but visibly longer in
C. secunda
), vi) relative length of the distal inner seta on P2EXP3 (visibly shorter than distal outer element in
C. pacifica
sp. nov.
, but as long as distal outer element in
C. secunda
), vii) P2ENP2 with long stiff inner seta parallel to inner margin of outer projection in
C. pacifica
sp. nov.
, but ENP2 unarmed in
C. secunda
.
At present, the genus
Canuellina
is composed of
C. canalis
from the Suez Canal, Sirbonian lagoon and south Red Sea (
Por 1969
),
C. femur
from the Gulf of Eilat (
Por 1967
),
C. insignis
from Port Said (Suez Canal) (
Gurney 1927
),
C. tuba
from the Gulf of Eilat and Red Sea (
Por 1983
), and
C. secunda
known from the Gulf of
Mexico
and the Caribbean Sea (
Coull 1970
,
1971
;
Fiers 1984
), and
C. pacifica
sp. nov.
from the Mexican eastern tropical Pacific (present study). We believe that
Canuellina
, as currently known, is composed of two different lineages. The
canalis
lineage (
C. canalis
,
C. femur
, and
C. tuba
, and most probably,
C. insignis
) is distributed in the Red Sea and Suez Canal areas. The Neotropical
secunda
lineage (
C. secunda
and
C. pacifica
sp. nov.
) is distributed in the Gulf of
Mexico
, Caribbean Sea, and north-western coast of
Mexico
. These lineages share the elongate outer spines on P4EXP2 and EXP3, but can be readily separated by the shape of the male P6 and genital field.