Parasitic copepods of the family Lernanthropidae Kabata, 1979 (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida) from Australian fishes, with descriptions of seven new species
Author
Boxshall, Geoff A.
Author
Bernot, James P.
Author
Barton, Diane P.
Author
Diggles, Ben K.
Author
Q-Y, Russell
Author
Atkinson-Coyle, Toby
Author
Hutson, Kate S.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-02-17
4736
1
1
103
journal article
24025
10.11646/zootaxa.4736.1.1
c76ec731-0dc9-4fc4-8ea4-d90d90da9438
1175-5326
3669745
970D7D36-6D8C-4463-B9EA-D3B8E191BE72
Lernanthropus atrox
Heller, 1865
Material examined:
19♀♀
,
10♂♂
from
Rhabdosargus sarba
(Forsskål, 1775)
,
Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
,
26 November 1981
; collected by
K. Rohde.
2♀♀
,
1♂
from
R. sarba
, Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
, 1980; collected by
K. Rohde.
21♀♀
,
13♂♂
from
R. sarba
, Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
,
October 1980
; collected by
K. Rohde.
6♀♀
,
12♂♂
from
R. sarba
, Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
, 1980; collected by
K. Rohde.
12♀♀
,
7♂♂
from
R. sarba
, Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
,
19 April 1982
; collected by
K. Rohde
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
1984.106–111
.
5♀
from
R. sarba
(
TC17083
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
13 January 2016
; collected by
G.A. Boxshall
;
QM
Reg. No.
W29480
.
2♀♀
from
R. sarba
(
TC17094
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
13 January 2016
; collected by
G.A. Boxshall.
2♀♀
from
Acanthopagrus australis
(Günther, 1859)
(
TC17133
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
14 January 2016
; collected by
G.A. Boxshall
;
QM
Reg, No.
W29481
.
2♀♀
,
1♂
from
A. australis
(
TC17316
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
20 January 2016
; collected by
G.A. Boxshall
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
2018.244–246
.
1♀
from
A. australis
(
TC17135
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
14 January 2016
; collected by
G.A. Boxshall.
3♀♀
from
Chrysophrys auratus
(Forster, 1801)
(
TC17145
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
14 January 2016
; collected by
G.A.Boxshall
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
2018.247–249
.
1♀
from
C. auratus
(
TC 16941
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
08 December 2015
; collected by
S.C. Cutmore
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
2018.250
.
2♂♂
from
C. auratus
(
TC17575
),
Moreton Bay
,
Queensland
,
25 June 2016
; collected by
G.A. Boxshall.
13♀♀
,
9♂♂
from
C. auratus
, Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
, collected by
K. Rohde
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
1982.85
.
Differential diagnosis:
Cephalothorax subrectangular, wider than long. Trunk about as long as cephalothorax; anterior part (second and third pedigerous somites) slightly wider than cephalothorax, bearing third legs ventrally (lateral margins of which visible in dorsal view). Posterior part of trunk (fourth pedigerous somite) covered by ovoid and longer than wide dorsal trunk plate, lateral margins of plate convex, entire free posterior margin weakly convex. Urosome comprising fused genital complex and abdomen bearing paired caudal rami. Caudal rami about twice as long as wide; tapering towards blunt apex; rami entirely concealed beneath dorsal trunk plate in dorsal view. Parabasal flagellum absent. Leg 3 located laterally on ventral surface of third pedigerous somite within trunk region, forming horizontally-orientated fleshy lamella, directed posteriorly, with weakly bilobed tip; outer lobe shorter than inner. Leg 4 bilobate; both inner and outer lobes elongate, subequal, protruding well beyond free posterior margin of dorsal trunk plate. Leg 5 as small unarmed lobe. Body length of
♀
ranging from
2.58 to 3.01 mm
, with a mean of
2.80 mm
(based on
6 specimens
); body length of
2 ♂♂
specimens 1.68 and
1.78 mm
.
Distribution:
Lernanthropus atrox
was originally described from Australian waters as parasitic on
Chrysophrys auratus
(as
Pagrus guttalatus
) by
Heller (1865)
.
Kabata (1979a)
subsequently reported a single male specimen of
L. atrox
from
Acanthopagrus australis
(as
Mylio australis
) collected at Tangalooma in Moreton Bay by P.C. Young in
February 1964
.
Kabata (1979a)
considered
L. atrox
to be rather rare but we found it to be common on
A. australis
in Moreton Bay.
Roubal (1981)
reported
L. atrox
from the same host caught off northern
New South Wales
, and
Roubal
et al
. (1983)
reported it from
Chrysophrys auratus
taken off Coffs Harbour. In a more detailed study,
Roubal
et al
. (1996)
found a significant difference in the prevalence of
L. atrox
on
C. auratus
between the estuarine (prevalence = 18.8%) and the offshore populations (70.1%) at Port Hacking, Sydney.
Byrnes (1988)
recorded it on
A. australis
,
A. butcheri
(Munro, 1949)
and
A. latus
(Houttuyn, 1782)
collected at numerous localities around the coast of
Australia
including: Carnarvon and Broome (WA), Brisbane (QLD), and Coffs Harbour, Newcastle and Eden (NSW).
This species has also been repeatedly recorded in Japanese waters (
Shishido, 1898
;
Yamaguti, 1936
;
Shiino, 1955
,
1959
;
Ho & Do, 1985
) where it occurs on several sparid fishes including
Chrysophrys auratus
(as
Pagrosomus unicolor
),
P. major
(Temminck & Schlegel)
and
Acanthopagrus schlegelii
(Bleeker, 1854)
(as
Sparus macrocephalus
and as
A. schlegelii
).
Lernanthropus atrox
has also been reported from
China
on
A. schlegelii
(as
Sparus macrocephalus
) (
Chin, 1947
;
Song & Chen, 1976
). In Brazilian Atlantic waters,
L. atrox
was recorded on
Pagrus pagrus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
by
Luque (1996)
, although the geographically disjunct nature of this record invites closer comparison with
L. sarbae
Kensley & Grindley, 1973
, described from South African waters.
Remarks:
Bassett-Smith (1898b)
reported
L. atrox
from
Rhabdosargus sarba
(as
Chrysophrys sarba
) caught at Bunder Abbas in the Persian Gulf but
Ho & Do (1985)
agreed with
Shiino (1955)
in suspecting that this
Lernanthropus
should be attributed to
L. sarbae
described from the same host caught off
South Africa
(
Kensley & Grindley, 1973
). When describing
L. wilsonis
Capart, 1941
from
Sparus aurata
Linnaeus, 1758
caught off the west coast of Africa,
Capart (1941)
appeared to distinguish between
L. atrox
as described by
Heller (1865)
and
L. atrox
as described by
Yamaguti (1936)
. We follow
Ho & Do (1985)
in considering Yamaguti’s Japanese material of
L. atrox
as conspecific with Heller’s.