The taxonomic status of Hymenodora (Crustacea: Oplophoroidea): morphological and molecular analyses suggest a new family and an undescribed diversity deep in the sea
Author
Lunina, Anastasiia
Author
Kulagin, Dmitry
Author
Vereshchaka, Alexander
alv@ocean.ru
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2024
Zool. J. Linn. Soc.
2023-08-14
200
2
336
351
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad077
journal article
296805
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad077
a5f57d75-9b7c-46dc-b11f-ee2fc4200e29
0024-4082
11239996
E48CE650-52B3-4853-9249-D228B9E00306C
Family
Hymenodoridae
fam. nov.
Hymenodoridae
LSIDurn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
1BC06DC5- E4C5-40A9-B593-66BF2F77F6CE
Diagnosis (
Fig. 7A–E
):
rostrum dorsally dentate and ventrally unarmed; second maxilla with elongate proximal endite lacking submarginal papilla and lamina; first maxilliped with two-segmented endopod at least two times as long as distal endite; second maxilliped with distal segment suboval (
Hymenodora
) or subtriangular (
Sclerodora
) and attached almost transversely to preceding joint.
Type
genus:
Hymenodora
Sars, 1877
.
Genera included:
Hymenodora
Sars, 1877
,
Sclerodora
Vereshchaka, Kulagin & Lunina, 2021
.
Remarks:
Chace (1986)
wrote that mandibles are dissimilar (molar process ‘compressed and sub-bilinear on left’;
Chace 1986: 6
) in
Acanthephyra
,
Ephyrina
,
Heterogenys
,
Hymenodora
,
Kemphyra
,
Meningodora
and
Notostomus
, i.e. in
Acanthephyridae
and
Hymenodoridae
; in
Janicella
,
Oplophorus
and
Systellaspis
, mandibles are similar. The shape of the mandibles would be a strong diagnostic character but, after examination of these structures (
Fig. 7A, F, K
), we could not find any objective difference that could definitely be codified. The figures of mandibles in the paper by
Chace (1986)
also do not show visible variations in the shape of the left molar process. We, therefore, do not include structure of the mandibles in the family diagnoses.
Overall, all three families of
Oplophoroidea
show a great variability of external characters including the rostrum, carapace, abdomen and pereopods. Diagnostic characters that are invariable within families are, therefore, few and linked only to mouthparts, on which we base the key below.