New records of cave-dwelling mysids from the Bahamas and Mexico with description of Palaumysis bahamensis n. sp. (Crustacea: Mysidacea)
Author
Pesce, Giuseppe L.
Author
Iliffe, Thomas M.
text
Journal of Natural History
2002
2002-02-28
36
3
265
278
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00222930010005033
journal article
10.1080/00222930010005033
1464-5262
4757320
Stygiomysis clarkei
Bowman
, IliOEe and Yager, 1984
Material examined
.
Grand Bahama
Island
,
Bahamas
:
Lucayan Caverns
,
Freeport
;
6 August 1998
, one aberrant (female?) specimen collected with vial from the water column in
5±10 m
depths.
Lucayan Caverns
,
Freeport
;
18 August 1998
,
one immature
specimen (female?) collected with vial from the water column in
5±10 m
depths.
Lucayan Caverns
,
Freeport
;
20 August 1998
;
one female
(
5.5 mm
) collected with vials from the water column in
5±10 m
depths.
Lucayan Caverns
,
Freeport
;
22 August 1998
;
two females
(5.9,
6.1 mm
) collected with vials from the water column in
5±10 m
depths
.
Remarks
. The
three adult
specimens from Lucayan Caverns,
Grand Bahama
®t the original description of the species, except for the following minor diOEerences, which, in our opinion, could better characterize the Lucayan population rather than justify the proposition of a new species or subspecies.
(1) Distal armature of telson: 31 41 31 41 3, or 31 31 31 31 3 (vs 31 31 31 31
3 in
the original description).
(2) Protopodal process of uropods with one lateral apical seta and ®ve apical spines, followed by two short spines, one longer spine and eight short setules (vs one lateral apical seta, ®ve apical spines followed by four short spines, one long spine and six to eight spinules, in the original description).
(3) Antenna 1, outer ¯agellum 14- or 15-segmented (vs
17±19 in
the original description), inner ¯agellum nine-segmented (vs ten-segmented in the original description).
Stygiomysis clarkei
is presently known only from anchialine caves in Middle
Caicos
, Providenciales and Grand Bahama islands (present data).
Habitat.
Lucayan Caverns
is located about
20 km
east of
Freeport
on
Grand Bahama
Island. It is the longest explored cave in
the Bahamas
with more than
10 km
of surveyed underwater passages.
The
surface waters in the cave are fresh, with a halocline at
16 m
depth
and full strength sea water beneath. Most passages were formed at the same depth as the halocline by mixing corrosion between fresh and salt waters. An unusual feature of this cave is the presence of large amounts of ¯occulent organic sediments, probably of bacterial origin, that occur below the halocline
.