The Lampropidae (Crustacea: Cumacea) of the World
Author
Gerken, Sarah
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-06-01
4428
1
1
192
journal article
22652
10.11646/zootaxa.4428.1.1
e10e53f2-0e1b-46f6-8b0f-af19d5529711
1175-5326
3769771
2419A7F0-5AED-47EC-86BB-06AADB2A4BD9
Reyssia
n. gen.
Platytyphlops
.—
Reyss, 1978b: 74–77
, figs 2–3.
Diagnosis.
Carapace dorsoventrally flattened, marginal carina present, eyelobe present, pseudorostral lobes short, blunt. Antennule flagella well developed, accessory flagellum at least 0.5 length of main flagellum. Mandible unknown. Maxillule palp unknown. Pereopod 1 slender. Pereopod 5 shorter than pereopod 4 basis. Telson short, 0.5 length of uropod peduncles. Uropod endopod of 3 articles. Uropod exopod article 1 0.2 length of article 2, or less.
Female
with fully developed exopod on pereopod 2, rudimentary exopods on pereopods 3–4.
Male
with short but non-clasping antenna, without penial lobes, without pleopods.
Etymology
. The new genus is named
Reyssia
in honor of Daniel Reyss, who originally described the
type
species (as
Platytyphlops lathierae
). Gender feminine.
Type
species
.
Platytyphlops lathierae
Reyss, 1978b
.
Remarks
.
Platytyphlops
was erected by
Stebbing (1912)
to accommodate a new species,
P. peringueyi
, based on males without pleopods. However, Stebbing’s material only included early juvenile males.
Stebbing (1912)
included
Platyaspis orbicularis
in
Platytyphlops
, because the description of the species by
Calman (1905)
was incomplete and adult males were not known. However,
Calman (1912)
completed the description of
Platyaspis orbicularis
, including adult males with 3 pairs of pleopods, and transferred the species to
Paralamprops
(transferred herein to
Platytyphlops
).
Day (1978)
described the adult male of
P. peringueyi
, with 3 pairs of pleopods, and also transferred the species to the genus
Paralamprops
(transferred herein to
Platytyphlops
). This effectively placed
Platytyphlops
in synonymy with
Paralamprops
, but
Platytyphlops
has been resurrected (see remarks for
Platytyphlops
). However,
Reyss (1978b)
described a new species,
Platytyphlops latheriae
, a species in which the males are without pleopods, but which cannot be accommodated in
Platytyphlops
as resurrected.
Băcescu (1988)
declared
“
Platytyphlops latheriaeí
”
incertae sedis
and suggested that a new genus would need to be erected to accommodate the species. The genus
Reyssia
is therefore erected for the species described as
latheriae
Reyss, 1978b
.