Freshwater cyclopoids and harpacticoids (Crustacea: Copepoda) from the Gnangara Mound region of Western Australia
Author
Tang, Danny
Author
Knott, Brenton
text
Zootaxa
2009
2009-03-06
2029
1
70
journal article
11755334
Elaphoidella bidens
(Schmeil, 1894)
Material examined.
Boomerang Cave
(
YN99
),
Yanchep National Park
,
Western Australia
(
31°32'33''S
,
115°41'24''E
):
1 ♀
, 17
July
, 1992;
1 ♀
, 28
August
, 1994;
Spillway Cave
(
YN565
),
Yanchep National Park
,
Western Australia
(
31°32'41''S
,
115°40'37''E
):
6 ♀
(
AM
P.78936), 8 November, 2005;
Twilight Cave
(
YN194
),
Yanchep National Park
,
Western Australia
(
31°34'05''S
,
115°41'21''E
):
14 ♀
(1 dissected and mounted on slide) and 3 copepodids, 17 July, 1992; Edgecombe spring, Ellenbrook,
Western Australia
(
31°47'39''S
,
115°59'43''E
):
1 ♂
, 4 November, 1995
.
Remarks.
Elaphoidella bidens
(Schmeil, 1894)
is a cosmopolitan species that typically inhabits the littoral zone of large waterbodies (
Gurney 1932
;
Lewis 1972
). In
Australia
, this species is known to occur commonly in slow-moving streams or lakes in
South Australia
,
Victoria
,
New South Wales
and
Queensland
(
Hamond 1987
). The presence of
E
.
bidens
from the Gnangara Mound region, accordingly, represents the first record of this species in
Western Australia
. Although the occurrence of this species in ground waters of
Western Australia
is unusual, it is certainly not unique, as it has been reported previously from caves in the Ryukyu Islands of
Japan
(
Miura 1962b
) and North America (
Reeves
et al
. 2000
).