Julmarichardiidae, a new apseudoidean family (Crustacea: Tanaidacea: Apseudomorpha) with the description of a new species of Julmarichardia Guţu 1995 from the Northwest Australian Shelf
Author
Moralés-Núñez, Andres G.
NSF-CREST Center for the Integrated Study of Coastal Ecosystem Processes and Dynamics in the Mid-Atlantic Region (CISCEP), Department of Natural Sciences, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Princess Anne, MD 21853, USA
Author
Heard, Richard W.
Department of Coastal Sciences, University of Southern Mississippi, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory Campus, Ocean Springs, MS 39564, USA.
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-12-09
5081
1
77
115
journal article
3041
10.11646/zootaxa.5081.1.3
58b56ac0-2210-4fe2-83aa-014d62375696
1175-5326
5769414
2A63D6CB-4838-45F1-8B2B-60A2F56216D3
Family
Julmarichardiidae
fam. nov.
Type
genus.
Julmarichardia
Guţu, 1989
Diagnosis.
Antenna
with squama.
Rostrum
well-developed spatulate or triangular, margins with or without spines or spinules, and with or without plumose setae.
Cheliped
and pereopod-1 with exopod.
Pereopod-1
with strongly developed coxal process dorsal margin bearing plumose setae and with or without spines. Mucus glands and reservoir packets dispersed throughout body and appendages with ducts opening on dactylus of pereopod-1.
Pleon
unfused, with five pairs of well-developed biramous pleopods.
Etymology.
From the double-patronym, type-genus,
Julmarichardia
.
Remarks.
Julmarichardiidae
fam. nov.
and the
Numbakullidae
Guţu & Heard, 2002
, are both small highly derived families, both of which are presently known from the Southwest Pacific and Indian Ocean. Based on the morphology of their appendages, primarily the pereopods, and other meristic features, both appears to have evolved from the same progenitors that gave rise to the family
Metapseudidae
Lang, 1970
. These two small families, unlike members of the larger, more diverse, and widely distributed
Metapseudidae
, are characterized by the presence of mucus glands and reservoir mucus packets throughout their bodies and appendages.
Like the julmarichardiids, numbakullids are represented by a single genus and a few (three) species (
Stępień 2013
); they are unique by having dense rows of long plumose setae on the posterior margins of the merus and carpus on pereopod-1 (
Guţu &
Heard
2002
: figs 1B, 3C). These setal modifications, which immediately distinguished numbakullids from the julmarichardiids and the metapseudids, appear to be an adaptation to facilitate suspension and/or filter feeding (
Ibid
) and maybe analogous to that of the kalliapseudids.
FIGURE 1.
Map of study area, indicating the sampling stations where
Julmarichardia magdae
sp. nov.
,
J
.
gutui
, and
J
. sp. A. were recorded.
The distinctive presence of mucus glands, a prominent anteriorly-directed coxal process on pereopod-1, and a strongly developed broad rostrum distinguish
Julmarichardiidae
from the
Metapseudidae
, where it (the genus) was originally placed by
Guţu (1989a)
. Except for these distinctive differences, the general morphology of
Julmarichardiidae
appears to be most similar to that of the metapseudid Subfamily
Chondropodinae Guţu, 2008
. Both groups share several apparent plesiomorphic characters, including the presence of an antennal squama, exopods on the cheliped and pereopod-1, and unfused pleonites bearing five pairs of well-developed pleopods. As mentioned earlier, these similarities indicate that the two groups may have been derived from the same ancestral stock.
Besides the
Julmarichardiidae
and
Numbakullidae
, only two other apseudomorphan families, the
Kalliapseudidae
Lang, 1956
and
Parapseudidae
Guţu, 1981
(see
Drumm 2005
;
Kakui & Hiruta 2014
,
2017
;
Morales-Núñez
et al.
2017
) are known to have distinct mucus glands. The mucus produced by these glands is used, at least in part, in the construction of domiciles (
Drumm 2005
;
Morales-Núñez
et al
. 2017
;
Heard
et al
. 2018
). One of us (RWH) when initially sorting tanaidaceans samples from the NW Australian Shelf observed remnants of mucoid domiciles still attached to specimens of both
Julmarichardia gutui
and
Numbakulla pygmaeus
Guţu & Heard, 2002
. Whether the mucus glands occurring in the representatives of these two small Indo-Pacific families are homologous or have been derived independently remains to be determined.