A new species of Chaetiliidae (Crustacea: Isopoda: Valvifera) from the Río de la Plata estuary, Argentina-Uruguay, and reconsideration of Macrochiridothea and Chiriscus
Author
Poore, Gary C. B.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2119
51
65
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.188066
ab6365d5-73f9-4961-b482-3020feb144a3
1175-5326
188066
Macrochiridothea stebbingi
Ohlin, 1901
Macrochiridothea stebbingi
Ohlin, 1901: 289
–291, pl.12, fig. 9. —
Carvacho, 1997
: 52
(list). Probably not
Macrochiridothea stebbingi
. —
Sheppard, 1957
: 170
–172, fig. 12.
Probably not
Macrochiridothea stebbingi
. —
Menzies, 1962
: 98–101, fig. 33.
Probably not
Macrochiridothea stebbingi
. —
Moreira, 1972
: fig. 1A. —
Moreira, 1973
: fig. 1. (=
M. multituberculata
).
Material.
Holotype
: Between
Isla
Nueva and
Isla
Navarino,
55°15'S
,
66°25'W
,
Chile
,
54 m
[30 fm],
SMNH
(female,
7 mm
).
Diagnosis.
Total body length of female
7 mm
. Dorsal surface generally tuberculate (5 longitudinal rows: median from head to pleotelson, 2 sublaterals and laterals from pereonite 1 converging on pereonite 6); pleotelson with a single strong median keel. Lateral lobes on head rounded. Coxa 6 just overlapping pleonite 2. Antenna 1 peduncle, article 2 without anterodistal prolongation. Antenna 2 peduncle, article 4, 1.1 times as long as greatest width; article 5, 3 times as long as greatest width. Pereopods 2 and 3 dactyli subchelate, closing on truncate palm. Pereopod 5 ischium without a prominent hook on upper margin.
Distribution.
Tierra del Fuego, Chile-Argentina,
55°15'S
,
66°25'W
;
54 m
depth; other localities doubtful.
Remarks.
Macrochiridothea stebbingi
is a problematic species. Ohlin’s (1901)
holotype
from western Tierra de Fuego is a female with prominent tubercles, especially evident in his illustration of the lateral view. He illustrated many limbs.
Sheppard (1957)
commented on additional material collected east of southern
Argentina
at
118–309 m
depth. Her illustrations of antennae and pereopod 2 show narrower limbs than in Ohlin’s figure 9. Menzies’ (1962) figure 33a of a specimen collected at Seno Reloncaví,
Chile
, at
20–25 m
depth, considerably north of the
type
locality, differs from Ohlin’s in tuberculation and apparent head shape. Notably, Menzies’ figure shows fewer tubercles on pereonites 5 and 6. His figure of pereopod 2 does not resemble Sheppard’s. The identity of Sheppard’s and Menzies’ specimens remains uncertain.
Moreira’s (1972, 1973) figures of a male from Rio Grande do Sul,
Brazil
, even further from the
type
locality, show a head with more prominent acute lateral lobes and more tubercles than in other illustrations (see
M. multituberculata
).
If the subspecies from the
Falkland Islands
were treated as a distinct species and subsequent records are not of this species, the geographical range of
M. stebbingi
would not be as extensive as summarised by
Moreira (1973)
and
Carvacho (1997)
.