Amphipoda (Crustacea) from Palau, Micronesia: Families Melphidippidae, Oedicerotidae, Photidae, Pleustidae, Podoceridae, Stenothoidae, Synopiidae and Talitridae
Author
Myers, A. A.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3811
4
535
552
journal article
45581
10.11646/zootaxa.3811.4.6
4dd915eb-fdd0-4371-a1cf-4f7ea9648460
1175-5326
224856
E84066D1-B66A-40A5-A9EE-362BE174ECA3
Latigammaropsis akhenateni
sp. nov
(
Figs 4
,
5
)
Gammaropsis atlantica
.
—
J.L. Barnard, 1970
: 174
, figs 111–113.
(not
G. atlantica
Stebbing 1888
)
Type
material.
Male
holotype
.
4.5 mm
(
OUMNH
.ZC.2002.24.124) Seabear Site, drop off, from rubble,
16 m
depth;
07°16.419' N
,
134°31.435'E
; leg. S.
De
Grave & C. Burras,
24 May 2002
.
Paratypes
:
2 males
,
3 females
(
OUMNH
.ZC.2002.24.125) same station data as
holotype
.
Other material.
1 male
,
1 female
(
OUMNH
.ZC.2002.24.126) Pkuklim Reef;
Halimeda
clumps on reef rubble, from
Halimeda
(Chlorophyta)
washings,
6 m
depth;
07°20.542' N
,
134°34.023'E
; leg. S.
De
Grave & C. Burras,
29 May 2002
;
1 male
(
OUMNH
.ZC.2002.24.127) Western Channel, Baobeldab
Island
, from
Sinularia
sp. (
Alcyonacea
:
Alcyoniidae
) and dead coral base,
20 m
depth;
07°32.526' N
,
134°28.287'E
; leg. S.
De
Grave & C. Burras,
21 May 2002
.
Etymology.
Named after the Egyptian King Akhenaten (1352–1336 B.C.).
Description.
Based on male
holotype
,
4.5 mm
.
Head.
Head
elongate with extended lateral cephalic lobes, anteroventral margin deeply recessed, extending far behind posterior margin of eye.
Eye
large extending dorsally.
Labrum
without epistome.
Labium
with acute mandibular processes.
Mandible palp
article 2 longest, article 3 spatulate.
Antenna 1
about three quarters body length; peduncular article 3 longer than article 1; primary flagellum with 13 articles; accessory flagellum with 5 long articles and a vestigial terminal article.
Antenna 2
a little shorter than antenna 1, peduncular articles 4 and 5 subequal in length; flagellum with 9 articles.
Pereon.
Gnathopod 1
coxa subrectangular, weakly produced; carpus and propodus subequal; propodus palm oblique, evenly rounded.
Gnathopod 2
coxa shallow wider than deep; basis robust, anterior margin and inner face bearing profuse, very long and slender setae; carpus short, cup-shaped; propodus almost four times length of propodus; propodus anterior margin densely setose, palm with deep, broad distal excavation, defined by a small spine and with a large robust seta; dactylus stout, without teeth and slightly overlapping inner face of palm.
Pereopods 3–4
similar, dactylus less than half length of propodus.
Pereopod 5
basis expanded proximally, subovoid.
Pereopods 6–7
similar; basis moderately expanded proximally;
pereopod 7
only a little longer than pereopod 6.
Pleon.
Urosomites 1–2
each with a pair of fine dorsal setae.
Uropod 1
peduncle with long distoventral spine, a little over half length of peduncle; inner ramus subequal in length with peduncle; outer ramus three quarters length of inner ramus.
Uropod 2
peduncle without distoventral spine; inner ramus a little longer than outer ramus.
Uropod 3
peduncle twice as long as wide and longer than inner ramus; outer ramus terminating in a cluster of robust setae; inner ramus more slender than outer ramus, narrowing distally and terminating in a single weak robust seta.
Telson
with terminal robust seta on each side.
Female.
(sexually dimorphic characters).
Gnathopod 2
carpus triangular, propodus about two times length of carpus, palm oblique, evenly rounded, defined by a small spine.
Habitat.
Among coral rubble and
Halimeda
sp. and sponge
Sinularia
sp. over rubble.
Remarks.
Stebbing (1888)
described
Gammaropsis atlantica
from
Cape Verde
. Since that time, the name has been applied to material collected widely in the Indo-Pacific from the Red Sea to Hawaii.
FIGURE 4.
Latigammaropsis akhenateni
sp. nov.
, male, holotype, 4.5 mm, Seabear Site,
Palau
.
FIGURE 5.
Latigammaropsis akhenateni
sp. nov.
, male, holotype, 4.5 mm, female paratype, 5.0 mm, Seabear Site,
Palau
.
The material figured by Stebbing is a female. It has an enlarged gnathopod 2 of male-like appearance with a relatively deep palmar excavation and strong defining spine. A species lacking strong sexual dimorphism was described from
Papua New Guinea
by
Myers (1995)
under the name
Gammaropsis gemina
Myers. Only
material from Eniwetok,
Marshall Islands
described under the name
Eurystheus atlanticus
(Stebbing)
, by
J.L. Barnard (1965)
, was synonymised by
Myers (1995)
with this species.
Latigammaropsis gemina
(Myers)
differs from
Latigammaropsis atlantica
(Stebbing)
in its much more strongly developed female gnathopod 2 which has a much larger, broad, flat-bottomed excavation in the palm, a non-crenulate palmar margin and a non-overlapping dactylus.
Within the Indo-Pacific, two quite different phenotypes can be found among materials described under the name
Gammaropsis atlantica
Stebbing. In
one phenotype, the male gnathopod 2 is very setose. Abundant long setae occur on the anterior margin and inner face of the basis and on the anterior margin of the propodus. The other phenotype is weakly setiferous with mainly short setae on the gnathopod 2 basis and propodus. In the setose phenotype, the palm of the male gnathopod 2 terminates in a very weak spine, whereas in the non-setose phenotype, the male gnathopod 2 palm terminates in a strong forward-produced spine.
Material of the setose phenotype has not previously been given specific status and is here described under the name
Latigammaropsis akhenateni
sp. nov.
Whether all world materials described under the name
G. atlantica
and exhibiting setose gnathopod 2 are conspecific is uncertain. Variations can be discerned among described material and it is possible that material from the Indian ocean, including the Red Sea (
Ruffo, 1969
);
Zanzibar
(
K.H. Barnard, 1937
);
Madagascar
(Ledoyer, 1982 [forma B];
India
(
Rabindranath, 1971
) and
Mauritius
(
Appadoo & Myers, 2004
), is a distinct species from that described from Pacific in Hawaii (
J.L. Barnard, 1970
). Material from Hawaii can be placed with some confidence in the synonymy of
L. akhenateni
, but the Indian Ocean materials cannot be assigned with certainty.
Latigammaropsis athenae
Myers
from the Great Barrier Reef has a similar male gnathopod 2 to that of
L. akhenateni
, but that species has a female gnathopod 2 propodus with an excavate posterior margin.
A species described from
Papua New Guinea
under the name
Gammaropsis afra
Stebbing
by
Myers, 1995
, also has a setose male gnathopod 2, but in that material, the propodus of that appendage is elongate and the antennae are relatively short, with the accessory flagellum having only three articles.
Distribution.
Hawaii (
J.L. Barnard 1970
);
Palau
(present study).