The genus Spirontocaris Spence Bate, 1888 (Caridea, Decapoda, Thoridae) in western Mexico
Author
Ayón-Parente, Manuel
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-09-15
4320
2
305
320
journal article
30124
10.11646/zootaxa.4320.2.6
47ecfcdf-b9e4-4117-b720-92b64dfe50a9
1175-5326
891848
39A76Add-9B5D-4Ba0-B499-B03Bfb1F1Af1
Spitontocaris sica
Rathbun, 1902
Figs. 4B, C
,
5C
,
6
–9
Spitontocaris sica
Rathbun, 1902
: 894
; 1904: 60 (key), 69, fig. 25.
Schmitt, 1921
: 55
, fig. 32.
Holthuis, 1947
: 8
(list), 37 (key).
Kozloff, 1974
: 166
.
Word & Charwat, 1976
: 155
(textfig.), 156.
Hayashi, 1977
: 158
(key).
Butler, 1980
: 19
(key), 167 (text fig.), pl. 7D. Wicksten, 1980: 363; 1987: 54; 1989: 313; 1990: 590 (key); 2012: 93, fig. 23
D. Hendrickx, 1993
: 307
(list); 2012: 314 (table).
Martin & Zimmerman, 1997
: 80
, fig. 2.11.
Chace, 1997
: 57
.
Stull et al. 1999
: 195
(table).
Figure 7.
Spirontocaris sica
.
Type
material (USNM-25261). Female (CL,
10.9 mm
). A, 3rd right pereiopod; B, merus of 3rd left pereiopod; C, merus of 4th left pereiopod; D, merus of 5th right periopod. Scale:
2 mm
.
Material
examined
.
Off
the west coast of
Baja
California
,
Mexico
.
TALUD XVI-B
. St. 5 (
28°48'06"N
,
115°24'6"W
)
,
May 24, 2014
, BS,
772–776 m
, 1 M (CL
8.1 mm
), 26 F (CL
7.6–10.6 mm
), and 1 ovig. F (CL
9.2 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10931); 3 F (CL
0.8–11.8 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10936); 4 F (CL 9.4–11.0 mm) (ICML-EMU- 10949).
St.
6 (
29°08'9"N
,
115°33'26"W
)
,
May 24, 2014
, 12 F (CL
7.7–10.3 mm
), BS,
1004–1102 m
(ICML-EMU- 10932).
St.
7 (
29°21'12"N
,
115°39'8"W
)
,
May 31, 2014
, 2 M (CL
6.7–7.5 mm
) and 28 F (CL
6.7–10.7 mm
), BS,
710–750 m
(ICML-EMU-10933).
St.
17 (
29°54'18"N
,
116°01'30"W
)
,
May 29, 2014
, BS,
734–774 m
, 1 M (CL
7.1 mm
), 10 F (CL
6.3–9.7 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10934), and 3 damaged specimens (CL
7.9–8.5 mm
) (ICML-EMU- 10937).
St.
18 (
30°39'16"N
,
116°39'18"W
)
,
May 25, 2014
, BS,
740–785 m
, 2 M (CL
6.2–7.4 mm
) and 35 F (CL
4.6–11.1 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10935); 2 F (CL
9.6–9.7 mm
) and 1 ovig. F (CL
9.7 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10938); 1 M (CL
6.15 mm
) and 7 F (CL
5.85–10.98 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10947); 1 M (CL
8.2 mm
) and 3 F (CL
8.9–11.4 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10948).
Additional material examined
.
Type
series.
Santa Barbara Channel
,
California
, 5 F (CL
9.5–12.6 mm
),
April 6, 1890
, "
Albatross
" St. 3200, 265 fm (
484 m
) (USNM-25261).
Description (
Figures 4B, C
,
5C
,
6
–9
)
. Body slender, stout. Rostrum long and deep, about 0.8 to 1.2 carapace length, constricted at base, blade-like in middle section, midaxis of rostrum curved upwards, lower limb of blade broader than upper, distal portion styliform, slightly ascending; upper margin with 9–15 teeth, two beyond orbit, proximal rostral teeth of similar size, distal forming a cluster of 4–7 smaller, closely set teeth; lower margin with 3– 8 teeth. Carapace carinate along almost all dorsal margin; two supraorbital spines, upper stronger; suborbital angle obtuse, antennal spine sharp, pterygostomial spine wanting of weak.
Figure 8.
Spirontocaris sica
, Talud
XVI-B
. A–C, I–K, female (CL,
9.40 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10935); D, female (CL,
12.06 mm
) (EMU-10939); E, male (CL,
4.22 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10935); F, female (CL,
11.44 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10935); G, female (CL,
11.08 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10935); H, female (CL,
8.87 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10935). A, lateral view; B, same, anterior portion of carapace, lateral view; C, same, anterior portion of carapace, dorsal view; D, lateral view (thoracic appendages omitted); E–H anterior portion of carapace, lateral view; I, stylocerite; J, 3rd maxilliped; K, telson amd uropods, dorsal view. Scale bars: A, D,
5 mm
; B, C, E–K,
2 mm
.
Abdomen dorsally smooth; ventral margin of somite 2 broadly convex; third somite slightly produced posteriorly; fourth and fifth pleura deeply recessed at articular knob, fourth without and fifth with small posterolateral spine; sixth as long as telson, posteroventral spine weak. Telson long, slender, about 4 times as long as wide, 3–4 pairs of small dorsal spines; posterior margin pointed at middle, with three pairs of lateral spines, outer pair short, intermediate pair the longest, inner pair slightly shorter than intermediate pair.
Eye large, cornea well developed, as long as stalk. Antennular peduncle long, not reaching rostral apex, stylocerite short, third segment less than half length of second, second and third each with a distal marginal spine. Antennal scale about 3 times as long as broad, not reaching rostral apex, outer terminal spine stout, moderately long, tip not quite reaching distal margin of scale. Basicerite with one upper outer lobe and one lower outer spine; carpocerite reaching proximal half of scale.
Third maxilliped moderately long, reaching tip of antennal scale, epipod present.
Pereipod 1 shorther than third maxilliped, slightly stouter, epipod present, terminally hooked. Pereiopod 2 longer than pereiopod 1, carpus 7–segmented, third segment the longest, shorter than segments 4–7 combined, cheliped one half longer than carpus ultimate segment. Pereiopods 3–5 of about same length, merus of pereiopod 3 with 5–9 spines, that of pereiopod 4 with 6–8 spines, that of pereiopod 5 with 4–7 spines; dactyli smooth, ending in ungui, proportionally shorter than propodus from 3rd to 5th (0.4–0.3x).
Uropod shorter than telson; outer margin of exopod ending in two spines, inner spine movable.
Size
. Maximum known size (CL): males, 8.0 mm; females,
13.3 mm
; ovigerous females,
8.6–11.4 mm
(
Butler 1980
). Male,
8.2 mm
(present study).
Colour
. The colour illustration provided by
Butler (1980)
and the corresponding description shows a mostly yellowish specimen, with many red blotches on the carapace and abdominal somites, and darker reddish pereiopods (
Figure 5B
). A photographed specimen captured during the TALUD cruises (
Figure 5C
) presents a more orange background, with similar reddish spots on the carapace and abdominal somites; pleopods are also reddish vs. pale yellow in the figure provided by
Butler (1980)
.
Geographic and depth distribution
. Type locality: Santa Barbara Channel, California, USA. From Restauration Bay, British Columbia, Canada, to San Benito and Cedros Islands, Baja California, Mexico (
Wicksten 2012
). From
88 to 849 m
depth, most abundant in
90–183 m
(
Butler 1980
). In California, most specimens have been captured between 150 and
550 m
(
Wicksten 2012
). Material from this study was caught between 710 and
1102 m
depth.
Distribution in
Mexico
.
Wicksten (1987)
was the first and the only one so far to have reported material of
S. sica
from western
Mexico
:
10 specimens
, between San Benito and Cedros Islands (
28°18'N
,
115°23'W
), at
247–265 m
depth (SIO C2546). The material collected during present study (five samples between
28°48'N
and
30°39'16"N
) (
Figure 1
) significantly increases the number of known localities from off western
Mexico
(from one to six) and confirm the presence of a large population of
S. sica
along the northern part of the
Baja
California
Peninsula.
Ecology
. Environmental data recorded during this survey indicate that
S. sica
lives below the Oxygen Minimum Zone (OMZ) (
710–1102 m
) that occurs along the
Baja
California
Peninsula (
Helly & Levin 2004
, Papiol et al. 2016), in poorly oxygenated water (0.22 to 0.40 ml O2/l), in a temperature range of 4.38 to 5.81°C. No specimens of
S. sica
were found in samples obtained with the benthic sledge operating in the shallower (
296–665 m
) or deeper (
1118–2136 m
) depth ranges during the same cruise. Sediments associated with this species are dominated by silt (>72% in 4 out of 5 localities), with organic carbon content of
18 to 52 mg
C org/g. In
California
, it forms part of the diet of the sandpaper skate,
Bathyraja kincaidii
(Garman, 1908)
(
Rinewalt et al. 2007
)
Remarks
. Compared to
S. holmesi
, the antennal scale distal margin of
S. sica
is obliquely straight vs. rounded in the former species, and the lateral spine does not quite reach the anterior margin of the scale (
Figure 5C
).
Spirontocaris sica
(the "offshore blade shrimp") was originally described from the Santa Barbara Channel from material (20 specimens in the type series) collected by the "Albatross" at 265 fathoms (
484 m
) (St. 3200). It was collected additionally in 19 stations of the "Albatross", from Point Arena to San Diego, in a depth range of 211–464 fathoms (
Rathbun 1904
).
Part of the material collected during this study (ICML-EMU-10931 and 10932) was compared to the
type
series used in the original description. Although the shape and length of the rostrum is quite variable in this species, the new material collected during the TALUD XVI-B cruise fit well with the specimens of this
type
series.
Spirontocaris sica
is very similar to
S. holmesi
but can be differentiated from the former by several characters, including: the rostrum of
S. holmesi
is usually proportionally deeper when compared to carapace height and feature one small tooth on the ventral margin of the styliform section of the rostrum, vs. no such tooth in
S. sica
; the pair of dorsal teeth on the carapace is placed at about mid-length of the carapace in
S. holmesi
, vs. in the proximal third in
S. sica
;
S. holmesi
has an epipod on pereiopods 1 and 2, vs. only on pereiopod
1 in
S. sica
; the ventral margin of the second pleura is almost straight in
S. holmesi
, vs. frankly convex in
S. sica
; the tip of the antennal scale is rounded in
S. holmesi
vs. obliquely straight in
S. sica
.
Figure 9.
Spirontocaris sica
, Talud
XVI-B
. Female (CL,
12.06 mm
) (ICML-EMU-10939). A, 1
st left
pereiopod, outer view; B, same, inner view; C, 2nd left pereiopod; D, 3rd left pereiopod. Scale bar:
5 mm
.
Although
S. sica
has been collected in several localities off California and off Canada, illustrations available in literature are scarce. The original drawing by
Rathbun (1904: lateral view of carapace)
was later reproduced by
Schmitt (1921)
.
Butler (1980)
provided the lateral and dorsal views of an entire specimen and a colour plate of another specimen. As in the case of
S. holmesi
,
Martin & Zimmerman (1997)
reproduced the figures provided by
Word & Charwat (1976)
and
Butler (1980)
, and the description provided by
Butler (1980)
.
Wicksten (2012)
provided a lateral view of the carapace of a specimen collected by the
Velero IV
off Dana Point (33°23.37'N, 117°41.54'W), California (LACM 1975-266) (M.K. Wicksten, pers. comm.
April 2017
). With the exception of Mary J. Rathbun's figure of the carapace, the illustrations provided herein are the first available based on the type material of
S. sica
. (
Figures 6
,
7
). In addition, several specimens collected during this survey were also illustrated as useful comparative material (
Figures 8
,
9
).
The key to species of
Spirontocaris
available on the scamit.org web page (http://www.scamit.org/tools/ toolbox-new/ARTHROPODA) includes
S. sica
.