Leuconidae Sars, 1878 (Crustacea: Cumacea) from the southwestern Atlantic, filling the distribution gap along the Brazilian coast
Author
Brito, Ayrton Do Ramo
Setor de Carcinologia, Museu Nacional / Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista, São Cristóvão s / n, 20940 - 040, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil & Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Zoologia), Museu Nacional / Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista, São Cristóvão s / n, 20940 - 040, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Author
Serejo, Cristiana Silveira
Setor de Carcinologia, Museu Nacional / Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista, São Cristóvão s / n, 20940 - 040, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil & Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Zoologia), Museu Nacional / Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista, São Cristóvão s / n, 20940 - 040, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-12-11
5383
2
101
134
https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5383.2.1/52444
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5383.2.1
1175-5326
10350586
996315A6-A209-4DF7-B59C-0B7662741F37
West Atlantic
Leuconidae
gap
Until the present study, there were no proper taxonomic records of family
Leuconidae
for the Brazilian coast. They appear only in ecological studies, where the specimens were identified only at genus level (
Leucon
and
Eudorella
) or only into family (
Leuconidae
A and
Leuconidae
B) (
Băcescu & Petrescu 1991
;
Dos Santos & Pires-Vanin 1999
;
Cristales & Pires-Vanin 2014
).
Leuconids occur in all oceans (
Watling & Gerken 2023
) and are also commonly found in the deep-sea zone (>
200 m
) (
Heard
et al.
2007
). Records from the NW Atlantic are from Guiana-Suriname Basin to
Greenland
coast (
Bishop 1981a
;
1981b
;
1982a
;
Hansen 1920
;
Heard
et al.
2007
;
Petrescu &
Heard
2010
) and in SW Atlantic are restricted to the Argentinian and Uruguayan coast (
Petrescu 1991
;
1994
). With the present study new records of the family go further north in the Brazilian coast until
18°S
(Espírito Santo state) and south until
27°S
(Paraná state), filling the gap in this area. According to the bathymetric distribution, only
Gyneleucon tripedium
gen. et
sp. nov.
(
39–53 m
) is restricted to shallow water.
Eudorella helenae
sp. nov.
(
25–392 m
) occurs from shallow water to the upper slope, while
Leucon
(
Alytoleucon
)
rhuanae
sp. nov.
(
1021–2501 m
),
Leucon
(
Crymoleucon
)
pseudograndidentatus
sp. nov.
(
381–1731 m
) and
Leucon
(
Macrauloleucon
)
watlingi
sp. nov.
(
381–3001 m
) occur solely on the slope, being the latter with a wider bathymetric range (
Fig. 16
). The lack of
Leuconidae
species records for the Brazilian coast might be explained by taxonomic impediment (
Marques & Lamas 2006
) or by the depths where leuconids generally live. The group successfully colonized the deep-sea, a difficult to reach and less sampled environment when compared to the continental shelf (
Mühlenhardt-Siegel 2005
; 2011;
Heard
et al.
2007
).
FIGURE 16.
Bathymetric range of species of
Leuconidae
along the Brazilian coast (18° S–27° S) based on samples listed in Table 1.
Cumacean deep-sea records along the Brazilian coast came from two pioneer expeditions in the sixties led by the Woods Hole Institution aboard the N/O Atlantis II along a long transect between
Senegal
and Recife (
200–5000 m
) (
Jones 1969
;
1973
;
1974
;
1984
;
Reyss 1975
;
1978
). Later on,
Watling & Gerken (1999)
described two new species,
Gaussicuma dufresne
Watling & Gerken, 1999
(
Bodotriidae
) and
Campylaspides abyssotrucidatus
Watling & Gerken, 1999
(
Nannastacidae
), both collected from the project
Marion Dufresne
TAAF-MD55 that dredged along the Vitória-Trindade chain (
15–5155 m
), off Espírito Santo coast.
The
Leuconidae
records, as well as
Cumacea
in general, are more condensed to North Africa and Europe in the Eastern Atlantic (
Bishop 1981a
;
1981b
;
Jones 1956
;
Petrescu 1994
;
Watling 2009
), where we noticed more expeditions and specialists working in the group. However, until 2005, only seven species of
Leuconidae
have been registered in the Southeast Atlantic, all of which were documented by
Bishop (1981a
,
1981b
). Later on,
Mühlenhardt-Siegel (2005
;
2011a
) conducted large taxonomic studies on
Leuconidae
in the Southeastern Atlantic, specifically in the
Guinea
Basin,
Angola
Basin, and Cape Basin, based in the DIVA I expedition, at abyssal depths ranging from 5047 to 5452 meters. A total of 17 new species were described in these works, with the majority belonging to the genus
Leucon
, followed by
Eudorella
,
Bytholeucon
, and the newly discovered genus
Afroleucon
.
In the present study we describe five new species and a new genus of
Leuconidae
for the SW Atlantic, but further studies from the area showed that much more new material needs to be described and will appear in near future publications (Brito pers. com.).