The Shallow-water Tanaidacea (Arthropoda: Malacostraca: Peracarida) of the Bass Strait, Victoria, Australia (other than the Tanaidae)
Author
Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, M.
Author
Bamber, R. N.
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2012
69
1
235
journal article
1447-2554
F060EED2-88C1-4A9A-92A7-6C06905F307B
Typhlotanais herthio
sp. nov.
Figures 108–110
Material examined
. 1 (J58514),
holotype
,
Eastern Bass Strait
,
60 km
E of North Point
,
Flinders Island
,
Stn
BSS 32
,
39º41.7'S
148º39.5'E
,
115 m
depth
, muddy sand,
27 March 1979
; coll.
G.C.B. Poore
; 45 and neuters (J58515)
,
paratypes
,
Central Bass Strait
,
32 km
SE of
Cape
Otway
,
Stn
BSS 48
DN,
39º01'S
143º49'E
,
81 m
depth
, coarse sand,
07 October 1980
; coll.
G.C.B. Poore
; 41 and neuters (J58518)
,
paratypes
,
Central Bass Strait
,
66 km
S of Rodondo Island
,
Stn
BSS 158
S,
39º48.6'S
146º18.8'E
,
82 m
depth
, sand with silt and mud,
13 November 1981
; coll.
R
.
S. Wilson
.
Description of female
. Body (
Fig. 108A, B
) slender,
holotype
2.7 mm
long, 6.4 times as long as wide. Cephalothorax subrectangular, tapering towards anterior with slight triangular rostrum, 1.2 times as long as wide, about as long as pereonites 1 and 2 together, naked, eyes absent. Pereonite margins parallel, pereonite 1 shortest, 0.4 times as long as cephalothorax; pereonites 2 to 5 subequal, 0.8 times as long as cephalothorax, pereonite 6 shorter, 0.6 times as long as pereonite 5 (all pereonites respectively 2.4, 1.4, 1.4, 1.3, 1.4 and 1.7 times as wide as long). Pleon with five free subequal pleonites bearing pleopods; each pleonite 5.8 times as wide as long. Pleotelson pentangular, one-third length of pleon and twice as wide as long, with four small distal setae (
Fig. 110I
).
Antennule (
Fig. 109A
) of three articles, proximal article 5.2 times as long as wide, 1.8 times as long as distal two articles together, with row of three strong inner-dorsal setae, outer margin with tufts of one simple and two or three penicillate setae at mid-length and distally; second article nearly twice as long as wide, 0.4 times as long as third article, with single inner distal penicillate and longer simple setae; third article tapering, 0.4 times as long as first article, with five simple and one penicillate distal setae.
Antenna (
Fig. 109B
) of six articles, proximal article compact, naked; second article stout, as long as wide, with dorsodistal seta longer than article; third article shorter than wide, with fine dorsodistal seta; fourth article longest, ten times as long as wide, curved, with one simple and one penicillate distal setae; fifth article one-quarter as long as fourth with one distal seta; sixth article minute with four distal setae.
Labrum (
Fig. 109C
) rounded, hood-shaped, distally setose. Left mandible (
Fig. 109D
) with subtriangular pars incisiva and wide, crenulate lacinia mobilis, right mandible (
Fig. 109E
) without lacinia mobilis; pars molaris of both mandibles with strong, rounded tooth-like protrusions around distal margin. Labium (
Fig. 109H
) simple, finely setose on outer margins. Maxillule (
Fig. 109F
) with eight distal spines, palp (
Fig. 109
F') with two distal setae. Maxilla (
Fig. 109G
) ovoid, naked. Maxilliped palp (
Fig. 109I
) first article naked, second article with one outer and three inner setae, distal of these finely denticulate in distal half; third article with four inner setae in distal half of article, two of these finely denticulate in distal half; fourth article with five inner to distal setae, four of these finely denticulate in distal half, and one outer subdistal seta; basis with single, long seta reaching distal margin of endites; endites distally with two setae and two slight tubercles, outer distal margin slightly denticulate. Epignath (
Fig. 109J
) elongate, linguiform, naked.
Cheliped(
Fig.110A
)with rounded basis reaching pereonite 1 ventrally, 1.2 times as long as wide, with single dorsodistal seta; merus subtriangular with single ventral seta; carpus elongate, three times as long as wide, with two midventral setae of markedly unequal length, one fine ventrodistal seta, and row of eight setae along dorsal margin; propodus slender, curved, twice as long as wide, fixed finger 0.73 times as long as palm, with two ventral setae, three setae on cutting edge; dactylus with fine proximal seta.
Pereopod 1 (
Fig. 110B
) longer than others, coxal apophysis large, triangular, pointed, with seta; basis arcuate, slender, nearly six times as long as wide, with six simple setae along dorsal margin; ischium compact, with ventral seta two-thirds as long as merus; merus 0.4 times as long as basis, with three simple distal setae; carpus just shorter than merus with distal crown of eight simple setae; propodus 1.5 times as long as carpus, with three dorsal subdistal setae, longer ventral subdistal seta; short, stout dactylus with proximal seta longer than dactylus, slender unguis 2.6 times as long as dactylus, both together 0.9 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 2 (
Fig. 110C
), coxa similar to that of pereopod 1, basis 3.3 times as long as wide, with midventral seta and eight setae along dorsal margin; ischium with seta only half as long as merus; merus 0.25 times as long as basis, with single dorsal and two ventral distal simple setae, and dense field of microtrichia across ventral and ventrolateral surfaces in distal two-thirds; carpus 1.4 times as long as merus, with distal crown of eight setae and dense field of microtrichia across ventral and ventrolateral surfaces in distal two-thirds; propodus 1.6 times as long as carpus, with two dorsal subdistal setae, longer ventral subdistal seta, and fields of microtrichia; short, stout dactylus with proximal seta longer than dactylus, slender unguis longer than dactylus, both together 0.4 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 3 compact (
Fig. 110D
), similar to pereopod 2, basis with six dorsal marginal setae; merus with three ventrodistal setae.
Fig. 108.
Typhlotanais herthio
sp. nov.
, female holotype. A, dorsal view; B, lateral view. Scale = 1.0 mm.
Fig. 109.
Typhlotanais herthio
sp. nov.
, female paratype. A, antennule; B, antenna; C, labrum; D, left mandible; E, right mandible; F, maxillule endite; F' maxillule palp; G, maxilla; H, labium; I, maxilliped; J, epignath. Scale = 0.1 mm.
Fig. 110.
Typhlotanais herthio
sp. nov.
, female. A, cheliped; B, pereopod 1; C, pereopod 2; D, pereopod 3; E, pereopod 4; F, pereopod 5; G, pereopod 6; H, pleopod; I, uropod-6. Scale = 0.1 mm.
Pereopod 4 (
Fig. 110E
) basis stout, 2.1 times as long as wide, with simple mid-dorsal seta and two penicillate setae near ventrodistal corner; ischium with two ventrodistal setae; merus 0.8 times as long as carpus, with field of microtrichia across ventral and ventrolateral surfaces in distal two-thirds, and two small ventrodistal spines; carpus with robust distal molar spine, two simple mid-dorsal and one dorsodistal setae, and “prickly tubercle” (
sensu
Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, 2007
) surrounded by minute spines in ventrodistal half; propodus 1.5 times as long as carpus, with fields of microtrichia, mid-dorsal penicillate seta, strong dorsodistal seta, and two ventrodistal dentiform spines; dactylus slender, with fields of microtrichia, three times as long as curved unguis, both together longer than propodus. Pereopod 5 (
Fig. 110F
) as pereopod 4, but carpus with mid-dorsal and dorsodistal spines. Pereopod 6 (
Fig. 110G
) as pereopod 5, but basis without penicillate setae, propodus with three dorsodistal setae.
Pleopods (
Fig. 110H
) all alike, with naked basis, exopod shorter than endopod; endopod and exopod without setae on inner margin, outer margins with respectively 15 and 21 plumose setae, proximal seta on both rami separated from others.
Uropod (
Fig. 110I
) biramous, basis naked; exopod and endopod of one segment, exopod shorter than endopod, with one fine proximal, one slender and one stouter distal setae; endopod with four slender, one stouter and one penicillate distal setae.
Male.
Unknown.
Etymology
. From the Anglo-Saxon
haer
– hairy, and
thioh
– the thigh, alluding to the density of dorsal marginal setae on the bases of the anterior pereopods, which distinguish this species most evidently from the other species of the
greenwichensis
- group of
Typhlotanais
sensu
lato
; noun in apposition
Remarks
. With the pronounced coxal spurs on the anterior pereopods, the curving carpus-propodus and the dorsal marginal spines on the carpus of the cheliped, and the prickly tubercles on the posterior carpi, this species fits into the
“
greenwichensis
-group” of Błażewicz-Paszkowycz (2007). The two described species of this group are
T. greenwichensis
Shiino, 1970
, from the Antarctic-Subantarctic, and
T. messinensis
Sars, 1882
from the Mediterranean.
Typhlotanais greenwichensis
differs from
T. herthio
sp. nov.
in being more elongate (nearly seven times as long as wide), with a less-slender proximal article to the antennule (four times as long as wide), and, most obviously, has only a few dorsal marginal setae on the pereopods 1 to 3 (4, 4 and 3 respectively).
T. messinensis
is quite distinct in having a more compact proximal peduncle article to the antennule (three times as long as wide), and two-segmented rami on the uropods.
Typhlotanais herthio
was collected sporadically through the Bass Strait, from sandy substrata at depths between 81 and
115 m
.