Resolving taxonomic and nomenclatural problems in the genus Caligus O. F. Müller, 1785 (Copepoda: Caligidae)
Author
Boxshall, Geoffrey A.
Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK
Author
Bernot, James P.
Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC, 20560, USA Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269, USA
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-10-30
5360
4
545
567
https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5360.4.5/52133
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5360.4.5
1175-5326
10084656
EA1BE6F9-88E2-4357-895E-8ED415206592
Caligus lessonius
Risso, 1826
and
Demoleus heptapus
(Otto, 1821)
This species was established by
Risso (1826)
to accommodate a parasitic copepod found on “squale griset” caught in the Mediterranean. In their catalogue of
Caligus
species
,
Margolis
et al.
(1975)
listed the
type
host as
Hexanchus griseus
(Bonnaterre, 1788)
, the bluntnose sixgill shark.
Caligus lessonius
has not been reported since 1826 although it has been listed in regional compendia such as
Carus (1885)
and
Brian (1935)
, and in taxonomic compendia such as
Wilson (1905)
and
Yamaguti (1963)
, all of which misspelled the name as
Caligus lessonianus
.
Parker (1969)
noted that
C. lessonius
did not belong in
Caligus
but he did not specify where it should be placed, and this treatment was followed by
Margolis
et al.
(1975)
. In the absence of any formal transfer out of
Caligus
, this species has remained listed by the World of Copepods website (
Walter & Boxshall, 2023
).
The very brief original description by
Risso (1826)
comprises the following (translated from French): an oblong body with a yellow coloration traversed by a brown stripe; cephalothorax heart-shaped, convex, traversed by two longitudinal sutures and ornamented with 2 golden spots which are touching; the eyes are close together; the antennae are small and 3-segmented; the oral cone is long and pointed; there are 7 pairs of legs, the first are short and armed with a curved hook, the third are thick, and the last are ornamented with 2 claws; the abdomen is composed of 4 segments, the first 2 of which are equipped with foliaceus lamellae, and the last is very long and divided into 2 parts each carrying a canaliculate appendage at the base of which are 2 pieces surrounded by spines.
This description includes sufficient characters, especially the presence of foliaceous lamellae on two postcephalothoracic body segments, to recognise that this species should be transferred to the family
Pandaridae
. The brief description given by
Risso (1826)
conforms reasonably closely to that of
Demoleus heptapus
(Otto, 1821)
(cf.
Kabata, 1979
) and this species is known principally as an external parasite of
Hexanchus
Rafinesque, 1810 species (
Cressey, 1967
)
. We consider it likely that
Caligus lessonius
Risso, 1826
is a junior synonym of
Demoleus heptapus
(Otto, 1821)
.