Contribution to the systematics of the genus Eurythenes S. I. Smith in Scudder, 1882 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea: Eurytheneidae)
Author
D’Acoz, Cédric D’Udekem
Author
Havermans, Charlotte
text
Zootaxa
2015
3971
1
1
80
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3971.1.1
28ab0d98-ed65-4875-af05-94c47f4c6d8f
1175-5326
288816
61D379B9-D9BA-41FB-B6A9-57BF87131B42
Superfamily
Lysianassoidea
Dana, 1849
Type
genus.
Eurythenes
S.I. Smith
in Scudder, 1882.
Generic composition.
Monotypic.
Description.
See
Stoddart & Lowry (2004)
.
Remarks.
During the past two decades, Lowry and his collaborators have split the old family Lysianassidaeelevated to the rank of superfamily Lysianassoidea—into a large number of new families. In their studies, a largely phenetic approach was applied, in the sense that each group of taxa sharing distinctive characters was automatically assigned to a separate family or genus, without attempting to unravel the deep interrelationships between taxa. In one case, they even rejected taxa definitions based on phylogenetic analyses (
Lowry & Kilgallen 2014: discussion on
Pseudorchomene
). In the course of this division process,
Stoddart & Lowry (2004)
erected the monotypic family
Eurytheneidae
for the genus
Eurythenes
. Recent works such as
Havermans
et al.
(2010
,
2011
),
d'Udekem d'Acoz & Havermans (2012)
and
Corrigan
et al
. (2014)
have shown that an important part of traditional or semiphenetic classifications of lysianassoid amphipods are not supported by molecular phylogenies. Therefore, the validity (and the composition) of the family
Eurytheneidae
remains an open question, as indeed for many other lysianassoid families. Future molecular phylogenies involving a larger number of lysianassoid taxa and a higher number of genetic markers will probably help to solve such issues, but for the time being, with limited data at hand, the family
Eurytheneidae
is accepted. The question of its delimitation is another issue to be solved. Should the
Eurytheneidae
remain restricted to
Eurythenes
as proposed by
Stoddart & Lowry (2004)
or should the family be expanded to include other genera? In a recent multigene phylogenetic study including 15 scavenger lysianassoid taxa,
Corrigan
et al.
(2014)
have shown that
Eurythenes
forms a clade together with the genera
Cyclocaris
,
Paralicella
and
Stephonyx
. While these genera exhibit significant morphological differences, they also share similarities, such as a reduction of coxa 1, which might be synapomorphies. To visualise the differences between these genera and
Eurythenes
, see for instance the illustrations of
Cyclocaris
given by
G.O. Sars (1900)
,
Lowry & Stoddart (2011)
and
Horton & Thurston (2014)
, those of
Paralicella
by Barnard & Ingram (1990), and those of
Stephonyx
by
Diffenthal & Horton (2007)
,
Narahara
et al.
(2012)
and
Lowry & Kilgallen (2014)
. If further molecular studies based on a larger number of taxa confirm the existence of a cluster of genera surrounding
Eurythenes
, it would be logical to expand the definition of
Eurytheneidae
to include these additional genera. This would imply the relegation of the monotypic family Cyclocarididae
Lowry & Stoddart, 2011
(
type
genus:
Cyclocaris
) to the rank of junior synonym of
Eurytheneidae
Stoddart & Lowry, 2004
.