Oedicerotidae *
Author
Hughes, L. E.
Author
Lowry, J. K.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2009-10-08
2260
1
746
758
https://www.biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.2260.1.40
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.2260.1.40
1175-5326
5307044
Monoculodes tropicalis
sp. nov.
(
Figs 3
,
4
)
Type material.
Holotype
, female (dissected), 4 slides, 6.0 mm,
AM
P78134,
Blue Lagoon
,
Lizard Island
,
Queensland
,
Australia
(~
14°40’S
145°28’E
), plankton tow, night, no moon,
6 m
,
J.M. Leis
,
20 October 1979
(
JML 20-10
-
1
)
.
Paratypes
: 3 unsexed,
AM
P78135 (
JML 20-10
-
1
)
.
Additional material examined
. 1 unsexed,
AM
P28309 (HI-3); 16 unsexed,
AM
P28310 (HI-3); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78136 (78
LIZ
PBW-2); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78137 (78
LIZ
PBW-6); 8 unsexed,
AM
P78138 (
JDT
/
OPH
6c); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78139 (
JML
7-10-1); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78140 (
JML
7-10-2); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78141 (
JML
16-10-7); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78142 (
JML
16-10-8); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78143 (
JML
16-10-9); 2 unsexed,
AM
P78144 (
JML
20-10-2); 2 unsexed,
AM
P78145 (
QLD
33); 3 unsexed,
AM
P78147 (
QLD
63); 1 unsexed,
AM
P70873 (
QLD
1654); 1 unsexed,
AM
P78148 (
QLD
1900); 2 unsexed,
AM
P78149 (
QLD
1922); 3 unsexed,
AM
P78150.
Type
locality.
Blue Lagoon
,
Lizard Island
,
Great Barrier Reef
,
Queensland
,
Australia
(~
14°40’S
145°28’E
)
.
Etymology.
The name signals the first record of
Monoculodes
from the tropical Indo-West Pacific.
Description.
Based on
holotype
, female (dissected), 6.0 mm, AM P78134.
Head
.
Head
rostrum well developed, broad, strongly deflexed, apically acute; eyes ovate, coalesced at top of head, situated fully within head; lateral cephalic lobe truncate.
Antenna 1
peduncle sparsely setose; peduncular article 1 without tooth, longer than article 2, longer than article 3; peduncular article 3 elongate, subequal to article 2; flagellum without callynophore, without calceoli.
Antenna 2
peduncle sparsely setose; calceoli with separated proximal and distal elements, proximal element convex, turret-shaped, broad lamellar receptacle with two apical cusps.
Mandible
molar well developed, triturative; left incisor a straight weakly serrate blade; palp elongate, article 2 straight, article 3 slightly shorter than article 2, with many marginal setae.
Lower lip
inner lobes separated.
Maxilla 1
outer plate with 9 setal-teeth.
Maxilla 2
inner plate without oblique setal row.
Maxilliped
inner plate present; palp article 2 expanded along midmedial margin.
Pereon
.
Gnathopods 1–2
well developed; propodi similar in shape, subchelate.
Gnathopod 1
subequal to gnathopod 2; carpal lobe short (extending less than half the length of the propodus), broad (as broad as long), divergent from propodus margin; propodus ovate, posterodistal margin smooth, palm acute, margin smooth.
Gnathopod 2
carpus elongate, longer than broad, carpal lobe short (extending less than half the length of propodus), broad (as broad as long), divergent from propodus margin; propodus ovate (about 2 x as long as broad), posterodistal margin smooth, palm acute margin smooth, setose.
Pereopods 3–4
carpi shorter than propodi; propodi posterior margins without setae, dactyli well developed, shorter than propodi, without apical setae.
Pereopod 3
coxa anterior margin rounded, anteroventral corner not produced, ventral margin convex.
Pereopod 4
coxa posterior margin excavate, with posteroventral lobe.
Pereopods 5–6
similar in form; propodi posterior margins sparsely setose; dactyli slender, tapering, each with circular unguis.
Pereopod 5
coxa small, depth distinctly less than coxa 4; dactylus longer than propodus.
Pereopod 6
dactylus longer than propodus.
Pereopod 7
basis with posteroproximal lobe, posterior margin straight, posterodistal lobe absent.
Pleon
.
Epimeron 3
posterodistal corner narrowly rounded to subquadrate.
Uropod 1
subequal in length to uropod 2; peduncle, lateral margin with 19 robust setae; rami subequal in length, with small robust setae; inner ramus margins smooth.
Uropod 2
shorter than uropod 3; rami subequal in length, with small robust setae.
Uropod 3
greatly enlarged; rami subequal in length, with small robust setae.
Telson
entire, apically truncate, with apical setae.
Habitat.
Monoculodes tropicalis
sp. nov.
has been found swimming in the water column at night and on shallow coarse to fine sand bottoms (
1 to 17 m
) during the day.
Remarks.
According to
Bousfield & Chevrier (1996)
the genus
Monoculodes
is still poorly defined because of the limited description of the
type
species,
M. demissus
Stimpson, 1853
.
Monoculodes tropicalis
sp. nov.
is placed in
Monoculodes
(
sensu stricto
) based on the subsimilar gnathopods with short carpal lobes (
Bousfield & Chevrier 1996
).
Monoculodes tropicalis
differs significantly from the other Indo-West Pacific species of
Monoculodes
(
M. abacus
J.L.
Barnard, 1961
,
M. dentimanus
Jo, 1990
,
M. koreanus
Jo, 1990
,
M. muwoni
Jo, 1990
) as follows: gnathopods 1–2 propodi more broadly subovoid in shape, and pereopod 7 basis with posterior proximal lobe and without posterodistal lobe. The presence of calceoli on the flagellum of antenna 2 (
Fig. 3 A, B
) is apparently the first record of calceoli for the genus
Monoculodes
. The structure of the calceolus conforms to the oedicerotid
type
seven as described by
Lincoln & Hurley (1981)
with separated proximal and distal elements. The broad lamellar receptacle around the proximal element has two apical cusps like those noted on
Oediceropsis bicornuta
Bellan-Santini, 2007
. This appears to be the first
type
seven calceolus reported with a convex, turret-shaped proximal element. Previously documented oedicerotid calceoli have a concave cupshaped proximal element.
Monoculodes tropicalis
can be separated from other oedicerotids on the GBR by the short, subchelate gnathopods with subovoid propodi and short-lobed carpi.
Monoculodes tropicalis
is the first tropical species described in the genus.
Ledoyer (1984)
reported a single specimen of
Monoculodes
sp.
from
New Caledonia
, but did not illustrate or describe the material.
Distribution.
Australia
.
Queensland
: Goodes and Hawkesbury Islands, Torres Strait (current study); Eagle and Lizard Islands (current study); Fantome Island (current study); Heron Island (current study).