Copepods (Cyclopoida) associated with ascidian hosts: Ascidicolidae, Buproridae, Botryllophilidae, and Enteropsidae, with descriptions of 84 new species
Author
Kim, Il-Hoi
m@gwnu
Author
Boxshall, Geoff A.
m@gwnu
text
Zootaxa
2021
1
1
286
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4978.1.1
1175-5326
4820443
9C7C1723-73EB-4FBE-A47A-54627DEB8F93
Family
Buproridae
Thorell, 1859
Diagnosis
(female). Body stout, consisting of distinct cephalosome and extremely inflated trunk. Rostrum with rounded apex. Abdomen extremely reduced to short lobe; caudal rami absent. Antennule 3- to 7-segmented; first segment bearing 2 setae. Antenna 3-segmented, with armature formula 1, 4, and 5 or 6. Labrum distinct. Mandible consisting of coxa with well-developed gnathobase and palp with 1 to 3 distal setae, or palp represented by seta. Maxillule consisting of precoxa and palp; precoxa with 6 or 7 spiniform setae on arthrite; palp unsegmented with 4 or 5 setae. Maxilla consisting of syncoxa with 1 large endite tipped with 2 elements, and allobasis with 4 or 5 elements. Maxilliped unsegmented, unarmed or armed with 4 setae. Legs 1-4 biramous with 2-segmented exopods; endopods 1-segmented in
Buprçrus
and 2-segmented in
Buprçrẚdes
gen. nov.
; coxa unarmed; basis of leg 1 with or without inner distal element. Leg 5 unsegmented, extending beyond posterior margin of abdomen and armed distally with several setae.
Remarks.
The family
Buproridae
was established by
Thorell (1859)
to accommodate his new monotypic genus,
Buprçrus
Thorell, 1859
. However, in their comprehensive revision of the family
Ascidicolidae, Illg
&
Dudley
(1980)
accorded this taxon subfamily status, as the Buprorinae. They considered that the antenna of all the other subfamilies within the ascidicolid series could be derived from a limb exhibiting the basic structure of the antenna in
Buprçrus
(Illg &
Dudley
, 1980
).
Marchenkov & Boxshall (2002)
compared the antennal segmentation patterns across all subfamilies of
Ascidicolidae
and showed that the ancestral first and second endopodal segments of the antenna are fused in
Buprçrus
and the third endopodal segment is free, and that the main flexure plane of the limb lies between the basis and endopod. In contrast, in all of the other subfamilies the third endopodal segment is fused with the second and the main flexure plane of the limb lies between the ancestral first and second endopodal segments. Based primarily on this difference,
Marchenkov & Boxshall (2002)
treated the
Buproridae
as a family level taxon.
Until the present account, the
Buproridae
remained a monotypic family represented only by the genus
Buprçrus
. The genus
Buprçrus
currently consists of three species:
B
.
lçvenẚ
Thorell, 1859
known from Scandinavian waters and from off
Mauritania
in the eastern North Atlantic (
Thorell, 1859
;
Marchenkov & Boxshall, 2002
) and from the Atlantic coast of America in the western North Atlantic (Dudley & Illg, 1991),
B
.
nçrdgaardẚ
G.O.
Sars, 1921
known from
Norway
(
Sars, 1921
), and
B
.
caudatus
Illg &
Dudley, 1980
known from southern California on the Pacific coast of America (Illg &
Dudley, 1980
).