Redescription of the monotypic micro-predatory isopod genera Alitropus H. Milne Edwards, 1840 and Barybrotes Schioedte & Meinert, 1879 (Isopoda, Cymothoida), with a taxonomic key to the Cymothooidea Leach, 1814 from India
Author
Vigneshwaran, P.
Author
Ravichandrana, S.
Author
Kumar Ajith ,, T. T.
text
Journal of Natural History
2022
2022-02-15
55
45 - 46
2909
2934
journal article
20600
10.1080/00222933.2021.2008542
b6d9068b-d3c3-40f7-9ca1-b79940072254
1464-5262
6127624
Genus
Barybrotes
Schioedte and Meinert, 1879
Barybrotes
Schioedte and Meinert, 1879: 280
. —
Hansen, 1890: 402
. —
Richardson, 1910: 8
. —
Thielemann, 1910: 94
. —
Nierstrasz, 1931: 177
. —
Barnard, 1936: 154
. —
Pillai, 1954: 8
. —
Pillai 1967: 278
. —
Brandt and Poore, 2003: 898
. —
Kensley, 2001
.
Type
species.
Barybrotes indus
Schioedte and Meinert, 1879
by monotypy.
Types
held in the Zoological Museum, Natural History Museum of
Denmark
, University of Copenhagen.
Diagnosis.
Bruce (2009)
provided a provisional diagnosis for the family
Barybrotidae
; the genus diagnosis is as for the family.
Remarks.
The family
Barybrotidae
is monotypic with a single genus and species,
Barybrotes
Schioedte and Meinert, 1879
.
Barybrotes
can be identified by the elongate body; large eyes; antero-median rostrum which separates the bases of the antennae, not concealing them; the morphology of the mouthparts and the long natatory setae on the pereopods; maxilla is a minute single lobe lacking robust setae, maxilliped with only four palp articles, with article 2 elongate; and the mandible incisor retains the cirolanid form, being wide and tridentate, though somewhat narrower; pereopods 1–3 forming a strong hook, and all seven pairs by dilatation of the joints or garniture of setae are auxiliary to swimming. This genus was first included under the family
Corallanidae
by
Schioedte and Meinert (1879)
. Two species,
Baryhrotes indus
and
Baryhrotes
agilis
, were instituted by the authors of the genus.
Hansen (1890)
created a new family
Barybrotidae
for this genus and found that these species are one and the same; he adopted the name
agilis
as the most significant, but
indus
has precedence in the original authority. Similarly, according to
Stebbing (1893)
, they are synonymous and the name
indus
has precedence. Schioedte and Meinert state that the male has a styliform appendage on the inner side of the inner branch of the second, third and fourth pleopods, which would be a truly remarkable feature. But
Hansen (1890)
, who has examined the
type
specimens, declared that neither here nor in any other isopod does such an appendage occur on the third and fourth pleopods; it is limited, here as elsewhere, to the second. A notable feature in the species is that the seventh segment of the pereion is almost entirely concealed.
Bruce (2009)
stated that the numerous characters strongly suggest the genus
Barybrotes
evolved from a
Natatolana-
like cirolanid ancestor. Differences in the morphology of the antennule peduncle, frontal lamina and pleopod setation prevent its inclusion in
Natatolana
, and there are several characters, normally regarded as invariable, in which
Barybrotes
differs from
Natatolana
. These variations are noted in the diagnostic and additional characters presented above and include the relative lengths of the peduncular articles of the antennule and the setation of the endopod of the pleopods.