A revision of the genus Paraleptognathia Kudinova-Pasternak, 1981 (Crustacea: Tanaidacea) and description of four new species
Author
Guerrero-Kommritz, Jürgen
text
Zootaxa
2004
2004-04-02
481
1
1
63
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.481.1.1
journal article
4855
10.11646/zootaxa.481.1.1
83833785-9beb-4d2f-8448-5657c8400fca
11755334
5030070
8B7F424B-FED5-4EEC-955E-1886C252909B
Paraleptognathia benguela
n. sp.
(
Figs 22
,
23
)
Material examined: 18 individuals.
Holotype
ZMH
K40618
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 340,
two females
.
Paratypes
ZMB
27520,
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 346,
three females
,
ZMUC
CRU 3961
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 325,
two females
,
ZMH
K40619
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 340,
two females
,
ZMH
K40620
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 345,
one female
,
ZMH
K40621
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 344,
three females
,
ZMH
K40622
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 340,
one juvenile
male,
ZMH
K40623
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 348,
one female
,
ZMH
K40624
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 325,
one female
,
ZMH
K40625
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 338,
one female
,
ZMH
K 40626
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 348,
one female
,
ZMH
K40627
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 345,
one female
.
Diagnosis: Carpal shield well developed. Pereopod 1, 2, 3 with spinules on merus, carpus and propodus.
Description: nonovigerous female. Body (
Fig. 22a, b
): long, about 7.3 times longer than broad. Body length 1.5 to 4.0 mm. Cephalothorax (
Fig. 22a, b
): about 1.3 times longer than broad. Pereon (
Fig. 22a, b
): pereonite 1 as long as pereonite 6; pereonite 5 as long as pereonite 2 and longer than 6, pereonite 4 longer than 2 and shorter than 3; pereonite 3 longest. Pleon (
Fig. 22a, b
): pleonites of equal length, pleotelson with pointed apex.
Antennule (
Fig. 22c
): article 1 longest, with one long and three short setae; article 2 with one long simple and two short simple setae; article 3 shortest, with two terminal simple setae; article 4 with five terminal setae.
Antenna (
Fig. 22d
): article 1 short, semifused to cephalothorax; article 2 as long as wide, with one short spiniform seta dorsally; article 3 with one simple distal seta; article 4 longest, with two distal simple long, two distal short and one short simple setae at midlength; article 5 with one simple long distal seta; article 6 shortest, with five terminal simple setae.
Labrum (
Fig. 23d
): hoodshaped, with row of setules on lateral margins.
Mandible (
Fig. 23c
): well calcified; pars molaris bent ventrally; lacinia mobilis spiniform and blunt.
Maxillula (
Fig. 23a
): endite with three rows of ventral setules, four rows of dorsal setules, with one simple and eight pinnate terminal spiniform setae.
FIGURE 22.
Paraleptognathia benguela
ZMH
K40618 a. Body, dorsal view, b. Body, lateral view. Scale bar 1mm. ZMH K40619 c. Antennule, d. Antenna, e. Uropod, f. Pleopod, g. Cheliped, h. Pereopod 1, i. Pereopod 2, j. Pereopod 3, k. Pereopod 4, l. Pereopod 5, m. Pereopod 6. Scale bar 0.25 mm.
FIGURE 23.
Paraleptognathia benguela
ZMH
K40619 a. Maxillula, b. Epignath, c. Mandibles, d. Labrum, e. Labium, f. Maxilla, g. Maxilliped. Scale bar 0.1 mm.
Maxilla (
Fig. 23f
): rectangular, with a row of setules on distal edge.
Labium (
Fig. 23e
): composed of two triangular lobes with row of setules at distal edge.
Maxilliped (
Fig.
23g
): endites not fused, with a distal tubercle, basis tongshaped.
Epignath (
Fig. 23b
): with no special features.
Cheliped (
Fig.
22g
): basis as long as carpus; merus with ventral simple seta; carpus with a ventral and a dorsal simple setae; carpal shield well developed, about one third of carpus; propodus smooth, with two teeth at cutting edge; dactylus smooth.
Pereopod 1 (
Fig. 22h
): coxa naked; basis twice as long as broad, with two simple setae; ischium short, with one simple seta; merus with a ventral and a dorsal row of spinules and one spiniform seta; carpus as long as merus, with a ventral and a dorsal row of spinules, and two spiniform setae; propodus with ventral and dorsal row of spinules, one terminal spine and terminal short spiniform seta; dactylus as long as propodus.
Pereopod 2 (
Fig. 22i
): as pereopod 1, except basis naked, merus and propodus lack dorsal rows of spinules, carpus with three spiniform setae.
Pereopod 3 (
Fig. 22j
): as pereopod 2, except carpus lacks dorsal rows of spinules, and only two spiniform setae.
Pereopod 4 (
Fig. 22k
): basis three times as long as broad, naked; ischium short, with one simple seta; merus with two spiniform setae; carpus with three spiniform setae; propodus with two terminal spiniform setae; dactylus with no special features.
Pereopod 5 (
Fig. 22l
): as pereopod 4, except basis with three simple setae; merus with two spiniform setae, propodus with three terminal spiniform setae, dactylus with larger spinules as in pereopod 4 and 6.
Pereopod 6 (
Fig.
22m
): as pereopod 4, except propodus with four terminal spiniform setae.
Pleopods (
Fig. 22f
): exopod with eight simple long setae, endopod with seven simple long setae.
Uropods (
Fig. 22e
): exopod half the length of article 1 of endopod. Exopod article 1 with one simple seta; article 2 with one terminal simple seta. Article 1 of endopod with two simple setae; article 2 with six terminal setae.
Juvenile males body length
3.32 mm
.
Mancas up to
1.5 mm
.
Type
locality:
South Atlantic Ocean
,
Angola
Basin
,
RV
”Meteor” 48 St. 340 18° 77.3´S 04° 41.2´E–
18° 19.4´S
04° 41.9´E
,
5395 m
.
Etymology: the name refers to the
Benguela
Current that flows on top of the
Angola
Basin.
Distribution: South Atlantic Ocean,
Angola
Basin.
Remarks: this species resembles
P. bacescui
but the presence of spinules on the merus and carpus of P1 to P3 on
P. benguela
distinguish them. A detailed analysis of the
type
of
P. bacescui
is needed to define these two species more properly.