The genus Mallacoota (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Maeridae) in New Zealand
Author
Kilgallen, Niamh M.
Author
Ahyong, Shane T.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2929
22
36
journal article
46563
10.5281/zenodo.202529
8f3fae26-629f-4038-9597-739ddbb266dc
1175-5326
202529
Mallacoota chiltoni
sp. nov.
(
Figs 1–3
)
Moera petriei
. —
Chilton 1883
: 82
, pl. 2 fig. 4. [Not
M. petriei
Thomson, 1882
].
Moera subcarinata
. —
Chilton 1884
: 230
; 1885b: 369 [Lyttelton specimens].
Elasmopus subcarinatus
. —
Chilton 1915
: 321
, figs 5–6 [“form 2”].
Maera subcarinata
. —
Hurley 1954
: 603
(list, in part).
Mallacoota subcarinata
. —
Barnard 1972b
: 114
, figs 59, 60.
Mallacoota nananui
. — Webber
et al.
2010: 220 [not
M. nananui
Myers, 1985
].
Type
material.
Holotype
: male (15.0 mm),
NIWA
69797, Port Waitangi Wharf, Chatham Islands,
43°56.736’S
,
176°33.570’E
, pile scraping at
0.5 m
depth, bottom depth
5 m
, site 24,
CHT
288, 0
8 Feb 2007
.
Allotype
: female (
12.5 mm
),
NIWA
69788, same collection data as
holotype
.
Other
paratypes
:
1 male
(16.0 mm),
3 females
(11.5– 15.0 mm),
NIWA
69789, Port Waitangi Wharf, Chatham Islands,
43°56.758’S
,
176°33.602’E
, pile scraping at 3.0 m depth, bottom depth
5 m
, site 25,
CHT
310, 0
8 Feb 2007
;
1 female
(12.0 mm),
NIWA
68790, Point Weeding Bay, Chatham Islands,
43°57.677’S
,
176°34.937’E
,
6 m
, site 28,
CHT
352, 0
9 Feb 2007
.
Other material examined. Golden Bay:
1 male
(15.0 mm),
MITS
29464, Separation Point,
40°40.967’S
,
173°00.196’E
, site 18, GLD372, 0
6 Nov 2007
.
Kaikoura:
1 female
(15.0 mm),
MITS
25456,
42°26.448’S
,
173°41.962’E
,
11.9 m
, KBZ216,
18 May 2007
.
Dunedin:
1 male
(10.0 mm),
2 females
(8.5–10.0 mm),
MITS
34459,
45°48.839’S
,
170°37.723’E
,
11 m
, 2DUD245,
28 Feb 2006
;
3 males
(8.0–12.0 mm),
2 females
(9.0–
10.5 mm
),
MITS
4975,
45°48.839’S
,
170°37.723’E
,
10 m
, 2DUD253,
28 Feb 2006
;
1 male
(12.0 mm),
2 females
(6.0– 7.0 mm),
MITS
4747,
45°48.839’S
,
170°37.723’E
,
9 m
, 2DUD260,
28 Feb 2006
;
1 female
(11.0 mm),
MITS
4973,
45°48.839’S
,
170°37.723’E
,
9 m
, 2DUD261,
28 Feb 2006
;
18 males
(7.5–14.0 mm),
17 females
(8.0–
15.5 mm
),
MITS
4748,
45°48.839’S
,
170°37.723’E
,
9 m
, 2DUD263, 0
2 Mar 2006
.
Bluff:
1 female
(
10.5 mm
),
MITS
3823,
46°35.796’S
,
168°20.561’E
,
7 m
, 2BLU040,
14 Feb 2006
;
1 female
(12.0 mm),
MITS
3832,
46°35.484’S
,
168°20.976’E
,
7 m
, 2BLU093,
13 Feb 2006
;
1 male
(12.0 mm),
2 females
(9.5–13.0 mm),
46°35.656’S
,
168°20.377’E
,
MITS
3818, 7 m, 2BLU071,
14 Feb 2006
;
5 males
(8.0–
14.5 mm
),
4 females
(9.5–15.0 mm),
MITS
33452,
46°35.656’S
,
168°20.377’E
,
3 m
, 2BLU067,
14 Feb 2006
;
1 male
(14.0 mm),
5 females
(6.5–11.0 mm),
MITS
3829,
46°35.656’S
,
168°20.377’E
,
7 m
, 2BLU063,
14 Feb 2006
;
1 male
(8.0 mm),
4 females
(6.0–13.0 mm),
MITS
3817,
46°35.656’S
,
168°20.377’E
,
7 m
, 2BLU062,
14 Feb 2006
;
1 male
(9.0 mm),
1 female
(10.0 mm),
MITS
4020,
46°35.709’S
,
168°20.002’E
,
7.5 m
, 2BLU149,
16 Feb 2006
;
1 female
(
12.5 mm
),
MITS
3803,
46°35.656’S
,
168°20.377’E
,
3 m
, 2BLU072,
14 Feb 2006
;
1 male
(8.0 mm),
MITS
33450,
46°35.619’S
,
168°20.340’E
,
13.1 m
, 2BLU022,
13 Feb 2006
.
Stewart Island:
3 females
(8.0–13.0 mm),
MITS
17450, Horseshoe Bay jetty,
46°52.512’S
,
168°07.887’E
, site 10, quadrat scraping at
0.5 m
, STW181,
27 Sep 2006
.
FIGURE 1.
Mallacoota chiltoni
sp. nov.
Holotype male, 15.0 mm, NIWA 69787, from Chatham Islands, CHT288, 0 8 Feb 2007. Scale bars: a, 2.0 mm (habitus); b, 0.2 mm (mouthparts).
FIGURE 2.
Mallacoota chiltoni
sp. nov.
Holotype male, 15.0 mm, NIWA 69787, from Chatham Islands, CHT288, 0 8 Feb 2007. Allotype female ‘f’, 12.5 mm, NIWA 69788. Scale 0.4 mm.
Etymology.
Named for Charles Chilton who was the first to report this species from
New Zealand
, albeit misidentified as
Moera petriei
Thomson.
FIGURE 3.
Mallacoota chiltoni
sp. nov.
Holotype male, 15.0 mm, NIWA 69787, from Chatham Islands, CHT288, 0 8 Feb 2007. Scale: a, 0.4 mm (pereopods); b, 0.4 mm (uropods, antennae, telson).
Diagnosis.
Coxae 1–3 lacking posteroventral notch. Gnathopod 2 (male) propodus massive, not hirsute, slightly concave anterodistally, straight posteriorly; posterior margin of palm irregularly toothed for full length of occlusal surface; dactylus distally spatulate. Pereopod 5 basis posterior margin straight to slightly rounded; pereopod 6 basis posterior margin slightly concave; pereopod 7 basis posterior margin rounded posteriorly.
Description of
holotype
.
Body
laterally compressed.
Head
with notch below lateral cephalic lobe, rostrum absent.
Eyes
oval.
Antenna 1
longer than antenna 2; peduncle article 1 broader than and subequal in length to article 2, with 3 robust setae along distal half of ventral margin; article 2 slender, much longer than article 3; primary flagellum>40-articulate, article 1 slightly longer than following articles; accessory flagellum with 5 articles, article 5 minute.
Antenna 2
peduncle article 4 longer than article 5; flagellum article 1 slightly longer than following articles.
Upper lip
broader than long, entire.
Mandibles
with weakly triturative molar; palp small, slender, 3-articulate, article 3 with 2 or 3 medial and 2 apical slender setae; right incisor irregular, lacinia mobilis 8-dentate; left incisor smooth, lacinia mobilis 4-dentate (based on
14.5 mm
male, MITS 33452).
Lower lip
with inner lobes well developed; 2 robust setae on apex of outer lobes.
Maxilla 1
with 2-articulate palp; inner plate with 2 terminal spine-like processes, apparently with distal pore.
Maxilla 2
inner and outer plates slender, with terminal slender setae.
Maxilliped
palp 4-articulate; outer plate not reaching distal end of palp article 2, with numerous robust setae along inner and distal margins; inner plate shorter than outer plate with plumose setae along inner margin and simple setae along distal margin.
Gnathopod 1
subchelate; coxa anterior margin slightly concave, rounded distally, posteroventral corner lacking notch; carpus subequal in length to propodus; palm acute, slightly convex, defined by 2 robust setae posteriorly; dactyl fitting palm.
Gnathopod 2
massive, subchelate; basis with anterodistal lobe; carpus compressed, propodus enlarged, anterodistal margin slightly concave, posteroventral margin straight; posterior margin of palm irregularly toothed for full length of occlusal surface; dactylus spatulate.
Pereopods 3–7
dactyli with unguis tapering to acute apex.
Pereopod 5
moderately armed with long robust setae; basis longer than broad, slightly rounded posteriorly; merus expanded posteriorly; carpus much shorter than propodus.
Pereopod 6
strongly armed with long robust setae; basis longer than broad, slightly concave posteriorly; merus widely expanded posteriorly; carpus much shorter than propodus, widened distally.
Pereopod 7
strongly armed with long robust setae; basis longer than broad, rounded posteriorly; merus widely expanded posteriorly; carpus slightly shorter than propodus, widened distally.
Gills
present on gnathopod 2 to pereopod 6.
Epimeron 1
anterodistal corner narrowly rounded.
Epimeron 2
posterodistal corner produced to a small spine.
Epimeron 3
posterodistal corner producing spine.
Urosomite 1
dorsally bicarinate. Uropods prominently armed with robust setae.
Uropod 1
peduncle with a basofacial seta, peduncle slightly longer than rami; rami subequal in length.
Uropod 2
peduncle subequal in length to rami; rami subequal in length.
Uropod 3
peduncle much shorter than rami; rami subequal in length.
Telson
about as long as broad; deeply cleft (>66%); apices acutely bifid, with longer outer and shorter inner apical conical extensions and with long robust setae.
Description of female allotype (sexually dimorphic characters).
Gnathopod 2
subchelate, not enlarged; basis lacking anterodistal lobe; merus acutely produced posterodistally; carpus short, shorter than propodus; propodus palm acute, dactylus fitting palm.
Oostegites
slender from gnathopod 2 to pereopod 5.
Variation.
Gnathopod 2 of juvenile males differing slightly from adult males in having a narrower dactylus, slightly sharpened apically, and a more weakly sculptured palm.
Habitat.
Intertidal to at least
13.1 m
, amongst algal fouling, primarily rhodophytes. Algal species from which
M. chiltoni
was collected are as follows:
Chlorophyta—
Cladophora
sp.,
Ulva
sp.
Ochrophyta—
Carpophyllum
sp.,
Dictyota kunthii
,
Halopteris paniculata
,
Lessonia tholiformis
,
Macrocystis pyrifera
,
Marginariella
sp.,
Undaria pinnatifida, Zonaria
sp.
Rhodophyta—
Adamsiella chauvinii
,
Anotrichium crinitum
,
Asparagopsis armata
,
Brongniartella australis
,
Callophyllis atrosanguinea
,
Callophyllis variegata
,
Ceramium apiculatum
,
Ceramium flaccidum
,
Ceramium rubrum
,
Ceramium vestitum
,
Chondria
sp.,
Delesseria
sp.,
Dipterosiphonia heteroclada
,
Griffithsia crassiuscula
,
Griffithsia traversii
,
Gloiderma
saccatum,
Haraldiophyllum crispatum
,
Heterosiphonia concinna
,
Hymenena variolosa
,
Laingia hookeri
,
Medeiothamnion lyallii
,
Phycodrys quercifolia
,
Plocamium angustum
,
Plocamium cartilagineum
,
Plocamium cirrhosum
,
Plocamium microcladioides
,
Pugettia delicatissima
,
Rhodymenia obtusa
,
Rhodophyllis acanthocarpa
,
Schizoseris dichotoma
.
Distribution.
New Zealand
, from the Chatham Islands (
type
locality) and localities around the South Island including Bluff, Kaikoura, Golden Bay, Dunedin and Stewart Island.
Remarks.
Mallacoota chiltoni
sp. nov.
is common and widespread in South Island,
New Zealand
.
Chilton (1883)
first recorded it from Lyttelton Harbour as
Moera petriei
, a different species originally described by
Thomson (1882)
from Port Pegasus, Stewart Island. The following year
Chilton (1884)
placed
Moera petriei
in the synonymy of
Megamoera subcarinata
Haswell, 1879
, and from then the species underwent a series of name changes until placed in
Mallacoota
(
Barnard 1972a
)
.
Barnard (1972b)
reported
New Zealand
material of the species as
Mallacoota subcarinata
and noted that all belonged to ‘form 2’ as described by
Chilton (1915)
.
Lowry & Springthorpe (2005)
clarified the identity of
M. subcarinata
, which is clearly separated from
M. chiltoni
by the acute rather than rounded apex of the male gnathopod 2 dactylus.
Mallacoota chiltoni
has a southerly distribution in
New Zealand
. All known localities are south of the Subtropical Convergence, a general marine biogeographic ‘barrier’ recognised for many benthic (albeit usually deepwater) species (
Nodder
et al
. 2003
).
Myers (1985)
described
Mallacoota nananui
from
Fiji
, and the following year recorded it again from
Niue
Island (
Myers 1986
). In those studies, Myers considered
M. subcarinata
‘form 2’ reported from
New Zealand
(
Chilton 1915
;
Barnard 1972b
) to be identifiable with
M. nananui
. However, as
Lowry & Hughes (2009)
observed, the
New Zealand
specimens differ from
M. nananui
in the dentition of the male gnathopod 2 propodus palm and shape of the posterior margin (straight versus concave). These authors also mentioned the lack of a basofacial seta on
New Zealand
specimens as figured by
Barnard (1972b
: fig. 60h), but all material examined in this study have such a seta present. In addition, the anterodistal (extensor) margin of the male gnathopod 2 propodus is concave in
M. chiltoni
, whereas that of adult
M. nananui
is straight to slightly convex. Care should be taken, however, in separating small
M. nananui
from
M. chiltoni
.
The degree of concavity of the posterior (flexor) margin of the male gnathopod 2 propodal palm in
M. nananui
appears to increase allometrically, and in small specimens, the concavity is slight (
Fig. 4
A). Nevertheless, the extent of the palmar dentition appears to differ between
M. nananui
and
M. chiltoni
at all sizes, distinctly falling short of the dactyl tip (when occluded) in the former and extending the full length of the occlusal surface in the latter; and the ventral margin of the.
FIGURE 4.
Male gnathopod 2 dactylus and propodus. A,
Mallacoota nananui
Myers, 1985
, 6.3 mm, between Ilot des Goelands and Grand Recif Abore, New Caledonia, AM P47502;
Mallacoota
sp., B, 5.2 mm, Sandal Bay, Lifou, Loyalty Islands, AM P48000. Scale 0.2 mm.
Specimens from Sandal Bay, Lifou (AM P48000:
7 males
,
3.6–5.2 mm
;
7 females
,
2.4–4.5 mm
), closely resemble
M. chiltoni
in the slightly concave distodorsal margin and straight (or nearly straight) posterior margin of the of the gnathopod 2 propodus (
Fig. 4
B). The Lifou specimens might represent
M. chiltoni
, with the differences in mature male body size between Lifou and
New Zealand
specimens (
5.2 mm
versus 15.0 mm) reflecting Bergmann’s Rule. The Lifou specimens, however, also differ from
M. chiltoni
in having only a single ventrodistal robust seta on article 1 of the antennular peduncle (versus a row of 3 robust setae along the distal half of the ventral margin in
M. chiltoni
) and in the extent of the palmar dentition of gnathopod 2, which, as in
M. nananui
, falls short of the dactyl tip (when occluded) (versus extending the full length of the occlusal surface in
M. chiltoni
). The Lifou specimens probably represent an undescribed species.
Mallacoota latidactylus
Ledoyer, 1982
[
type
locality:
Madagascar
], and
M. worimi
Hughes, 2011
[
type
locality: Boondelbah Island, New South
Wales
] also exhibit the blunt, spatula-like male gnathopod 2 dactylus of
M. Chiltoni
.
Mallacoota latidactylus
can be distinguished by the posteroventral notches on coxae 1–3, the straight anterior margin of the male gnathopod 2 propodus, and the wellrounded posterior margin of the pereopod 7 basis.
Mallacoota worimi
is perhaps the most similar species to
M. chiltoni
but differs in the straight rather than concave anterior margin on the male gnathopod 2 propodus, with a proportionally much longer palm, and a convex posterior margin on the basis of pereopod 6.