Jassa (Crustacea: Amphipoda): a new morphological and molecular assessment of the genus
Author
Conlan, Kathleen E.
0000-0002-2263-7075
kconlan@nature.ca
Author
Desiderato, Andrea
0000-0002-2263-7075
kconlan@nature.ca
Author
Beermann, Jan
0000-0002-2263-7075
kconlan@nature.ca
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-03-04
4939
1
1
191
journal article
7102
10.11646/zootaxa.4939.1.1
ee8e66ff-2f2c-47e2-978b-be52996d5b0f
1175-5326
4580622
F33F42D0-A139-4CE3-97D7-1314C12CF86B
Jassamonodon
(
Heller, 1866
)
(
Table 11
,
Figs 56–59
)
Podocerus monodon
Heller, 1866
, pp. 45–46
, plate IV, figs. 4, 5; not
J. falcata
:
Krapp-Schickel (1974)
, p. 344.
Diagnosis.
Mandibular palp
: article 2, dorsal margin without a fringeof setae.
Maxilla 1
: state unknown.
Gnathopod 1
: basis, anterolateral margin without a setal fringe along its length; carpus without a seta or cluster of setae at the anterodistal junction of the propodus.
Gnathopod 2
: basis with 5–7 widely spaced setae along the anterolateral margin (setal length 1/2 to 2/3 the width of the basis); carpus and propodus, setae on the anterior margin short and simple (setal length <basis width).
Pereopods 5–7
: propodus not expanded anteriorly.
Uropod 1
: ventral peduncular spinous process underlying about 1/3 of the longest ramus.
Uropod 3
: inner ramus without spines mid-dorsally (with only the single apical spine).
FIGURE 56
.
Jassamonodon
(
Heller, 1866
)
. Holotype, subadult male, 5 mm, CR 20619. Lesina (Hvar, Croatia), 1865, C. Heller, coll. (NHMW). Left side of body with magnification of the left second gnathopod. Photographs by Peter Dworschak (NHMW) with adjustments by S. Laurie-Bourque.
FIGURE 57.
Jassa monodon
(
Heller, 1866
)
. Holotype, subadult male, 5 mm, CR 20619. Lesina (Hvar, Croatia), 1865, C. Heller, coll. (NHMW). Right side of body with magnifications of the right antennae 1 and 2, left pereopod 3 or 4, right or left pereopod 7 and third uropods and telson as viewed from the right side. Photographs of the appendage magnifications by K.E. Conlan (CMN). Photograph of uropod magnification by Peter Dworschak (NHMW). Photograph adjustments by S. Laurie-Bourque.
FIGURE 58
.
Jassamonodon
(
Heller, 1866
)
. Adult male, major form, length unknown, CR 20621. Lesina (Hvar, Croatia), 1865, C. Heller, coll. (NHMW). Left side of body with magnification of the left second gnathopod. Photographs by Peter Dworschak (NHMW) with adjustments by S. Laurie-Bourque.
FIGURE 59.
Jassamonodon
(
Heller, 1866
)
. Adult male, major form, length unknown, CR 20621. Lesina (Hvar, Croatia), 1865, C. Heller, coll. (NHMW). Right side of body with magnification of the right second gnathopod. Photographs by Peter Dworschak (NHMW) with adjustments by S. Laurie-Bourque.
Telson
: tip with 1–2 apical setae in addition to the usual short setae at each dorsolateral cusp.
Condition.
Without left gnathopod 1, right pereopods 5–7 and left pereopod 5. Right antennae 1 and 2, left pereopods 3, 4 and 7 broken from the animal but present in the vial.
Thumbed male:
Antenna 2
: missing (subadult, peduncular article 5 with long filter setae; flagellum with short brush setae (not plumose setae)).
Gnathopod 2
: propodus, palmar defining spines absent in the major form, thumb long, more than half the length of the propodus and distally acute. Dactyl expanded close to the junction with the propodus but not centrally toothed. Minor form unknown.
Condition.
Without right and left antennae 1 and 2 and pereopods 5–7.
Adult female:
unknown.
Remarks.
Jassa monodon
was first described by
Heller (1866)
as
Podocerus monodon
, based on a subadult male specimen collected at Lesina (Hvar,
Croatia
). No information on depth or substrate was given. This specimen is in the crustacean collection of the Naturhistorisches Museum Wien (NHMW 20619) and was examined by one of us (KC) in
November 2018
.
Krapp-Schickel (1974)
had previously examined this specimen and called it a female
Jassa falcata
. Asecond specimen of
Jassa monodon
(NHMW 20621) was also found in Heller’s collection from Lesina and named
Podocerus pulchellus
in
Heller (1866)
and
Krapp-Schickel (1974)
. This specimen is a major form thumbed male. These are the only two specimens known for this species. Due to their type status and fragility, the specimens could not be measured for body length or dissected for line drawing.
Heller (1866)
recorded the length of the
holotype
subadult male as
5 mm
. The length of the major form adult male was not recorded.
Jassa monodon
has a unique combination of diagnostic characters (
Table 11
). Other species that currently occur in the vicinity of the
type
locality for
Jassa monodon
are
J. marmorata
,
J. slatteryi
and
J. morinoi
(
Figs 1–6
,
9
). The European
J. pusilla
and
J. falcata
are not known to occur in the Mediterranean Sea. The European
J. herdmani
has been found in the western part of the Mediterranean Sea but not as far east as the Adriatic, where
J. monodon
was collected.
Tables 10
and
11
show the key distinguishing characters for these species.
Possibly the “
Podocerus falcatus
” described from Trieste,
Italy
by
Nebeski (1880)
was
J. monodon
mixed with
J. marmorata
. In interpreting this study,
Sexton and Reid (1951)
suggested that
Nebeski (1880)
was dealing with both a “Broad-form” and a ʺNarrow-form”.
Conlan (1990)
identified Sexton and Reid’s Broad-form as
J. marmorata
and their Narrow-form as being
J. falcata
or
J. herdmani
, but did not know of
J. monodon
’s characteristics at the time. Both
J. marmorata
and
J. monodon
were known from the vicinity of Trieste in the 19
th
century (Table 3,
Figs 1
and
9
).