Amathillopsidae (Crustacea: Amphipoda) from New Zealand, Including the Description of a New Species
Author
Lörz, Anne-Nina
Institute of Marine Ecosystem and Fishery Science (IMF), Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability (CEN), University of Hamburg, Grosse Elbstrasse 133, 22767 Hamburg, Germany
Author
Peart, Rachael A.
National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research, 301 Evans Bay Parade, 6021, Wellington, New Zealand
text
Records of the Australian Museum
2023
Rec. Aust. Mus.
2023-12-06
75
4
459
470
http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.2201-4349.75.2023.1885
journal article
10.3853/j.2201-4349.75.2023.1885
2201-4349
7132F634-86C3-47E7-A5D9-B0518D2AF97A
Amathillopsis
cf.
charlottae
Coleman, 1998
Figs 9–10
Type
locality
. Antarctic Peninsula,
66°33.10'S
68°41.90'W
, depth
607 m
,
Polarstern
cruise 42 ANT
XIV/2
, station 177, Agassiz-Trawl
.
Material examined
.
NIWA 84392
(figured) and
NIWA 156317
(
3 specimens
),
Canterbury
Basin
, east of
South Island
,
New Zealand
,
45.872°S
174.082°E
,
1676 m
,
NZOI
station S152,
26 October 1979
.
Diagnosis
. (Based on
Coleman, 1998
).
Head
with short rostrum, anteroventral angle deeply excavate, ocular lobe with short acute process, with ridge parallel to ventral margin; Pereonite 1 somewhat longer than 2 and 3. Pereonite 2–4 indistinctly keeled dorsally; pereonite 5 with short carina and 5 or 6 with long pointed, weakly posteriorly curved processes. Similar but slightly longer processes on pleonites 1–2 and a shorter one on pleonite 3, about half length of that on pleonite 2. Epimeral plate 1 ventrally truncate, obtuse posteroventrally; plate 2 posteroventrally acute, plates 1 and 2 laterally ridged; posterolateral margin of epimeral plate 3 sinuous, posteroventral angle acute. Urosomite 1 as long as segment 2 and 3 combined; urosomite 2 shortest; urosomite 3 with shallow keel, slightly overreaching posterior margin, with shallow depression in lateral view.
Distribution
. Southern
Canterbury
basin,
New Zealand
, Antarctic Peninsula.
Remarks
. While analysing the
Amathillopsidae
held in the NIWA collection, we encountered specimens collected off southeast
New Zealand
that were remarkably similar to
A. charlottae
, originally described by
Coleman (1998)
from the Weddell Sea. While
Coleman (1998)
stated that
A. charlottae
had no eyes “or pigments lost in alcohol”, the
New Zealand
material shows distinct small, round eyes. The lateral surface of the
New Zealand
material seems smoother than Coleman’s Antarctic material. The morphological differences between the
New Zealand
and the Weddell Sea specimens were too minute to establish a new species, and our attempts to secure DNA sequences failed. We therefore refer to the
New Zealand
specimens as
A.
cf.
charlottae
.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Specimens were collected as part of the project “PoribacNewZ” by the Insitut fur Chemie und Biologie des Meeres, University Oldenburg, on the German flagship RV
Sonne
, using the GEOMAR ROV
Kiel 6000
with participation and funding from GEOMAR, DSMZ, LMU, NIOZ, NIWA, and ETH-Zurich. NIWA voyage participation was funded through MBIE SSIF Enhancing Collections project.We are grateful to Sadie Mills (National Institute of Water & Atmosphere,
Wellington
) for joining the
Sonne
expedition, curating the samples and managing the registration database. We appreciate the extra sampling effort and great in-situ images taken by the ROV team led by Fritz Abegg from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Zentrum Kiel. Peter Schlupp, University Oldenburg, took the board photographs. Michelle Kelly (NIWA
Auckland
) kindly identified the sponge tube from a photograph. We are grateful to Kareen Schnabel and Jaret Bilewich for molecular assistance.
Anne-Nina LÖrz was financed by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft project IceAGE
Amphipoda
(LO2543/1-1).