A review of the families and genera of the superfamily PLATYSCELOIDEA Bowman & Gruner, 1973 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyperiidea), together with keys to the families, genera and species
Author
Zeidler, Wolfgang
text
Zootaxa
2016
4192
1
1
136
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4192.1.1
724e0dd4-6194-4e3a-bb22-e5259cb0a130
1175-5326
166420
B3AE1A8B-EE40-4ACF-879B-33B55FBD1FB8
Genus
Thyropus
Dana, 1852
(
Figs 60–61
)
Thyropus
Dana, 1852
: 316
.—
Dana 1853
: 1008
, 1012, 1013.—
Bate 1862
: 326
(refers to
Platyscelus
&
Hemityphis
).—
Stebbing 1888
: 1492
.—
Spandl 1927
: 251
(key), 258.—
Bowman & Gruner 1973
: 57
(key), 57 (part).—
Zeidler 1978
: 37
(part).—
Vinogradov
et al
. 1982
: 464
(key), 468.—
Shih & Chen 1995
: 254
(part).—
Vinogradov 1999
: 1199
(key), 1200.
Tanyscelus
Claus, 1879
: 17
(incl. key).—
Gerstaecker 1886
: 483
.—
Claus 1887
: 43
(key), 45.
Type species.
Thyropus diaphanus
Dana, 1853
by subsequent designation.
Type
material could not be located at any major
North American
museum and is considered lost (see
Evans 1967
).
Dana’s
(1853) description and figures are inadequate to determine the specific status, but clearly refer to a species of
Platyscelidae
or
Parascelidae
.
His
figure of the male second antennae does not correspond to any genus of
Platyscelidae
and is most like
Parascelus
.
However
, his description of the eyes, “pigments of eye four in number”, readily distinguish the genus
Thyropus
as defined here.
The
type
locality is the tropical
South
Atlantic [
04°25’S
21°30’W
],
7 November 1838
.
The diagnosis of
Thyropus
, presented here, is based on
T. sphaeroma
(
Claus, 1879
)
, as the specific status of
T. diaphanus
is uncertain, and
T. sphaeroma
is the next oldest available species.
Type
species of synonyms.
The
type
species of
Tanyscelus
is
T. sphaeroma
Claus, 1879
by monotypy. There are two lots of specimens in the
ZMH
which may represent
type
material; two males labelled “sansibar
Tanyscelus
” (K8757), and about
20 specimens
labelled “
Ombaistr
” (K8755).
The
latter locality is
Ombai Strait
, just north of
Timor
.
This
corresponds with the
type
localities given by
Claus
(1879)
, “
Zanzibar
and
Ombaistrasse
”, and the age of the material appears to correspond to the time of Claus. All of the specimens are in poor condition but are clearly
T. sphaeroma
, as described and figured by
Claus
(1879
,
1887
).
Tanyscelus
is clearly a synonym of
Thyropus
, based on the morphology of the eyes, second male antennae, and the basis of pereopod 6, and
Claus
(1879)
even suggested that his species may be the same as that of
Dana
(1853)
.
Diagnosis.
Head round. Eyes occupying most of head surface; grouped in two fields on each side of head. Antennae 1 of males with 1-articulate peduncle; flagellum with large, crescent-shaped callynophore, with aesthetascs arranged in two-field brush medially, with three smaller articles inserted on antero-dorsal corner. Antennae 1 of females with 3-articulate peduncle; callynophore narrowly rectangular, with two smaller articles inserted terminally. Antennae 2 of males 5-articulate; strongly zig-zagged, with most articles folded back on each other, extending anteriorly under head and posteriorly between the gnathopoda and pereopoda to pereonite 4; basal article distinctly inflated, about half or less the length of following article; articles 2–4 sub-equal in length; terminal article length about half preceding one, pointing anteriorly. Antennae 2 of females 5-articulate. Mandibular incisor styliform, with reduced number of teeth; in male orientated more or less parallel to palp. Maxillae 1 consisting of styliform lobes, with robust setae in four groups distally on medial margin. Maxillae 2 consisting of curved, rounded, elongate plates, with terminal denticles, and with rounded medial bulge. Maxilliped with inner lobes incompletely fused, slightly separate terminally; medial margin of outer lobes with membranous fringe. Gnathopods 1 & 2 simple. Pereopods 3 & 4 distinctly shorter than pereopods 5 & 6. Pereopod 5; basis very broad, oval-shaped, maximum width about half length; articles 3–7 inserted sub-terminally on basis. Pereopod 6; basis very broad, distinctly narrowed for distal half, length about twice maximum proximal width, with fissure; articles 3–7 inserted sub-terminally on basis; merus with antero-distal corner slightly extended, overlapping carpus medially. Pereopod 7 reduced in size with large basis; all articles present; dactylus normal. Uropoda all with articulated exopoda and endopoda; all more-or-less lanceolate, usually with serrated margins.
FIGURE 60.
Thyropus sphaeroma
(Claus, 1879)
, male (8.4 mm), North Atlantic, SAMA C5827; female (7.2 mm), Bermuda, USNM 253618.
A
, habitus of male. Scale bars = 0.5 mm (A), 0.2 mm (A1 & 2), 0.1 mm (mouthparts).
FIGURE 61.
Thyropus sphaeroma
(Claus, 1879)
, male (8.4 mm), North Atlantic, SAMA C5827. P6-l & P6-r are medial views. Scale bars = 0.1 mm (Mxp), 0.2 mm (remainder).
Species.
Thyropus sphaeroma
(
Claus, 1879
)
and
T. similis
(
Stephensen, 1925
)
.
Sexual dimorphism.
Sexual dimorphism in
Thyropus
is similar to that found in
Parascelus
.
Remarks.
The similarity of this genus to
Parascelus
has already been discussed under that genus.
Thyropus
, like
Parascelus
, seems to be preferentially associated with siphonophores.
Thyropus sphaeroma
has been recorded from
Stephanophyes superba
(Harbison
et al
. 1977)
, and
T. similis
from
Agalma okeni
,
Athorybia
sp.,
A. rosacea
(Harbison
et al
. 1977)
, and
A. lucida
(
Biggs 1978
)
. Harbison
et al
. (1977) also record
Thyropus
sp. from the following siphonophores, but some of these records may be of
Parascelus
sp., as these authors synonymised the two genera;
Agalma okeni
,
Abyla
sp.,
Athorybia
sp.,
A. rosacea
,
Diphyes dispar
,
Forskalia
sp.,
F. edwardsi
and
Stephanophyes superba
.
Very little is known about the biology of this genus. It is relatively uncommon, but widely distributed in the tropical and warm-temperate regions of the world’s oceans. Although most records are from surface hauls,
Thurston (1976)
found
T. sphaeroma
down to
450 m
.
Vinogradov
et al
. (1982)
consider this genus to be monotypic but
Parascelus similis
Stephensen, 1925
is recognised as a valid species of
Thyropus
, in addition to
T. sphaeroma
(
Zeidler 1998
)
.