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
Family
BRACHYSCELIDAE
Stephensen, 1923
Diagnosis.
Body length up to
20 mm
, but usually about
10 mm
. Head of females evenly rounded; of males usually slightly pointed antero-ventrally; as long as first 4–5 pereonites. Eyes large, occupying most of head surface. Coxae separate from pereonites. Antennae 1 of females with 2-articulate peduncle, and enlarged first flagellar article (callynophore), followed by two small terminal articles. Antennae 1 of males with 2-articulate peduncle, and enlarged, curved first flagellar article (callynophore), with two-field brush of aesthetascs medially, and three smaller, slender articles inserted on antero-distal corner. Antennae 2 absent in females. Antennae 2 of males with five slender articles folded back on one another, juncture of articles 2 & 3 and 4 & 5 supported in pocket of basis of G1. Mandibles with 3-articulate palp in males; absent in females. Maxillae 1 reduced to tiny, rounded lobes. Maxillae 2 extremely reduced, or most likely absent. Gnathopods 1 & 2 distinctly chelate. Pereopod 5 the longest. Pereopods 5 & 6 with greatly enlarged basis, slightly shorter than remaining articles combined, which are inserted terminally to basis. Pereopod 7 reduced in size, but with full complement of articles, with enlarged basis, which is longer than remaining articles combined. Uropoda all with articulated endopoda and exopoda. Telson triangular, usually extending to limit of U3, not fused with double urosomite. Gills with folds on pereonites 2–6. Oostegites on pereonites 2–5.
Genera.
Brachyscelus
Bate, 1861
.
Remarks.
Bovallius (1890)
, in a footnote (p18 & 19), divided the old family Tryphaenidae into two;
Lycaeidae
(for
Lycaea
) and Euthamneidae (for
Brachyscelus
and
Thamneus
) and changed
Thamneus
to
Euthamneus
to avoid confusion, and fit with the new family name. However,
Stephensen (1932)
quite rightly points out that
Brachyscelus
is the older generic name, and “the family must be named after the older genus and so be called
Brachyscelidae
”. Not all subsequent authors have accepted this arrangement and have restored
Brachyscelus
and
Thamneus
to the family
Lycaeidae
(e.g.
Bowman & Gruner 1973
,
Shih & Chen 1995
), while others support the recognition of
Brachyscelidae
(e.g.
Vinogradov
et al
. 1982
,
Vinogradov 1999
).
In this review the family
Brachyscelidae
is maintained for the genus
Brachyscelus
because it differs significantly from the family
Lycaeidae
in a number of characters as follows. The head of males is usually pointed (round in
Lycaea
and only slightly pointed in
Simorhynchotus
); the second antennae of males have the juncture of articles 2 & 3 and 4 & 5 supported in a pocket of the basis of gnathopod 1 (absent in
Lycaeidae
); the second antennae of males consist of a relatively long basal article, followed by three slightly longer articles, and one shorter one, all folded back on one another, the terminal one being about one-quarter as long as the preceding one, and orientated anteriorly (in
Lycaeidae
the basal article is only about one-third as long as the following article, and the terminal article is minute, is not folded, and is orientated posteriorly); the basis of pereopods 5 & 6 is closer to becoming operculiform, and in pereopod 6 the terminal articles are inserted sub-terminally on the basis; the endopoda and exopoda of the uropoda are not fused with the peduncle, and the telson is not fused with the double urosomite. In addition, newly hatched juveniles of
B. crusculum
have specialised appendages that differ from those of the adult. In particular, pereopod 5 is chelate, while in the adult it is simple.
Lycaea
lacks these specialised appendages, thus supporting the familial status for
Brachyscelus
(Harbison 1976)
. Some of the above characters, such as the morphology of the male head and the pereopoda, are intermediate between the families
Lycaeidae
and
Oxycephalidae
. The morphology of the maxillae are also like those of
Lycaeidae
and
Oxycephalidae
.
Prior to this review this family included
Thamneus
which has been removed to the new family, Thamneidae
fam. nov.
, because it has characters that are unique and inconsistent with
Brachyscelus
(or
Lycaeidae
).