The genus Caligus Müller, 1785 (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida): two new species from reef associated fishes in New Caledonia, and some nomenclatural problems resolved
Author
Hayes, Polly
Author
Justine, Jean-Lou
Author
Boxshall, Geoffrey A.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3534
21
39
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.210824
4a3ca8ca-49ff-4de5-99fb-53dca97cd62c
1175-5326
210824
Caligus kirtioides
Ho & Lin, 2004
Ho & Lin (2001)
first described this species as an unnamed
Caligus
sp. and only later (
Ho & Lin, 2004
) named it as a new species. The species was based on material from the carangid,
Decapterus kurroides
Bleeker, 1855
, taken off
Taiwan
, and the authors noted its close similarity to
Caligus kirtii
Prabha & Pillai, 1986
. They distinguished the new species primarily on the basis of minor differences in the relative length of the antennal claw, the size of the postantennal process, and the ornamentation of the outer margin of the endopod of leg 2 (
Ho & Lin, 2001
).
We made comparisons between
C. kirtioides
and
C. jawahari
Hameed & Adamkutty, 1985
. The latter species was described from
Pristipomoides
typus
Bleeker, 1852
caught at
Cochin
(Kerala,
India
) (
Hameed & Adamkutty, 1985
). In body shape these two species are very similar to
C. berychis
Wilson, 1936
, originally described from
Beryx decadactylus
Cuvier, 1829 (
Wilson, 1936
)
. All three species share the same unusual and distinctive shape of the female genital complex, with well developed posterolateral lobes and a narrow constriction at the head of the abdomen. All three species also share: a relatively short antennal claw, a sternal furca with widely divergent tines, a leg 4 with two exopodal segments and 4 spines on the distal segment, a similar configuration of distal margin spines 1 to 3 on the exopod of the first leg with a long seta 4 (longer than the segment), and the adult male antenna terminates in a strongly curved but simple claw.
On the basis of published descriptions,
C. berychis
differs from
C. kirtioides
and
C. jawahari
in having a slightly longer claw on the first exopodal segment of leg 3, in having an accessory process on distal spine 1 of leg 1 (a rare state in the genus that needs verification), and in having a slightly better developed posterior process on the female antenna. So we tentatively continue to treat
C. berychis
as valid, at least until the
types
have been reexamined, but we consider that there are no significant differences between
C. kirtioides
and
C. jawahari
, and propose to treat
C. kirtioides
Ho & Lin, 2004
as a junior subjective synonym of
C. jawahari
Hameed & Adamkutty, 1985
. This species utilises both lutjanid and carangid hosts.