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 spinosurculus
Pearse, 1951
This poorly described species belongs to the cluster of caligid species that share the following distinctive features in the female: bifid postantennal process and bifid posterior process of the maxillule, heavily ornamented apron of the third leg with an outer longitudinal row of spinules, an inner rosette of large spinules, and a prominent rib-like structure with a bifid apex, arising near the border with the intercoxal sclerite, a massive and strongly incurved spine on the first exopodal segment of leg 3, and a 3-segmented exopod on leg 4 armed with I,I,III spines. In the male the genital somite is slender and the short, two-segmented abdomen is as wide as the genital somite at its posterior margin. The list of nominal species sharing these features includes:
C. chorinemi
Krøyer, 1863
,
C. tenax
Heller, 1865
,
C. aesopus
Wilson, 1921
,
C. spinosurculus
,
C. germoi
Pearse, 1951
,
C. rectus
Pearse, 1952
,
C. confusus
,
C. cordyla
,
C. zylanica
Hameed & Pillai, 1986
and
C. equulae
Ho & Lin, 2003
. The close relationship between these species is supported by additional shared similarities including the relatively elongate distal segment of the antennule, the relatively long claw of the antenna and the weak development of the posterior process on the antenna, and the possession of a simple but strongly curved claw on the male antenna.
Caligus isonyx
Steenstrup & Lütken, 1861
, as redescribed by
Cressey (1991)
, is closely related to this cluster of species, sharing most of these character states, but it is excluded from consideration as it has a simple postantennal process and simple posterior process of the maxillule.
Caligus fortis
Kabata, 1965
also shares most of these character states including the bifid processes, but the inner rosette of spinules on the apron of leg 3 is less prominent and the rib-like structure is lacking, and the spine on the first exopodal segment of leg 3 is smaller and relatively straight, rather than strongly incurved. We exclude
C. fortis
from the further consideration.
Cressey (1991)
redescribed
Caligus chorinemi
after re-examination of Krøyer’s
holotype
and listed
C. tenax
,
C. germoi
and
C. rectus
as new synonyms. Cressey presumably examined the
holotype
of
C. rectus
as the USNM registration number was cited in his account (
Cressey, 1991
). Cressey noted that he had found
C. chorinemi
only on carangid fishes from the western Atlantic and that published records under the name
C. tenax
from the Indian and Pacific Oceans were of a related but different species. The relegation of
C. germoi
and
C. rectus
to synonymy is well supported by the similarities in descriptions of these species.
We do not accept Cressey’s (1991) treatment of
C. tenax
as a synonym of
C. chorinemi
. The key differences are the proportional lengths of the female genital complex and abdomen. The genital complex of female
C. chorinemi
is 1.3 to 1.4 times longer than the abdomen and the abdomen is about 2.9 times longer than wide (measured from
Cressey, 1991
: figure 198). In contrast, Heller’s (1865) figure shows the female genital complex of
C. tenax
as 2.8 times longer than the abdomen and the abdomen as only 1.5 times longer than wide. These are major differences and cannot be accounted for by intraspecific variability and we consider
C. tenax
a valid species, found in the western Atlantic.
The genital complex of adult female
C. spinosurculus
is nearly 3.5 times longer than the abdomen and the abdomen is 1.5 times longer than wide. We consider this falls within the range of
C. tenax
and propose to treat
C. spinosurculus
Pearse, 1951
as a junior subjective synonym of
C. tenax
Heller, 1865
. The relationship between
C. tenax
, the western Atlantic species, and the species that has been reported as
C. tenax
from Indo-Pacific fishes still needs to be resolved, as indicated by
Cressey (1991)
.