Description of Metaprotella haswelliana (Mayer, 1882) (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Caprellidae) from Western Australia with designation of a neotype
Author
Takeuchi, Ichiro
Author
Lowry, James K.
text
Zootaxa
2007
1466
11
18
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.176578
86b40a14-e7f9-487d-98ba-5df3253d8f47
1175-5326
176578
Genus
Metaprotella
Mayer, 1890
Diagnosis
. Head fused (suture present) with pereonite 1. Antenna 1 well developed; flagellum with more than 2 articles. Antenna 2 well developed; flagellum with 2 articles. Mandible well developed; molar present, well developed; palp 3-articulate, setal formula 1-x-y-1 or
1-x-
1. Maxilliped well developed; inner plate (basal endite) smaller than outer plate (ischial endite); outer plate (ischial endite) well developed; palp article 3 with distal projection; palp article 4 well developed. Pereonite 4 clavate appendage absent. Pereonites 6 and 7 completely fused (dorsal suture absent). Pereopod 3 vestigial; with 1 article. Pereopod 4 vestigial; with 1 article. Pereopod 5 well developed, with 7 articles, with sparse, short setae and well developed dactylus. Pereopods 6 and 7 well developed, with 7 articles. Gills on pereonites 3 and 4. Pleopods absent. Uropods 2 pairs; biarticulate, uniramous and vestigial.
Telson
(dorsal lobe) present.
Type
Species.
Protella Haswelliana
Mayer, 1882
, by monotypy.
Remarks.
The diagnosis of the
Metaprotella
is modified from that provided by
Takeuchi (1993)
and
Larsen (1997)
. Recently Takeuchi & Lowry (unpubl.) have developed a generic and species level DELTA database for New South
Wales
caprelloid taxa. The diagnostic description of
Metaprotella
is generated from this database, based only on the
type
species,
M. haswelliana
. Since pereopods 5 to 7 are missing from all the specimens of
M. haswelliana
(
Mayer, 1882
)
, the diagnosis of pereopod 5 is inferred from the descriptions of
Metaprotella sandalensis
Mayer, 1898
(see
Müller 1990
;
Laubitz 1991
) and
M. unguja
Larsen, 1997
(see
Larsen 1997
); both species were well described in the last two decades.