A new species and illustrated records of Paracyclops Claus, 1893 (Copepoda: Cyclopoida: Cyclopinae) from Mexico
Author
Mercado-Salas, Nancy
Author
Suárez-Morales, Eduardo
text
Journal of Natural History
2009
2009-11-23
43
45 - 46
2789
2808
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930903108462
journal article
10.1080/00222930903108462
1464-5262
5218118
B0EF4FF6-CE81-45C4-B2CA-457CB56AD0FA
Paracyclops chiltoni
(Thomson, 1882)
(
Figures 6
,
7
)
Material examined
Two adult female specimens from a water reservoir in the lagoon of Silvituc (
18°37′37.44′′ N
,
90°16′44.12′′ W
), state of
Campeche
, southeast
Mexico
, coll.
Martha Gutiérrez-Aguirre
,
13 October 1998
. One specimen dissected, slide in collection of Zooplankton at ECOSUR-Chetumal (ECO-CHZ-02380). One undissected specimen in vial, ethanol-preserved (ECO-CHZ-02380)
.
Remarks
The main morphological characters stated as diagnostic by Karaytug (1999) for this presumably cosmopolitan species are present in the Mexican specimens; these include: eight antennular segments (
Figure 6A
), genital double-somite about as long as broad, a relatively short outer seta of the fifth legs, which is as long as the inner spine or slightly longer, the absence of a cluster of spinules on the insertion of two coxobasal setae of the antennae in the female (which is present in the male), and cuticular depressions on the ventral surface of the caudal rami. The specimens from
Campeche
,
Mexico
, show some variation with respect to the description of
P. chiltoni
from
New Zealand
, the country from where this species was originally described. Our specimens exhibit differences in several characters, including the presence of only two cuticular pits on the ventral surface of the caudal rami (
Figure 6G
); according to
Karaytug and Boxshall (1998b)
and Karaytug (1999), this character is weaker or less defined in specimens from outside the Palaearctic region. In the Campeche material, the relative length of the outer seta of the fifth leg is distinctly longer than the inner spine (
Figure 7D
); according to
Karaytug and Boxshall (1998b)
, this character was found only in some specimens from
New Zealand
, whereas in most other specimens both elements are equally long. The spinulation of the anal somite was most similar to the specimens from
Brazil
depicted by
Karaytug and Boxshall (1998b)
, with a denser array of the longitudinal row of spinules on the anal cleft (see
Figure 6F
), but with a shorter transverse row, covering only half of the insertion margin of the caudal rami. The caudal rami (
Figure 6F,G
) are relatively shorter in both the Mexican (length: width ratio = 3.1) and the
New Zealand
(2.9) specimens than in those from
Brazil
(3.5) (Karaytug 1999). As in the
New Zealand
specimens, the Campeche females have an innermost terminal caudal seta slightly longer than the posterolateral seta, but in our specimens it is 70% as long as caudal ramus versus 63% in the
New Zealand
females. In the specimens of
P. chiltoni
examined by Karaytug (1999), the diagonal dorsal row of spinules on the caudal rami continues ventrally and is observable in this position, but in the Mexican specimens, spinules are absent from the ventral surface (
Figure 6G
). Dorsally, this row is slightly curved anteriorly, as in the specimens from
Brazil
(see
Karaytug and Boxshall 1998b
). In leg 1 (
Figure 7B
) there is some variation in the ornamentation of the coxa and the basipod (i.e. distal row with longer and fewer elements in the Mexican specimens, denser cluster on the outer edge of coxa, row of spinules absent on insertion of exopod), but the main difference is in the heavier and denser spinulation of the outer margins of the endopod and exopod. The same is true for legs 2–4 (
Figures 6D,E
,
7A,C
). The coxal ornamentation of leg 4 is similar to that of the
New Zealand
specimens, with two rows of small spinules versus strong, longer elements in the Brazilian specimens (see Karaytug 1999). The ornamentation of the antennal coxobasis is almost identical to that depicted by
Karaytug and Boxshall (1998b)
, except for shorter semi-circular row on middle surface of segment, denser field of spinules on proximal outer surface and inner distal row of spinules (
Figure 6B,C
).
Figure 6.
Paracyclops chiltoni
, adult female from Campeche, Mexico. (A) Antennule; (B) antenna; (C) coxobasis of antenna, frontal view; (D) leg 4 with separated endopod and exopod; (E) coupler of leg 4; (F) urosome, dorsal view; (G) same, ventral view showing fifth legs. Scale bars A, D–G, 50 µm, B, C, 25 µm.
Overall, the morphological variations observed in the Mexican specimens from
Campeche
are within the range of variability of this species, as demonstrated by
Karaytug and Boxshall (1998b)
and Karaytug (1999); hence, they are clearly assignable to this species. This is the first illustrated record and morphological comparison of
P. chiltoni
from
Mexico
.