Revision of the genus Peraeospinosus Sieg, 1986 (Crustacea: Peracarida: Tanaidacea)
Author
Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena
text
Journal of Natural History
2005
2006-01-30
39
45
3847
3901
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930500450879
journal article
10.1080/00222930500450879
1464-5262
5221058
Peraeospinosus
Sieg, 1986
Diagnosis
Female.
Body robust, elongated, usually 5.6–10 times as long as wide, preserved specimens are often stiff and straight (stick-like). Some of pereonites 1–5 with collar-like grooves, usually anteriorly or posteriorly. Carapace usually oval or rounded, rarely narrow, rostrum well-developed. Dorsal margin of cheliped carpus with row of minute setae. Labrum hoodshaped, with upper part covered with needle-like setae. Molar process with row of setae on lower margin of crushing edge. Maxillule with nine spiniform setae distally, two semi-fused (10th short seta centrally usually not observable). Labium external lobes with row of minute setae on edges. Maxilliped bases wide, heart-shaped, endites with two small flat setae (tubercles) on distal margins. Epignath sharply tipped, often bifurcated. Pereopods 1– 3 walking
type
. Pereopods 4–6 clinging
type
. Distal seta on propodus of pereopods 4 and 5 longer than unguis; prickly tubercles on pereopods 4–6, surrounded by blunt, calcified spines; unguis of pereopods 4–6 bifurcated. Exopod of pleopods semi-elliptical. Uropod rami usually uni-articled, equal or subequal. Uropod exopod tipped by diminutive and robust seta (at basis almost as wide as exopod).
Male.
Only the male of
P. subtigaleatus
n. sp.
is known. Swimming
type
. Pereonites less developed than in females, pleonites more so. Pleon subequal in length to pereon. Pleotelson elongated, with well-developed caudal process. Antennule and antenna sevenarticled; antennule articles 4–6 with multiple aesthetascs. Mouthparts reduced. Maxilliped bases fused, forming heart-shaped plate; maxilliped endite lobe-shaped, with two setae and two flat setae (tubercles) distally. Cheliped with row of setae near insertion of dactylus. Pereopods long and slender (walking
type
). Pleopods well-developed. Uropod exopod three-articled, endopod two-articled.
Type
species.
Typhlotanais pushkini
Tzareva, 1982
.
Distribution
Members of newly defined
Peraeospinosus
have so far been recorded from the Pacific Ocean (off Alaska, Kurile-Kamchatka Trench,
Japan
Trench), the Indian Ocean (
Sri Lanka
, off Dunbar), the Atlantic (off
Argentina
), and the Southern Ocean (Kerguelen Island, Bransfield Strait, South Shetlands, Ross Sea). The genus is widely distributed in abyssal and hadal depths. Only in the Antarctic has it been found on the continental shelf at
300–400 m
(
Figure 25
).
Remarks
Five species
Peraeospinosus
(5
Typhlotanais
)
kerguelenensis
(Beddard, 1886)
,
P.
(5
T.
)
magnificus
(
Kudinova-Pasternak, 1969
)
,
P.
(5
T.
)
magnus
(
Kudinova-Pasternak, 1990
)
,
P.
(5
T.
)
peculiaris
(
Lang, 1968
)
, and
P
. (5
T.
)
rectus
(Kudinova-Pasternak, 1968)
are now placed in the genus
Pereospinosus.
Pereospinosus
(Sieg, 1986),
Typhlotanais
(G. O.
Sars, 1882
)
, and
Typhlotananoides
(Sieg, 1983) are the only typhlotanaid members that have pereopods 4–6 adapted for clinging in the tubes. Members of the newly defined
Pereospinosus
share a few specific characters which allow them to be distinguished from the other typhlotanaids (see
Table I
). The third, monotypic, genus
Typhlotanaoides
has a hook-shaped unguis on pereopods 4–6 that is usually simple or bifurcate in the members of the genus
Typhlotanais
sensu lato
.