Parasites (Isopoda: Epicaridea and Nematoda) from ghost and mud shrimp (Decapoda: Axiidea and Gebiidea) with descriptions of a new genus and a new species of bopyrid isopod and clarification of Pseudione Kossmann, 1881
Author
Boyko, Christopher B.
Author
Williams, Jason D.
Author
Shields, Jeffrey D.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-12-19
4365
3
251
301
journal article
31134
10.11646/zootaxa.4365.3.1
506d11e3-029a-482b-ad11-cff65e539fa9
1175-5326
1117980
C5AC71E8-2F60-448E-B50D-22B61AC11E6A
Ione thompsoni
Richardson, 1904
Fig. 1A–C
Ione thompsoni
Richardson, 1904
: 75
–78, figs. 64–68 (2 specimens, type locality: North Falmouth, Massachusetts, infesting
Callianassa stimpsoni
Smith, 1873
=
Gilvossius setimanus
(DeKay, 1844))
.—
Giard, 1904
: 592
(mention).—
Rathbun, 1905
: 49
(list).—
Richardson, 1905
: 508
–510, figs. 554–558 (repeat of 1904 text; no new material).—
Giard, 1913
: 420
(mention).—
Sumner
et al
., 1913
: 661
(list).—
Kunkel, 1918
: 192
(mention of specimens examined herein in a footnote).—
Chopra, 1923
: 437
(mention).—Nierstrasz & Brender à Brandis, 1923: 80 (list).—
Miner, 1950
: 451
, pl. 145 (list; brief description with figures from
Richardson, 1904
).—
Danforth, 1963a
: 8
(list).—
Shiino, 1964a
: 32
(mention).—
Smith & Bowman, 1964
: 105
, 107, 108, pl. 14, fig. 20 (list, figure after
Richardson, 1904
).—
Schultz, 1969
: 316
, fig. 502 (list, figure after
Richardson, 1904
).—
Danforth, 1970b
: 10
, 47 (list), 147 (key), fig. 22d–f (after
Richardson, 1905
).—
Kaestner, 1970
: 462
–463 (mention occurrence “on
Callianassa
on the eastern North American coast”).—
Gosner, 1971
: 476
(list).—
Lawler, 1978
: 309
(list).—
Markham, 1988
: 56
(list).—
Adkison & Heard, 1995
: 108
(mention).—
Markham, 1995
: 86
(mention).—
Markham, 2001
: 199
, 200 (list).—
Heard
et al
., 2007
: 22
(mention of specimens from Georgia and Florida).
“Crustacean lice”
Pimentel, 1967
: 89, 2 unnumbered figures (after
Richardson, 1904
).
Material examined.
United States
:
Mature female (
17.9 mm
), mature male (
5.3 mm
) (
YPM
IZ 089393),
ex
left branchial chamber of female
Gilvossius setimanus
(
15.6 mm
CL) (
YPM
IZ 005658.CR), Long Island Sound, outer island, Thimble Islands, Branford, New Haven County,
Connecticut
,
4–6 ft
(
1.2–1.8 m
), coll. A. E. Verrill,
17 May 1910
.
Distribution.
North Falmouth,
Massachusetts
to Long Island Sound; and possibly to St. Augustine,
Florida
.
Host.
Gilvossius setimanus
(DeKay, 1844)
(type host).
Remarks.
The specimens from Long Island Sound match the original description of
Ione thompsoni
, with females possessing highly digitate lateral plates, five pairs of biramous pleopods, and large, slightly curled, uniramous uropods (
Fig. 1A, B
); the oostegites are covered in short, thin cuticular extensions (
Fig. 1B
). Males are found attached between the pleopods (
Fig. 1B
) and have long, lanceolate lateral plates (
Fig. 1C
).
Ione thompsoni
is a rare bopyrid, with the pair of specimens reported herein first being mentioned without description or illustration in a footnote in
Kunkel (1918)
and only now having their identity verified, nearly 100 years later. This rarity is surprising considering the relatively large size of the host,
Gilvossius setimanus
, and its distribution in the wellstudied fauna of the shallow water, northeastern American coastal region. The range of the host is from Nova Scotia to southern
Georgia
(
Heard
et al
. 2007
), whereas that of
I
.
thompsoni
is apparently from Cape Cod,
Massachusetts
to northern
Florida
. However, the only records of
I
.
thompsoni
from outside
Massachusetts
(
type
locality) and Long Island Sound (present specimens) are from
Georgia
and
Florida
but with both as “pers. observ.” cited in
Heard
et al
. (2007)
; these specimens are not known to have been deposited in any museum collection and are not described or illustrated. Although
Heard
et al
. (2007)
stated that the southern end of the range of the host was
Georgia
, they also mentioned a parasitized host from St. Augustine,
Florida
, without comment that such a record would extend the known host range somewhat farther south.
Williams (1984)
gave the host range as extending to Franklin County,
Florida
, but this locality is in the
Florida
panhandle;
Manning and Felder (1991)
suggested that specimens from the northeastern Gulf of
Mexico
might belong to an undescribed species of
Gilvossius
. No bopyrids have been reported from specimens of
Gilvossius
from the Gulf of
Mexico
.
Richardson (1904)
described the species based on “two specimens… collected by Mr. G.
M. Gray
at
North Falmouth
,
Massacusetts
” and listed the “
type
” as
USNM 29091
. However, it is clear that
Richardson (1904)
had at least three specimens on hand because she described both the male and female of the species, but also mentioned a “young female” and an “adult female” (p. 75, footnote)
. USNM 29091 is the female holotype, whereas USNM 29230, also labeled as being collected from the type locality by Gray, contains one female and one male, both of which are paratypes.