The first record of the crustacean isopod genus Pseudarachna Sars, 1897 (Isopoda: Asellota: Munnopsidae) from the Southern Hemisphere, with description of a new species from New Zealand
Author
Merrin, Kelly L.
text
Zootaxa
2006
1370
59
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.174907
ab401a52-f3c8-4174-b525-7843e9c12d48
1175-5326
174907
Pseudarachna
Sars, 1897
Mesostenus
Sars, 1864
: partim: 9 (preoccupied).
Pseudarachna
. —
Sars, 1897
: 142
.—
Nierstrasz & Schuurmans-Stekhoven, 1930
: 129
.—
Kussakin, 2003
: 261
.
Not
Pseudarachna
. —
Schultz, 1976
: 13
.
Type
species:
Mesostenus hirsutus
Sars, 1864
; by monotypy.
Diagnosis
Cephalic frons enlarged, broad, semi-circular, without defined ridge around antennae; cephalon anterior flanges absent. Pereonites 1–4 not short or compact, dorsal spines present, apical setae present. Pereonite 2 largest; pereonites 5–7, lateral margins not narrow, natasome not reduced. Pleon anterolateral margins rounded, without spine. Antennae positioned widely apart; antenna 1 small, article 1 with lateral flange; antenna 2 article 1 with no anterolateral spine. Mandible lacinia mobilis, spine row and palp all absent; mandibular fossa angular, sub-horizontal across mandible. Pereopod 2 elongate, robust; ischium compact, wider than other articles; pereopods 5 and 6 ischium superior margin with plumose setae; carpus paddle shaped; carpus and propodus with marginal plumose setae; pereopod 7 more ambulatory, with setation similar to that of pereopods 5 and 6; dactyli of natatory pereopods flattened, slightly broadened. Pleopod 4 exopod with more than 1 plumose seta. Pleon triangular, domed in centre. Operculum partially vaulted, with small medial keel. Pleopod 5 simple lobe. Uropods flat, uniramous.
Remarks
Pseudarachna
has many unique apomorphies, the most notable being the enlarged, semi-circular shaped cephalic frons, the widely spaced antennae, the small antenna 1, enlarged pereonite 2 and a robust and enlarged pereopod 2 with a wide, compact ischium.
Pseudarachna
is easily distinguished by these characters from other closely related genera such as
Ilyarachna
Sars, 1870
and
Echinozone
Sars, 1897
.
Males are not known for this genus, and thus there is no data specific on sexual dimorphism.
Distribution
In the North Atlantic, from western
Ireland
to
Denmark
(
Wolff 1962
) at depths between 50–478 metres (
Svavarsson
et al
. 1993
); off eastern
Australia
at approximately 36° south and, Bass Strait at 38° south off Point Hicks (both records of undescribed mancas) at depths between 960–1277 metres; and the Challenger Plateau, west of the South Island,
New Zealand
at depths between
1005–1463
metres.