Substrate dependent talitrid amphipods from fragmented beaches on the north coast of Crete (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Talitridae), including a redefinition of the genus Orchestia and descriptions of Orchestia xylino sp. nov. and Cryptorchestia gen. nov.
Author
Lowry, J. K.
Author
Fanini, Lucia
text
Zootaxa
2013
3709
3
201
229
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3709.3.1
5b557aa2-7974-4348-8e55-ad2577166a47
1175-5326
215773
085F14AF-53D1-42C0-A594-4EC9EAE19A06
The
Orchestia
Problem
For many years talitrid species were placed mainly in
Orchestia
Leach, 1814
or
Talorchestia
Dana, 1853
.
J.L. Barnard (1958)
reported 57 species in
Orchestia
and
41 in
Talorchestia
,
80% of the known species at that time. Starting in the early 1970’s Bousfield (see
Lowry & Bopiah 2012
for a review) began to develop a generic structure for talitrids, which indicated more concise geographic ranges for the genera.
Morino & Miyamoto (1988)
revised
Talorchestia
and confined it to 4 species in the western Pacific Ocean, subsequently increased to 9 species (see
Lowry & Bopiah 2013
). It is now apparent that the approximately 65 talitrid genera are not individually widespread, but occur in well-defined ranges as a result of vicariant dispersal. The exceptions are almost always taxa with anthropogenic dispersal.
Bousfield (1982)
thought of
Orchestia
as a coastal Atlantic-Mediterranean genus of about 15 species. His definition took in most, but not all of the European species. Although his definition also took in five
New Zealand
species Bousfield did not recognise them.
Currently
Orchestia
(
sensu lato
) contains about 28 species from varied habitats and widespread geography. In this paper we redefine
Orchestia
to include a marine supralittoral group, from eastern North
America
, some northeastern Atlantic islands, western Europe and the Mediterranean Sea, plus the anomalous outlier in
New Zealand
. In addition, we establish the new genus
Cryptorchestia
, to include nine terrestrial species, previously embedded in
Orchestia
, from Europe and some islands in the Atlantic Ocean.