Review of the fish-parasitic genus Ceratothoa Dana, 1852 (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothoidae) from Australia, with description of two new species
Author
Martin, Melissa B.
Author
Bruce, Niel L.
Author
Nowak, Barbara F.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3963
3
251
294
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3963.3.1
ad62837b-1053-4845-b467-6fe79ef2f339
1175-5326
242174
B09B07C7-9E00-43A7-9671-382ACAC0469D
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
(
Leach, 1818
)
Cymothoa trigonocephala
Leach, 1818
: 353
.—
Desmarest, 1825
: 309
.—
Guérin-Méneville & Cuvier,
1829
–1844: 26, pl. 29, fig. 2.—
Milne Edwards, 1840
: 272
.—
Gerstaecker, 1901
: 261
, 263.—
Ellis, 1981
: 124
.
Cymothoé
a tête triangulaire
.—
Desmarest, 1825
: 309
.
Cymothoé
de Banks
.—
Milne Edwards, 1839
: pl. 65, fig. 2 (a–h).
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
.—
Bruce, Lew Ton & Poore, 2002
: 173
.—
Hadfield, Bruce & Smit, 2014a
: 32
, figs. 19, 20, 21(F).
Cymothoa Banksi
.
—
Gerstaecker, 1901
: 259
, pl. VIII, figs. 24–25.
Meinertia trigonocephala
.—
Yamaguchi, 1993
: 192
, fig. 19.
Not
Cymothoa trigonocephala
.—
Milne Edwards, 1835
: pl. 14, figs. 1–5
[=
Ceratothoa imbricata
].
Not
Cymothoé
à tête triangulaire
.—
Milne Edwards, 1835
: pl. 14, figs. 1–5
[=
Ceratothoa imbricata
]
.
Not
Cymothoa trigonocephala
.—
Haan, 1850
: 227
, tab. L, figs. 7 (a–b)
[=
Ceratothoa banksii
]
.
Not
Ceratothoa Huttoni
Filhol, 1885
: 446
, pl. LV (fig. 7), pl. XLIX (fig. 2)
[=
Ceratothoa imbricata
]
.
Not
Meinertia huttoni
.—
Hutton, 1904
: 262
.—
Thomson, 1913
: 245
[=
Ceratothoa imbricata
]
.
Not
Codonophilus huttoni
.—
Nierstrasz, 1931
: 132
[=
Ceratothoa imbricata
]
.
Not
Meinertia trigonocephala
.—
Trilles, 1973b
: 1245
, pl. I (8–9)
[=
Ceratothoa imbricata
]
.
Not
Ceratothoa trigonocephalon
.—
Bruce, 1987
: 359
, figs. 1–2 (d–f)
[=
Ceratothoa banksii
]
.
Not
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
.—
Avdeev, 1992
: 16
, figs. 2 (2–3)
[=
Ceratothoa imbricata
]
.
Excluded (identity not known)
Cymothoa trigonocephala
.—
White, 1847
: 110
.
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
.—
Heller, 1868
: 148
.—
Koelbel, 1878
: 416
, pl. 1 fig. 3.—
Thomson, 1879
: 233
.—
Haswell, 1882
: 282
; 1885: 1001.—Schioedte & Meinert, 1883: 358, tab. XVI (Cym. XXIII) figs. 1–7.—
Miers, 1884
: 301
.—
Filhol, 1885
: 446
.—
Trilles, 1979
: 258
; 1994: 128.—
Avdeev, 1981b
: 1769
; 1982a: 65; 1982b: 69; 1985: 217, fig. 1; 1992: 14.—Beumer, Ashburn,
Burbury, Jetté & Latham, 1983
: 31
.—
Hine, Jones & Diggles, 2000
: 79
.—
Kensley, 2001
: 232
.
Meinertia trigonocephala
.—
Richardson, 1904
: 46
; 1909: 87.—
Thielemann, 1910
: 35
, tab. 4.—
Avdeev, 1978b
: 281
.
Codonophilus imbricatus
.—
Monod, 1931
: 23
; 1933a: 153; 1933b: 195.—
Pillai, 1954
: 14
.
Codonophilus trigonocephalus
.—
Huang, 2001
: 325
.
Type
and
type
locality.
The
lectotype
(female specimen;
NHMUK
2013.1013) and
paralectotype
(female specimens;
BMNH
1979.404.2) were designated by
Hadfield
et al
. (2014a)
and are held at the Natural History Museum, London, both specimens collected by W. E. Leach (White’s MS Cat no. 404 a, b) from an unknown host and locality.
Remarks
.
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
may be identified by the subtriangular cephalon anterior margin; elongate body shape, 2.4 times as long as greatest width; pereonites with straight lateral margins and pleotelson wider than pereonite 7.
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
had long been considered the same species as
C. imbricata
and
C. banksii
specifically due to the similar subtriangular cephalon anterior margin. A number of specimens from various hosts (e.g. MTQ W7249 from
Selenotoca multifasciata
and MTQ W30407 from
Girella tricuspidata
) have a subacute cephalon anterior margin. However, other morphological characteristics (e.g. stout rather than elongate body) do not conform to
C. trigonocephala
, indicating that cephalon shape alone may not be necessarily useful in the identification of this species.
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
has a pereopod morphology that is similar to that of
C. imbricata
and
C. banksii
(i.e. pereopods 5–7 with a broad carina on the basis and a narrow ischium).
Ceratothoa trigonocephala
, however, has no visible eyes, has more elongate and subparallel body shape, pereonites 1–4 are subequal in width and the anterolateral margins of pereonite 1 are proportionally longer than those of
C. banksii
.
Ceratothoa oestroides
is also similar to
C. trigonocephala
in the morphology of the cephalon, pleonite and pleotelson, but differs in having a blunt rostrum (which covers the antennula bases) and small anterolateral margins of pereonite 1.
Guérin-Méneville & Cuvier (1829)
,
Milne Edwards (1839)
and
Gerstaecker (1901)
all used the same figures and those records are here regarded as
C. trigonocephala
, and can be identified by the elongate and subparallel body margins, body length 2.5 times that of greatest body width and pleotelson width greater than pereonite 7.
Koelbel (1878)
provided a brief description of
C. trigonocephala
with only a drawing of the cephalon. Despite the apparent subtriangular-shaped cephalon, the eyes are visible and the anterolateral margins of pereonite 1 are more pronounced compared to the smaller anterolateral margins of the
lectotype
. Koelbel’s (1878) drawing of cephalon also has a more pronounced concave anterolateral margin compared to the smooth cephalon of the
lectotype
, suggesting that Koelbel’s species is not
C. trigonocephala
and is here excluded from synonymy.
Schioedte & Meinert (1883) provided a description and figures of
C. trigonocephala
(female, male, second and first
pullus
stages) based on specimens from Australian waters. A comparison of Schioedte & Meinert’s (1883) female drawings in comparison to the female
lectotype
showed similarities of the cephalon, subequal length of pereonites 1–4 and the irregular posterior margins of the pleotelson. Schioedte & Meinert’s (1883) drawings show a more pronounced anterolateral margin of pereonite 1, almost reaching anterior margin of cephalon; visible eyes; pleon slightly smaller in width than pereonite 7; increased width in pereonites 1–5 and decreased width in pereonites 6–7 (compared to the subparallel body shape of the
lectotype
). Schioedte & Meinert (1883) also illustrated serrated dactyli on pereopods 1–3 from the second
pullus
stage. Based on Leach’s (1818)
type
material and Schioedte & Meinert’s (1883) specimens and the noted difference between the two works, we conclude that Schioedte & Meinert’s (1883) specimens are not
C. trigonocephala
. As there is no evidence that the species [in reference to Leach’s (1818) material] occurs in Australian waters, we exclude the species from the Australian fauna.
Distribution
. Most records of
C. trigonocephala
are now regarded as uncertain (
Hadfield
et al
. 2014a
; present study) and the distribution of this species remains unknown.
Hosts
. There is no host or locality date in the original description of
C. trigonocephala
. The redescription of
C. trigonocephala
by
Hadfield
et al.
(2014a)
was based on the
type
material, and allowed for the differentiation of
C. imbricata
, and now
C. banksii
,
and consequently restricts the concept of
C. trigonocephala
with all subsequent records being regarded as unverified. At present we regard the host (or hosts) of
C. trigonocephala
as unknown.