Deep-sea asellote isopods (Crustacea, Eumalacostraca) of the north-west Atlantic: the family Haploniscidae
Author
George, Robert Y.
text
Journal of Natural History
2004
2004-10-10
38
3
337
373
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0022293021000030844
journal article
10.1080/0022293021000030844
1464-5262
5258656
Family
HAPLONISCIDAE
Hansen, 1916
Synonym: Haploniscini Hansen, 1916: 28.
Haploniscidae
: Gurjanova, 1933: 402; Menzies, 1962: 94; Wolf, 1962: 49; Menzies and George, 1972: 107; Lincoln, 1985b: 659.
Diagnosis
.
Janiroidea
with free cephalon; blind; oval or subrectangular body, dorsoventrally flattened; all pereonites wider than long, free or fused. Pleotelson composed of a single somite, fused with last pereonite in some genera. Anus separated from branchial chamber by robust pre-anal bar. Antenna shorter than body, antenna 1 shorter than 2. Mandible with incisor and lacinia only on left mandible, molar elongate and truncated, palp three-segmented with article 3 reflexed. Pereopods 1–7 ambulatory, dactylus with single claw. Uropods small, uniramous, ventral, subterminal, one- or two-segmented.
Key to the genera of
Haploniscidae
(figures 2, 3)
1 Pleotelson with posterior part tapering to a blunt point........ 2
– Pleotelson truncated or broadly rounded posteriorly......... 3
2 Uropods not concealed, set close together, ventral to the anal valves; female opercular
pleopod fringed with long plumose distal setae.
Aspidoniscus
Menzies and Schultz, 1968
– Uropods concealed; female opercular pleopod fringed with simple short marginal setae
.................
Abyssoniscus
Birstein, 1971
3 Antenna 2 with peduncular articles flattened, article 3 elongate and grooved, article 4
short, articles 5 and 6 fused and apically prolonged, flagellum small and slender, subterminal (figure 2C)..........
Antennuloniscus
Menzies, 1962
– Antenna 2 unmodified................. 4
4 Pereonites 5–7 free (figure 3D).........
Chandraniscus
n. gen.
– Pereonites 5 and 6 fused, or 6 and 7 fused, or 7 fused with pleotelson, or 5–7 and
pleotelson fused together................. 5
5 Pereonites 5–7 fused with the pleotelson to form a single segment (figure 2B)....
.................
Hydroniscus
Hansen, 1916
– Pereonites 5 and 6 fused, or 6 and 7 fused, with pleotelson........ 6
6 Pereonites 5–7 without any pronounced anterolateral angles in anterior pereonites. 7
– Pereonites 5–7 free, with one or more pereonites 2–4 having prolonged anterolateral
angles (figure 3B)...........
Chauliodoniscus
Lincoln, 1985
F. 2. Four Haploniscid genera: (A)
Haploniscus
Richardson, 1908
; (B)
Hydroniscus
Hansen
; (C)
Antennuloniscus
Menzies, 1962
; (D)
Aspidoniscus
Menzies and Schultz, 1968
.
F. 3. Four Haploniscid genera: (A)
Abyssoniscus
Birstein, 1971
; (B)
Chauliodoniscus
Lincoln, 1985
; (C)
Mastigoniscus
Lincoln, 1985
; (D)
Chandraniscus
n. gen.
7 Pereonites 5–7 fused between each other, and pereonite 7 fused or not fused with
pleotelson but pereonite 7 not reduced (figure 2A)..
Haploniscus
Richardson, 1908
– Posterior pereonites fused mid-dorsally between each other and with pleotelson, and pereonite 7 much reduced in adult, conspicuously shorter and narrower than pereonite
6, and pleotelson with posterolateral angles conspicuously produced (figure 3C)...
.................
Mastigoniscus
Lincoln, 1985