Parasitic copepods of the family Lernanthropidae Kabata, 1979 (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida) from Australian fishes, with descriptions of seven new species
Author
Boxshall, Geoff A.
Author
Bernot, James P.
Author
Barton, Diane P.
Author
Diggles, Ben K.
Author
Q-Y, Russell
Author
Atkinson-Coyle, Toby
Author
Hutson, Kate S.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-02-17
4736
1
1
103
journal article
24025
10.11646/zootaxa.4736.1.1
c76ec731-0dc9-4fc4-8ea4-d90d90da9438
1175-5326
3669745
970D7D36-6D8C-4463-B9EA-D3B8E191BE72
Lernanthropus seriolii
Shishido, 1898
(
Figs. 38
,
39A
)
Syn:
Lernanthropus seriolae
:
Yamaguti, 1963
Lernanthropus paenulatus
C.B.
Wilson, 1922
new synonym
Lernanthropus paenulatus
:
Rohde
et al
., 1995
; Hutson
et al
., 2007
Material examined:
7♀♀
,
1♂
on
Seriola hippos
Günther, 1876
,
Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
;
December 1980
–
January 1981
; collected by
K. Rohde.
10♀♀
,
1♂
on
S. hippos,
Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
;
December 1980
–
January 1981
; collected by
K. Rohde
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
1984.97–98
.
17♀♀
on
Seriola lalandi
Valenciennes, 1833
,
Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
;
December 1980
–
January 1981
; collected by
K. Rohde.
3♂♂
on
S. lalandi,
Coffs Harbour
,
New South Wales
;
December 1980
–
January 1981
; collected by
K. Rohde
;
NHMUK
Reg. No.
1984.99–100
.
Comparative material examined:
Holotype
♀
(
USNM 54058
) and
paratype
♀♀
(
USNM 54057
) of
Lernanthropus paenulatus
C.B.
Wilson, 1922
stored in the United States
National Museum of Natural History
,
Washington D.C.
,
USA
.
Differential diagnosis:
Cephalothorax longer than wide with weakly convex lateral margins and straight frontal margin: trunk elongate, about 5 times longer than cephalothorax; anterior part (second and third pedigerous somites) just wider than cephalothorax and bearing third legs posteriorly; posterior part (fourth pedigerous somite) covered by large dorsal trunk plate; plate becoming wider posteriorly and with evenly convex free posterior margin (
Fig. 38
A–C). Urosome comprising fifth pedigerous somite, genital complex and abdomen, all fused (
Fig. 39A
). Genital complex with conspicuous gonopores located dorsolaterally and with paired copulatory pores located posterolaterally on ventral surface. Genital complex ornamented with 2 pairs of sensillae on dorsal surface between gonopore openings. Paired caudal rami slightly curved; about 3.4 times longer than maximum width, tapering from broad base towards apex; not extending beyond posterior margin of dorsal trunk plate; each ramus armed with 2 plumose setae proximally on dorsal surface, 1 small lateral seta located about at 58% of ramus length, and 2 small apical setae (
Fig. 39A
). Leg 3 bilobate, located ventrally inner lobe forming fleshy lamella, shoehorn-shaped with distal part curved towards head; outer lobe much smaller than inner, but clearly visible in lateral view (
Fig. 38A
). Leg 4 bilobate; inner lobe longer than outer; tips of both lobes protruding beyond posterior margin of dorsal trunk plate. Leg 5 represented by large lamellate lobe (
Fig. 39A
) about 4.7 times longer than maximum width, tapering towards tip extending beyond tips of caudal rami: armed with single protopodal seta located in proximal quarter on dorsal surface. Body length of
♀
ranging from 7.85 to 9.00 mm, with a mean of
8.48 mm
(based on
10 specimens
); mean body length of
♂
2.43 mm
(based on
4 specimens
).
Distribution:
Lernanthropus seriolii
was originally described by
Shishido (1898)
based on material collected from the gills of
Seriola lalandi
caught off
Japan
.
Izawa (2014)
redescribed this species (as
L. seriolae
) after examination of material from the same host caught in Japanese waters. The change in spelling to
seriolae
is an unjustified emendation, first used by
Yamaguti (1963)
; the original spelling was subsequently used by
Izawa (2018)
and is maintained here.
FIGURE 38
.
Lernanthropus seriolii
Shishido, 1898
, adult ♀. A, habitus, lateral; B, habitus, lateroventral; C, habitus, dorsolat- eral. Scale bar 5 mm.
Lernanthropus seriolii
is very similar in gross morphology to
L. paenulatus
Wilson, 1922
which was described from material collected from the gills of the same host (
S. lalandi
) caught off the Atlantic coast of the
USA
at Woods Hole,
Massachusetts
and at Beaufort,
North Carolina
(
Wilson, 1922
). According to
Izawa (2014)
,
L. seriolii
can be distinguished from
L. paenulatus
most readily by the form of the female leg 5. In
L. seriolii
the fifth legs form elongate lamellae, which extend well beyond the tips of the caudal rami, whereas in
L. paenulatus
the fifth legs were described by
Wilson (1922: 52)
as “a pair of short fifth leg rudiments just in front of genital segment”. Re-examina- tion of the
type
material of
L. paenulatus
stored in the USNM revealed that Wilson’s description was erroneous:
L. paenulatus
possesses elongate lamellate fifth legs, as described for
L. seriolii
. In the absence of other substantive differences, we propose to treat
L. paenulatus
as a junior subjective synonym of
L. seriolii
.
Previous records of
L. paenulatus
from
Australia
should be attributed to
L. seriolii
:
Hutson
et al
. (2007a)
reexamined material from
S. lalandi
caught in
New Zealand
waters, originally reported as
Lernanthropus
sp. by
Smith
et al
. (2004)
and one of us (GAB) identified it as
L. paenulatus
.
Rohde
et al
. (1995)
had first reported
L. paenulatus
from
Australia
, on
S. lalandi
caught at Coffs Harbour (NSW). Re-examination here of Rohde’s material stored in Natural History Museum, London confirms that the Australian material from Coffs Harbour is
L. seriolii
. The material reported by
Hutson
et al
. (2007a)
as
L. paenulatus
from the same host taken at Sir John Woods Banks (NSW) and off Killarney (
Victoria
) and material reported by
Hutson
et al
. (2007b)
from
Seriola hippos
is also now reassigned to
L. seriolii
, as is the record of
L. paenulatus
from a
Seriola
sp. caught in
China
(
Song & Chen, 1976
).
Remarks:
This is a distinctive species with a long slender body in the female. A characteristic feature of this species is the small triangular outer (exopodal) lobe located proximally at the base of leg 3.
Lernanthropus micropterygis
is similar to
L. seriolii
, both species have a similar elongate body form in the female and both have long, lamellate fifth legs and caudal rami. However,
L. micropterygis
differs from
L. seriolii
in the relative lengths of these structures: the fifth legs are longer than the caudal rami in
L. seriolii
but shorter than the caudal rami in
L. micropterygis
. In addition, the dorsal trunk plate is much shorter in
L. micropterygis
so that almost the whole of the elongate fourth legs are visible in dorsal view whereas in
L. seriolii
only the distal 40% is visible.
Lernanthropus micropterygis
has a more restricted distribution than
L. seriolii
, as it is known only from the Mediterranean Sea (
Richiardi, 1884
;
Goggio, 1906
), Red Sea (
Wilson, 1924
) and
South Africa
(
Kensley & Grindley, 1973
, as
L. ecclesi
).