Revision of the cirolanid isopod genus Odysseylana Malyutina, 1995 (Crustacea) with description of two new species from Singapore
Author
Sidabalok, Conni M.
Author
Bruce, Niel L.
text
Zootaxa
2015
4021
2
351
367
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4021.2.6
0a21cf1d-6713-4567-905c-872f28b9b794
1175-5326
243704
78AB258C-42D4-4950-8682-DC2BE1B4855D
Genus
Odysseylana
Malyutina, 1995
Odysseylana
Malyutina, 1995
: 101
–109.
Parilcirolana
Yu & Li, 2001
: 59
–64.
Type
species.
Odysseylana sirenkoi
Malyutina, 1995
; by monotypy.
Type
locality,
10°46’N
,
109°43’E
, off southern
Vietnam
, east of Phu Quy Island (
Malyutina 1995
).
Species included.
Odysseylana setosa
(
Yu & Li 2001
)
comb. nov.
, Beibu Gulf (
Tonkin
Gulf) to northern South
China
Sea;
Odysseylana sakijang
sp. nov.
and
Odysseylana temasek
sp. nov.
, both known only from
Singapore
.
Diagnosis (male)
. Body elongate, 2.9–3.5 as long as wide. Pereonites smooth, with or without fine tubercles on posterior margins of pleonites 4 and 5 and proximal surface of pleotelson. Cephalon anterior margin rounded or weakly produced, without rostral point, not medially indented. Pleonite 3 posterolateral margin acute, not extending posteriorly to posterior of pleonite 5; pleonite 4 rounded, encompassing and extending posterior to pleonite 5.
Antennula
peduncle articles 1 and 2 shortest, article 3 longest; flagellum equal or shorter than peduncle. Antenna peduncle article 3 about half as long as 4, article 4 longest, with row of long plumose setae (except
Odysseylana sakijang
sp. nov.
); flagellum longer than peduncle. All pereopods with secondary unguis on dactylus. Pereopods 1–3 with superodistal margins of ischium and merus moderately produced; pereopod 1 merus inferior margin with single row of acute and blunt RS; pereopods 2 and 3 with single row of tubercular RS; carpus with a cluster of slender and acute setae on inferodistal; propodal palm with evenly-spaced row of stout acute RS. Pereopod 6 basis broader in inferior distal half; ischium and merus flat and widest distally; superodistal ischium– carpus with clusters of long acute RS and long simple setae; inferior margin of ischium–carpus with rows of long acute RS and long simple setae. Pereopod 7 similar with pereopod 6 but more slender. Penial processes present on sternite 7 as two papillae or small lobes. Pleopod 1 peduncle quadrate; endopod narrow, about 70% as long as wide. Pleopod 2 appendix masculina inserted basally.
Description (male).
Body
about 2.9–3.5 times as long as greatest width.
Head
wide, approximately 66–71% as wide as pereonite 1, anterior margin evenly rounded, without rostral point.
Body surfaces
unornamented or ornamented; pereonite 1 between 0.9–1.5 times as long as pereonite
2 in
dorsal view.
Pleon
unornamented or ornamented, about 11–18% BL, with 4–5 visible unfused segments, pleonite 1 usually not concealed by pereonite 7; pleonite 2 epimera not posteriorly produced.
Pleotelson
without longitudinal carinae, or with 2 rows of small tubercles; posterior margin with PMS and 4–9 RS.
Antennula
peduncle articles collinear, articles 1 and 2 not fused or partly fused with weak suture; peduncular article 2 not at right angles to article 1; article 3 well developed, about 0.6–0.9 as long as combined lengths of articles 1 and 2; flagellum between 0.8–1.0 as long as peduncle; without callynophore.
Antenna
peduncular articles 1–3 shortest, articles 4 and 5 longest, 4 longer than 5; flagellum about 1.3 as long as peduncle.
Frontal lamina
pentagonal, lateral margins parallel or weakly concave; ventrally flat, with lateral angles, anteriorly acute; posteriorly abutting clypeus; approximately 1.25–2.0 times as long as basal width, not projecting anteroventrally from posterior.
Clypeus
ventral surface not projecting relative to frontal lamina.
Mandible
incisor wide, right incisor tricuspidate; spine row with 8–11 RS.
Maxillula
mesial lobe with 3 CP RS.
Maxilliped
palp article 2 mesial margin with 6–7 slender setae, lateral margin with 1 slender seta; article 3 mesial margin with 13– 18 slender setae, lateral margin with 11 slender setae; article 4 mesial margin with 9–13 slender setae, lateral margin with 5 slender setae; articles 3 and 4 distal margin width greater than proximal margin of article 4 and 5 respectively; endite with 2–3 coupling hooks.
Pereopods
1–7 dactylus with small secondary unguis present. Pereopod 1 dactylus longer than propodus palm; simple RS opposing dactylus. Pereopod 7 basis not noticeably broader in distal half compared to proximal half; margins with few discontinuous setae; ischium and merus flattened, distal margin between weakly and moderately expanded, inferior margins with few setae.
Pleopod
1 rami lamellar; endopod narrow, 0.6–0.7 as wide as exopod, 2.3–2.7 times as long as wide. Pleopod 2 appendix masculina 0.8–1.1 longer than endopod. Pleopods 1–5 with PMS present on all rami except endopod 5; pleopod 5 endopod shorter (0.8) than exopod.
Uropod
peduncle mesial margin produced; exopod lateral margin not excised.
Female.
No ovigerous females present in material examined. Non-ovigerous females are similar to males but for the sexual characters; body size is slightly larger.
Remarks.
Odysseylana
Malyutina, 1995
can be identified by the following characters: elongate body shape (2.9–3.5 long as greatest width), the absence of rostral point; frontal lamina pentagonal; antenna peduncle articles 4 and 5 subequal in length with 4 the longest; pereopods 1–3 with the superodistal margin of ischium and merus moderately produced; pleopod 1 peduncle quadrate, and pleopod 1 endopod slender, 48–65% width of exopod.
Malyutina (1995)
included the highly distinctive shape and setation of the uropods and pleotelson in the generic diagnosis, but we consider those to be species-level characters.
Malyutina (1995)
placed
Odysseylana
in the
Conilera
group of
Bruce (1986)
[= Conilerinae of
Kensley & Schotte (1989)
], sharing characters such as the short
antennula
, quadrate pleopod 1 peduncle, superodistal angles of pereopod 1–3 ischium and merus strongly produced and setose, and pereopods 5–7 with the ischium to carpus generally flattened and setose, sometimes the distal margin of the article also being expanded. In contrast
Odysseylana
differs significantly from that group in several critical characters, notably the antennal peduncle has articles 4 and 5 longest, the frontal lamina is pentagonal and relatively wide, with distinct anterolateral angles, pereopods 1–3 have the superodistal angles of the ischium and merus only moderately produced, and have a distinct secondary unguis on the dactylus; all these characters are in strong contrast to genera such
Politolana
Bruce, 1981 (
Riseman & Brusca 2002
)
,
Natatolana
Bruce, 1981 (
Keable 2006
)
and
Dolicholana
Bruce, 1981 (
Keable 1999
)
. In conclusion we do not consider that
Odysseylana
belongs with the
Conilera
group of genera.
Odysseylana
shares several diagnostic characters with the Indo-Pacific genera
Aatolana
Bruce, 1993
,
Baharilana
Bruce & Svavarsson, 2003
and
Plakolana
Bruce, 1993
. These characters include the anterior margin of the head lacking a rostral point, being rounded or weakly medially protruded, the superodistal angles of the ischium and merus of pereopods 1–3 being moderately produced, quadrate pleopod 1 peduncle and the presence of lateral setae on uropod peduncle.
Odysseylana
differs from both
Aatolana
and
Plakolana
in lacking prominent and flattened penial processes, and also in having a pentagonal frontal lamina (linear in
Plakolana
, anteriorly rounded and posteriorly narrowed in
Aatolana
), pereopods 1–3 have a small, blunt secondary unguis (absent or seta-like in
Aatolana
and
Plakolana
) and relatively elongate pleopod 1 rami (exopod broadly rounded, endopod narrow in
Plakolana
; pleopod 1 endopod in
Aatolana
has strongly convex lateral margin, and pleopod peduncles are complex).
Odysseylana
is most similar to
Baharilana
but differs in having two coupling hooks on the maxilliped endite rather than one, pleopod 2 appendix masculina is basal (vs. sub-basal) and straight (vs curved at tip).
The genus
Parilcirolana
Yu & Li, 2001
was described from the northern Gulf of
Tonkin
, Hainan Island and northern South
China
Sea near
Macau
.
Yu & Li (2001)
were apparently unaware of Malyutina’s (1995) publication as they made no mention of
Odysseylana
Malyutina,
1995
in their discussion or remarks. At the generic level we can find no differentiating characters to support
Parilcirolana
, with the diagnostic antennal, pereopodal and pleopod morphology entirely consistent with that of
Odysseylana
.
FIGURE 1.
Map showing distribution of
Odysseylana
species, ˔
Odysseylana setosa
; ⋅
Odsseylana sirenkoi
; •
Odysseylana sakijang
and O.
temasek
.
Some generic characters that were identified as diagnostic by
Malyutina (1995)
are here considered to be species characters, such as the incised distal margin of the pleotelson and conical shape of uropod exopod. Similarly, the dense setae on the pereopod 7 of
O. setosa
(
Yu & Li 2001
)
is also regarded as a species-level character.
Distribution.
Odysseylana
has a distribution centred on the tropical and subtropical western Pacific (
Fig. 1
), from
Singapore
in the south to
Macau
in the north-east. The genus is absent from the relatively well-documented regions of
Australia
,
South Africa
and also the tropical western Indian Ocean.