Pelagic amphipods (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyperiidea) in western Mexico. 2 Family Eupronoidae
Author
Gasca, Rebeca
El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Unidad Chetumal, Av. del Centenario Km. 5.5, Chetumal, Quintana Roo, 77014, Mexico. rgasca @ ecosur. mx
Author
Hendrickx, Michel E.
Laboratorio de Invertebrados Bentónicos, Unidad Académica Mazatlán, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-03-22
4948
3
419
430
journal article
7467
10.11646/zootaxa.4948.3.6
c2d59cb8-6001-48c9-b41d-96af31028066
1175-5326
4629183
2B5E0C82-3B2F-4C90-8604-73E53F7C590B
Eupronoe minuta
Claus, 1879
Eupronoe minuta
Claus, 1879: 28
;
Siegel-Causey, 1982: 275
;
Vinogradov
et al
., 1996: 448
(key), 449, fig. 195;
Gasca, 2009
b: 87 (table 1);
Gasca
et al
., 2010: 933
;
2012: 126
(
Table 1
);
Lavaniegos & Hereu, 2009: 139–147
(passim), 142 (table 1), 152 (Appendix 1);
Lavaniegos, 2014: 1–8
(passim), 4 (table 1), 10 (table 4); 2017: 13–24 (passim), 18 (table 2).
Material examined
. 5M and 21F from 8 stations. (
Fig.3
).
TALUD
I. St. 5 (
23°16’N
,
107°31’W
),
December 12, 1989
, 1M, BO, surface to ca.
200 m
(ICML-EMU-12768-A).
TALUD III
. St. 3B (
22°36’36”N
,
106°35’54”W
),
August 17, 1991
,
1M, 1F, I-K from surface to
275 m
(
TD
ND) (ICML-EMU-12768-B); St. 10B (
23°43’24”N
,
107°39’06”W
),
August 18, 1991
,
2M, 6F, I-K from surface to
630 m
(
TD
ND) (ECO-CH-Z-10369); St. 19B (
25°18’24”N
,
109°18’36”W
),
August 20, 1991
,
6F, I-K from surface to
600 m
(
TD
1890 m
) (ICML-EMU-12768- C); St. 25A1 (
25°51’00”N
,
109°57’00”W
),
August 21, 1991
,
3 F, I-K from surface to
200 m
(
TD
2000 m
) (ICML- EMU-12768-D)
.
TALUD IV
. St. 7 (
22°00’22”N
,
106°49’18”W
),
August 23, 2000
, 1F,
MN
from surface to
500 m
(
TD
1970 m
) (ICML-EMU-12769-A)
.
TALUD
VI
. St. 7 (
22°21’39”N
,
107°01’42”W
),
March 14, 2001
, 2F,
MN
from surface to
1305 m
(
TD
2100 m
) (ICML-EMU-12769-B)
.
TALUD VII
. St. 29 (
25°18’02”N
,
109°24’09”W
),
June 8, 2001
, 2F, 1M,
MN
,
1335 m
(
TD
2080 m
) (ECO-CH-Z-10370)
.
Distribution
. Cosmopolitan. Epipelagic in tropical and temperate areas (
Vinogradov
et al
. 1996
). In the eastern Pacific it is known from the Gulf of
California
(
Brusca & Hendrickx 2005
;
Garcia-Madrigal 2007
) and has been reported as ‘very common’ along the west coast of the
Baja California
Peninsula (
Lavaniegos & Hereu 2009
;
Lavaniegos 2014
,
2017
); its known distribution stretches south to off
Jalisco
and
Colima
(
Gasca
et al
. 2012
).
Remarks
. According to
Siegel-Causey (1982)
and
Brusca & Hendrickx (2008
onwards),
E. minuta
is widely distributed in the Gulf of
California
, where it occurs from
29°57’N
(off Punta Tepoca) in the northeastern Gulf to
22°21’39”N
in the southwestern Gulf (TALUD VI. St. 7 record). Our material, however, did not include specimens from the northern Gulf and all samples were taken south of
25°51’00”N
(
Fig. 2
). This species is the smallest in the genus, with adult reaching
6‒8 mm
of total length. The specimens examined herein feature especially long dactyls on pereopods III and IV. Indeed, in some specimens, particularly in some females, dactyls are up to 85% as long as propodus. This is much longer that what has been reported in the original description (
Claus 1879
) and in subsequent contributions by Vinogradov
et al.
(1986) and
Zeidler (1998)
(i.e., less than 50%). However, among our specimens some fit well with this feature (i.e., dactyls less that 50% of propodus length) and this could therefore represent a variation within
E. minuta
adult population or an ontogenic variation.