Brucerolis gen. n., and Acutiserolis Brandt, 1988, deep-water southern genera of isopods (Crustacea, Isopoda, Serolidae)
Author
Poore, Gary
Museum Vistoria, Melbourne ,, Australia
Author
Storey, Melissa
CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood ,, Australia
text
ZooKeys
2009
2009-08-26
18
18
143
160
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.18.129
8a217c82-c8c9-4341-bf51-7483b6558a46
1313–2970
576499
3C3956F9-1565-4C0F-B3E7-9FECD0DE6CEF
Brucerolis
gen. n.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
FC4BEA04-0350-49E1-8FA3-01AF4DBB7186
Type
species.
Brucerolis nowra
,
sp. n.
here designated.
Diagnosis
.
Body deeply incised between extremely long, attenuating, posteriorly directed coxal and epimeral plates; middorsal line without midposterior processes, not elevated in lateral view, or with short triangular middorsal processes on posterior margin of head, pereonites 2–4 and pleonites 1–3, evident in lateral view. Pereonite 6 to pleonite 1 fused middorsally and midventrally. Eyes contiguous with head margin posteriorly, twice as long as wide, reniform. Coxal dorsal plates 2–4 delimited from tergite by suture; coxal dorsal plates 2–6 with anterior blunt process slotting into groove on preceding coxae, isolating an oval aperture between coxae; coxal plate 5 with an intermediate anterior process meeting a similar posterior process on coxal plate 4, so subdividing intercoxal aperture. Pleotelson with horizontal obscure middorsal keel; dorsal surface with flattened plate-like ridges laterally, with rounded ends. Pereonal sternite 1 with sharp medial ridge anteriorly and saddle posteriorly; ventral coxal plates 2–4 meeting in midline, without pair of contiguous teeth on anteromesial corners of sternites 2, smaller pair on sternites 3; pleonal sternites 1–3 with acute posterior ridged margin. Antenna 2 article 5 about 10 times as long as wide. Mandible, incisor smooth, chitinised, hoof-like; left lacinia mobilis expanded, half as wide as mandibular incisor; right lacinia mobilis diverging, with obsolete apical dentition; spine simple; mandibular palp, article 2 with row of setae confined distally along mesial margin. Maxilla 1 inner lobe a simple expanded plate, outer lobe with ̴11 robust terminal setae. Maxilla 2 inner lobe broad, distally richly setose, middle and lateral lobes each with 2 apical setae. Maxilliped, endite with 2 strong distal robust setae; maxillipedal palp of 3 articles; palp article 2 distally dilated, distomesially lobed, with shallow indentation on mesial margin separating two clusters of setae; epipod more or less semicircular. Pereopod 1, palm of propodus with alternating flagellate cylindrical setae and flagellate plate-like setae. Pereopod 2 of male subchelate; palm of propodus with U-shaped row of robust setae; dactylus with small terminal unguis. Pereopod 7 of male sexually differentiated, propodus broader than in female, with felt of fine scale setae, dactylus simple, curved. Pleopod 4 endopod simply triangular, not bilobed. Uropod biramous, inserting sublaterally at about midpoint of pleotelson. Oostegites of female present on pereopods 1–4.
Included
species
(see too Remarks below).
Brucerolis bromleyana
(
Willemöes-Suhm, 1876
)
(ex.
Serolis
) comb. n. – Southern
Ocean (Indian Ocean sector),
3614 m
depth.
B. cidaris
(
Poore & Brandt, 1997
)
(ex.
Acutiserolis
) comb. n. – Coral Sea, 891–
1491 m depth.
B. macdonnellae
(
Menzies, 1962
)
(ex.
Serolis
(
Serolis
)) comb. n. – South Atlantic,
2741 m
depth.
?
B. maryannae
(
Menzies, 1962
(ex.
Serolis
(
Serolis
)) comb. n. – South
Atlantic,
3839 m
depth.
B. nowra
sp. n.
– south-eastern
Tasman
Sea,
450–1750 m
depth.
Etymology
.
Named for Niel Bruce, Museum of Tropical
Queensland
, Townsville, formerly of National Institute of Water and Atmosphere,
Wellington
, in recognition of his extensive contribution to isopod taxonomy and his friendship.
Remarks
.
Acutiserolis
is diagnosed above and
Cuspidoserolis
is placed in synonymy.
Brucerolis
differs from
Acutiserolis
in having the coxal dorsal plates 2–6 interacting only by means of key-like lobes, coxal plate 6 exceeding the pleotelson by at least the pleotelson length, middorsal spines absent or obscure, and the pleotelson lacking ridges and keels. All are clearly distinctive autapomorphies different from
Acutiserolis
and
Cuspidoserolis
.
Brandt (1988)
listed five species and
Wägele (1994)
seven in
Acutiserolis
; another has been described since (
Poore and Brandt 1997
). All except the
type
species are excluded from
Acutiserolis
above and are candidates for inclusion in the new genus,
Brucerolis
.
Serolis bromleyana
Willemöes-Suhm, 1876
and
Acutiserolis cidaris
Poore and Brandt, 1997
, both illustrated in detail by
Poore and Brandt (1997)
, conform well to the generic definition of
Brucerolis
and are here transferred to join the
type
species. The illustrations of
Serolis
(
Serolis
)
macdonnellae
Menzies, 1962
show the coxal keys, pereonite 1 and pleotelson in suffi cient detail to be confident that this too belongs to
Brucerolis
.
Serolis
(
Serolis
)
maryannae
Menzies, 1962
has the general habitus, pleotelson sculpture, elongate bifid pleonal epimera, and acute coxal dorsal plates of
Brucerolis
and pereonite 1 like
B. bromleyana
, but coxal keys were not shown in the illustration. If this is an oversight by Menzies or a juvenile feature, the 18.8-mm female would be the smallest individual of the genus known. Th e species is a possible member of
Brucerolis
. All others listed previously in
Acutiserolis
are not.
Serolis gracilis
Beddard, 1884
and
S
.
neaera
Beddard, 1884
are similar to each other (
Beddard, 1884b
) and superficially to species of
Brucerolis
, sharing acute tapering coxae, elongate coxa 6, prominent interacting coxal keys and notched article 2 of the maxillipedal palp, but there are several important differences. The anterolateral margin of the head is concave in species of
Brucerolis
, but in
Serolis gracilis
and
S
.
neaera
the anterior margin of the head is strongly convex and the anterolateral corners of the head extend much further laterally than the eyes. Th e pleotelson of
S
.
gracilis
and
S
.
neaera
are as in
Acanthoserolis
Brandt, 1988
(
type
species:
Serolis polaris
Richardson, 1911
) with a proximal, acute spine middorsally and a median transverse ridge produced into acute spines middorsally and midlaterally, and uropods that insert on the pleotelson terminally and point mesially. We examined
S. schythei
Lütken, 1858
(included in
Acanthoserolis
by Brandt and Wägele and similar to
S. polaris
) from the collections of Museum
Victoria
. Both species lack elongate coxal plates and share a bilobed endopod on pleopod 4.
Beddard’s (1884b)
descriptions and figures and our own examination of material of
Serolis gracilis
and
S
.
neaera
demonstrate many differences from
Acutiserolis
,
Brucerolis
and
Acanthoserolis
.
Serolis neaera
and
S
.
gracilis
have a dense mat of plumose setae on the male pereopod 2 whereas the three genera are scarcely setose. Th e endopod of pleopod 4 is bilobed in
Serolis paradoxa
Fabricius, 1775
,
Acanthoserolis schythei
,
A
.
polaris
,
Serolis neaera
(
Nordenstam, 1933
)
and
S
.
gracilis
(
Beddard, 1884b
)
, earlier observations confirmed by us. Th e endopod of pleopod 4 is not bilobed in
Acutiserolis
or
Brucerolis
.
Moreira (1977)
discussed the resemblance of his species,
S. insignis
, included in
Acanthoserolis
by
Wägele (1994)
, to
Serolis gracilis
. Th ese two and
S. neaera
are clearly related but their generic placement remains problematic.
Serolis margaretae
Menzies, 1962
was included in
Acutiserolis
by
Brandt (1991)
and
Wägele (1994)
. We agree with
Poore and Brandt’s (1997)
conclusion that the very small (
8.4 mm
and smaller)
type
specimens without elongate coxal plates and epimera could not be assigned to
Acutiserolis
. Nor do they conform to
Brucerolis
.
Held’s (
Held 2000
;
Held and Wägele 2000
;
Held 2001
) observations on the relationships of
Acutiserolis
derived from molecular analyses (using the species
A. bromleyana
) refer to
Brucerolis
.