The sea lice (Copepoda: Caligidae) of Moreton Bay (Queensland, Australia), with descriptions of thirteen new species
Author
Boxshall, Geoff
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-03-19
4398
1
1
172
journal article
30482
10.11646/zootaxa.4398.1.1
e5a58990-d727-440a-aab9-7638a5698954
1175-5326
1202953
79E3EB78-D1C3-45CF-AB13-F8E61C936252
Lepeophtheirus acutus
Heegaard, 1943
(
Fig. 67
)
Material examined.
28♀♀ from
Aetobatus ocellatus
(Kuhl, 1823)
(TC17287)
19 January 2016
, QM Reg. No. W53122; 7♀♀, 1♀ immature, 2♂♂ (TC17294)
19 January 2016
, QM Reg. No. W53123; 2♀♀ (TC17115)
13 January 2016
, 1♀ (TC 17360)
21 January 2016
, 6♀♀, 1 incomplete, 1♂ (TC17940)
6 July 2016
, 1♀, 2♂, 1 immature (TC17932)
5 July 2016
, 1♀, 1 immature, 1♂ (TC 1 7933)
5 July 2016
; NHMUK Reg. Nos 2017.453– 462. 1♀ from
Himantura
cf.
astra
Last, Manjaji-Matsumoto & Pogonoski, 2008 (TC17750)
30 June 2016
, NHMUK Reg. No. 2017.463.
FIGURE 67.
Lepeophtheirus acutus
Heegaard, 1943
, female. A, habitus, dorsal; B, maxillule; C, distal margin spines on exopod of leg 1; D, first and second endopodal segment of leg 2; E, leg 4. Scale bars: 1.0 mm on A, 100 µm on B, D, 200 µm on E, 50 µm on C.
Site on host.
Body surface.
Differential diagnosis.
Cephalothorax dorsoventrally flattened with well-developed marginal membranes along lateral zones of dorsal cephalothoracic shield; frontal plates lacking lunules. Genital complex subtriangular, about 1.5 times longer than wide (
Fig. 67A
); genital complex more than half length of cephalothorax; abdomen distinct, 1-segmented, about 1.4 times longer than wide; carrying caudal rami on posterior margin, either side of anal slit. Antenna with well-developed, pointed, posterior process on proximal segment. Tine of post-antennal process slightly curved; associated papillae multisensillate. Posterior tooth on anterior sclerite overlapping base of posterior process of maxillule (
Fig. 67B
). Sternal furca with straight, divergent, tapering tines. Distal exopodal segment of leg 1 with 3 plumose setae on posterior margin; distal margin spine 1 longest (
Fig. 67C
), spines 2 and 3 each with accessory process and ornamented with serrations; seta 4 just shorter than spine 3. Outer margin of first endopodal segment of leg 2 ornamented with row of stout teeth (
Fig. 67D
); second endopodal segment short with hirsute lateral margin. Leg 3 with 2-segmented exopod; first segment bearing strong outer spine and inner plumose seta; compound distal segment bearing total of 9 setal elements (4 spines and 5 setae); endopod 2-segmented; first segment forming short velum and bearing inner plumose seta; compound distal segment with 6 plumose setae. Leg 4 uniramous, 3-segmented (
Fig. 67E
); first and second exopodal segments armed with I and III spines, respectively; apical spine just longer than second segment, other 2 distal spines less than half length of apical spine. Leg 5 represented by outer papilla bearing protopodal seta and inner papilla bearing 3 plumose setae. Mean body length of adult female
4.20 mm
, range
3.85 to 4.44 mm
(based on
14 specimens
). Mean body length of adult male
2.10 mm
, range
2.04 to 2.19 mm
(based on
4 specimens
).
Remarks.
This species was originally described by Heegaard (1943) based on a
syntype
series taken from
Taeniura lymma
(Forsskål, 1775)
caught in the western Pacific off
Abemama
Atoll in
Kiribati
(formerly the
Gilbert Islands
). It was redescribed in detail by
Tang
et al.
(2013)
who also summarized existing records. The majority of published reports of
L. acutus
are based on specimens removed from diverse elasmobranchs kept in captivity including:
Pteroplatytrygon violacea
(Bonaparte, 1832)
,
Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos
(Bleeker, 1856)
,
C. melanopterus
(Quoy & Gaimard, 1824)
and
Stegostoma fasciatum
(Hermann, 1783)
in the Tropen-Aquarium Hagenbeck in
Germany
(Kik
et al.
, 2011),
Glaucostegus
typus
,
Triaenodon obesus
(Rüppell, 1837)
and
Stegostoma fasciatum
in Burger’s Zoo,
The Netherlands
(Kik
et al.
, 2011), and
Manta alfredi
(Kreft, 1868)
and
Rhincodon
typus
Smith, 1828 held in sea pens off Okinawa-jima Island,
Japan
(
Tang
et al.
, 2013
). There is also material in the collections of the Natural History Museum, London, collected from
M. alfredi
in the S.E.A. Aquarium,
Singapore
(NHMUK Reg No. 2015.567-572). In the wild,
Lepeophtheirus acutus
has also been reported on
Rhinobatos rhinobatos
(Linnaeus, 1758)
and
Aetomylaeus bovinus
(Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1817) in Turkish
waters (Özak
et al.
, in press.) and on
Rhinobatos annulatus
Müller & Henle, 1841
caught off Muizenberg Beach in
South Africa
(unpublished data).
Rodríguez-Santiago
et al.
(2016)
recorded
L. acutus
on the body surface of
Aetobatus narinari
(Euphrasen, 1790)
caught in the southern Gulf of
Mexico
, off
Campeche
.
This is the first record of
L. acutus
from Moreton Bay and both the hosts,
Aetobatus ocellatus
and
Himantura
cf.
astra
, reported here are new host records. This wide-ranging copepod has not previously been reported from Australian waters.