New littoral, shelf, and bathyal Paratanaidae (Crustacea: Peracarida: Tanaidacea) from New Zealand, with descriptions of three new genera
Author
BIRD, GRAHAM J.
Author
BAMBER, ROGER N.
text
Zootaxa
2013
2013-06-17
3676
1
1
71
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3676.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3676.1.1
11755334
5597797
7AB2D8F5-62F2-46D1-BDE4-BF91D6513797
Aparatanais
gen. nov.
Paratanais
:
Sieg (1981)
: 1271
; Gutu & Ramos (1995): 39; Larsen (2001, in part): 368;
Larsen
et al
(2012)
: 34
.
Diagnosis.
Female
:
Carapace
entire or divided into plates.
Pereonites
all shorter than broad.
Pleonites 1–4
with or without articulated epimeral pappose seta.
Pleotelson
not plate-like.
Antennule
four-articled, with or without distinct cap-like segment; with simple terminal setae.
Antenna
article-2 unexpanded or expanded, with or without superodistal apophysis; article-3 with superior spine; articles 2–4 without longitudinal ridge.
Mandible
body smooth; right incisor crenulate and weakly bifid.
Maxilliped
endite with two distal tubercles small; palp article-2 with one medial seta (or spine) heavily serrate or multifurcate on aboral margin.
Cheliped
palm with slender or broad [shaped like Ghurkha kukri knife] sinuate spine near articulation with dactylus; medial comb of one or two heavily serrate spines; fixed finger with one or two inferior seta.
Pereopod-1
basis with superoproximal seta, or naked; merus elongate, up to six times ltb.
Pereopods 2–3
basis with superoproximal seta; carpus with three distal spines, superior largest (excepting
spinanotandus
); inferior pair of spines longer than broad, unequal.
Pereopods 4– 6
ischium with two setae; carpus with elevated rows of spinules on inferior margin.
Uropod
visible from dorsal view, projecting beyond pleotelson; exopod present; rami not longer than peduncle.
Etymology.
From the Greek negative particle ‘
a
’ – not, and
Paratanais
.
Gender.
Male.
Type
species.
Paratanais spinanotandus
Sieg, 1981
.
Composition.
A. denticulatus
(Gutu & Ramos, 1995)
comb. nov.
;
A. intermedius
(
Dojiri & Sieg, 1997
)
comb. nov.
;
A. malignus
(Larsen, 2001)
comb. nov.
;
A. spinanotandus
comb. nov.
;
Aparatanais timutimu
gen. et sp. nov.
(See below);
A. vicentetis
(
Larsen, Nagaoka & Froufe, 2012
)
comb. nov.
Distribution.
Eastern
Australia
(
New South Wales
), California,
Colombia
(Pacific coast),
New Zealand
, NW Africa (
Cape Verde
), South Atlantic (Vema Seamount); eulittoral to
591 m
(
A. intermedius
).
Remarks.
Primarily,
Aparatanais
gen. nov.
is characterised by the heavy serrate spine on the maxilliped palp article-2. Several other characters support it, although not all are expressed simultaneously in all the taxa transferred to the genus: small maxilliped endite tubercles, a kukri-shaped cheliped palm spine, a long pereopod-1 merus (extreme in
A
.
timutimu
sp. nov.
and
A
.
spinanotandus
), a relatively narrow pereopod-3 propodus, and short uropods (marginally longer in
A. denticulatus
). It is not clear if
A. spinanotandus
lacks pleonal pappose setae or these were simply not recorded by
Sieg (1981)
but as
A. denticulatus
also only has simple epimeral setae, the absence is probably genuine. The general habitus tends to be robust and can sometimes help distinguish specimens from sympatric paratanaids. If the modified maxilliped palp seta (spine) and the kukri-shaped cheliped spine are true homologies, then
Atemtanais
is a closer sister genus than is
Paratanais
and these spines might therefore be synapomorphic.
Atemtanais
too is robust, lacks pappose epimeral setae, and has short uropods.
Five species previously classified in
Paratanais
are transferred to
Aparatanais
:
P. denticulatus
,
P. intermedius
,
P. malignus
,
P. spinanotandus
,
and
P. vicentetis
(see above); the transfer of
P. intermedius
is provisional and more data are required to confirm this.