Studies on the genus Onisimus Boeck, 1871 (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Uristidae) II. The barentsi and edwardsii groups
Author
Berge, Jørgen
Author
Vader, Wim
Author
Johnsen, Jan Roger
text
Zootaxa
2007
1410
55
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.175595
cfca74e8-b37b-4f49-b776-a1991a6659cc
1175-5326
175595
Onisimus edwardsii
(Krøyer, 1846)
Anonyx edwardsii
Krøyer 1846: 41
Onesimus Edwardsii
Sars 1891
: 105
;
Stephensen 1913
: 121
Onisimus edwardsii
Shoemaker 1930: 228
;
Lowry & Stoddart 1993
:173
.
Onisimus edwardsi
Gurjanova 1951
: 162
Boeckosimus edwardsii
Barnard 1969: 330
Type
locality
Greenland
.
Diagnosis
Epimeral plate 3 with slightly upturned tooth. Pereopod 1 propodus clearly longer than carpus, pereopods 3 and 4 propodus with posterior margin with paired robust setae and setae, P4 coxa with moderate posteroventral lobe.
Telson
cleft 30%.
Material examined
USNM
Acc.no 182783, Indian Harbor, Labrador, 1 spm.
SMNH 6672 det:
O. plautus
, male,
9mm
, Matoschkin scharr, Belusha viken, 6 spm. TMU xxx, Female,
10mm
, Ekkerøy
2–3m
; TMU 1168, male,
8 mm
, Vardø; TMU 10025, Herwigshavna.
Distribution
Stephensen (1923) provided a distribution map of the Atlantic records of
O. edwardsii
; as in the case of
O. plautus
, there are also here a few old records from S.
Norway
and W.
Sweden
, where the species never has been refound, in spite of extensive collecting; there is even an old, vague record from the Kattegat, dating from Meinert (cf
Stephensen 1923b
). The most recent Norwegian catalogue (
Vader et al. 1997
) only has records from Tromsø (69*50’N) and north, and also here there are only a few reports. Otherwise this species is common and often numerous in the Atlantic Arctic (cf Stephensen 1923, 1935, 1944), and also along the entire arctic coast of
Russia
East to the Chukchi Sea (
Gurjanova 1985
,
Tzvetkova & Golikov 2001
) and in the cold eastern waters of
Canada
(Shoemaker 1930, 1930b,
Dunbar 1954
,
Brunel et al. 1998
) south to Nova
Scotia
. The species was not present in the extensive collections from Point Barrow, Alaska, however (
Shoemaker 1955
), nor does
Gurjanova (1962)
report on any Pacific material.
Biology
Onisimus edwardsii
is a well-known general scavenger; it is easily and in large numbers collected in baited traps, and has also been found clustering on dead invertebrates in the field (Berge, pers. obs., Vader, pers. obs.).The observations and experiments of
Legezynska (2001)
have shown that
O. edwardsii
is an opportunistic predator and scavenger, with a wide range of prey animals. She also showed that this species avoids the very turbid waters of the inner fjord basins (where the much larger
O. caricus
is absolutely dominant), and only is found in the less turbid outer parts of the fjords. Life cycle data have been collected by
Weslawski & Legezynska (2002)
. The animals appear to be K-strategists and winter breeders, and do not reproduce until they are one year old.
The species occurs mostly in very shallow waters in the high arctic, but somewhat lower down in low arctic areas:
Stephensen (1944)
noted occurrences from
6–36m
in E.
Greenland
,
Dunbar (1954)
from
5 to 20 m
in Ungava Bay, and
Weslawski (1990)
from
2–20m
in the cold Hornsund area of
Spitsbergen
, with a clear maximum around
15 m
(
Legezynska et al. 2000
). On the other hand, Bryazgin’s data from the Barents Sea noted depths of
30–70m
, and also in the Gulf of St Lawrence the animals also occur in the infralittoral (
Brunel et al. 1998
, see also
Shoemaker 1930a
,
b
).