REVIEW ARTICLE Caprellids (Crustacea: Amphipoda) from the Gulf of Mexico, with observations on Deutella mayeri, redescription of Metaprotella hummelincki, a taxonomic key and zoogeographical comments
Author
Paz-Ríos, Carlos E.
Laboratorio de Bentos, Departamento de Recursos del Mar, Cinvestav, Merida, Mexico;
Author
Guerra-García, José M.
Laboratorio de Biología Marina, Departamento de Zoología, Facultad de Biología, Universidad de Sevilla, Sevilla, España
Author
Ardisson, Pedro-Luis
Laboratorio de Bentos, Departamento de Recursos del Mar, Cinvestav, Merida, Mexico;
text
Journal of Natural History
2014
2014-07-11
48
41 - 42
2517
2578
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2014.931481
journal article
10.1080/00222933.2014.931481
1464-5262
5194444
Deutella mayeri
Stebbing, 1895
(
Figures 6–8
)
Deutella mayeri
Stebbing, 1895: 400–402
, pl. 15a.
Mayer, 1903: 44–45
.
McCain, 1968: 54–57
, figs 25, 26, 52.
McCain and Steinberg, 1970: 48
.
Ortiz et al., 2002
, fig. 30.
Guerra-García, 2003b: 1070–1071
, fig. 8. Guerra-García, Krapp-Schickel, et al., 2006: 168–171, figs 12, 13.
Material examined
Station 10,
two males
(
one male
from this station used for figures, male A; the other male used for figure Gn2″, male B),
17 September 2007
, CYMX-11-
CY
.
Station 21,
one male
,
21 May 2010
, CYMX-28-
CY
.
Station 23,
one male
,
two females
(1 ovigerous),
22 May 2010
, CYMX-29-
CY
;
one male
,
two females
,
21 July 2010
, CYMX-39-
CY
.
Station 24,
one male
,
18 May 2010
, CYMX-27-
CY
;
one male
,
18 June 2010
, CYMX-30-
CY
.
Station 27,
one male
(gnathopod 2 used for figure Gn2′, male C),
three females
(two ovigerous;
one female
from this station used for figures), CYMX-34-
CY
.
Type
locality
Antigua
,
West Indies
.
Distribution
Gulf
of
Mexico
; Caribbean Sea (
McCain 1968
;
Ortiz and Lalana 1996
,
2010
; Guerra- García 2003b; Guerra-García, Krapp-Schickel, et al. 2006).
Records in the
Gulf
of
Mexico
MEX
: Celestun; Celestun Offshore; Sisal Offshore (present study).
USA
: Southwestern
Florida
(
Guerra-García 2003b
).
Habitat
This species has been found clinging on
Thallassia
sp., hydroids, algae (Guerra- García, Krapp-Schickel, et al. 2006) and on sandy bottoms from coral reef areas as
Figure 6.
Deutella mayeri
Stebbing, 1895
. Yucatan, Mexico; male A, CYMX-11-CY; female, CYMX-34-CY. Scale bar for A1 and A2: 0.5 mm; scale bar for male A and female: 1 mm.
Figure 7.
Deutella mayeri
Stebbing, 1895
. Yucatan, Mexico; male A, CYMX-11-CY. Scale bar: 0.1 mm.
well as on muddy sediment from the coast (present study). The depth range is
1–18 m
(
Guerra-García 2003b
; present study).
Ontogenetic development
The main feature to distinguish this species easily from the remaining species of
Deutella
is in the striking propodus of gnathopod
2 in
males: it has a triangular elongate process proximally provided with a grasping spine (
Guerra-García 2003b
). Regarding that, Guerra-García, Krapp-Schickel, et al. (2006) illustrated the morphological variation in the propodus of gnathopod
2 in
the male of
D. mayeri
during its development. In the present study, though only a few specimens were examined, the morphological variation of gnathopod 2 was also observed. In fact, the propodus of the male specimen is stouter and larger than those illustrated by
McCain (1968)
;
Guerra-García (2003b)
and Guerra-García, Krapp-Schickel, et al. (2006), suggesting a final stage of development, a superadult. Furthermore, based on the material examined, the morphological variation during the development of
D. mayeri
can also be noticed on the anterolateral projection of pereonites 2 and 3 (rounded when superadult instead of triangular when juvenile or adult), and dorsal surface of pereonite 2 (two pairs of tubercles when superadult instead of smooth when juvenile or adult).
Figure 8.
Deutella mayeri
Stebbing, 1895
. Yucatan, Mexico; male A and male B, CYMX-11- CY; male C and female, CYMX-34-CY. Scale bars for P3, P4, AbDv and AbDv of female: 0.1 mm; scale bars for Gn1, Gn1 of female and Gn2 of female: 0.2 mm; scale bar for Gn2 of male A, Gn2′ of male C and Gn2″ of male B: 0.5 mm.
Other morphological characters that also varied with development, and which contrast with the descriptions and observations of
McCain (1968)
and
Guerra-García (2003b)
were displayed in the mouthparts, specifically in the maxilla 1–2, and maxilliped. Outer lobe of maxilla 1 bearing seven distal spines (new range: 4–7). Outer lobe of maxilla 2 with nine apical setae (new range: 5–9); inner lobe with eight apical setae (new range: 4–8). Inner plate of maxilliped with 3–7 apical setae of which 1–4 robust and 2–3 plumose, and one robust, short seta like a ‘tooth’.
Remarks
A characteristic observed in the material examined and not reported before for
D. mayeri
was the uni-articulate pereopod 3 and 4. Usually these pereopods have been described and illustrated with two articles, therefore the present material denotes intraspecific variation in
D. mayeri
.
The male of
D. mayeri
is similar to that of
Deutella indica
Guerra-García, 2002c
by the shape of gnathopod 2, but differ by the two pairs of dorsal tubercles on pereonite 2, a simple setal formula and the uni-articulate abdominal appendage. Likewise,
D. mayeri
is similar to
Deutella caribensis
Guerra-García
, Krapp- Schickel, et al. 2006,
Deutella philippinensis
Guerra-García, 2002d
and
Deutella venenosa
Mayer, 1890
, the others species of the genus bearing one article on pereopods 3 and 4.
Deutella mayeri
differs from the first species by the head and pereonites 3 and 4 smooth, and mandibles with setal formula simple; it differs from the second species by the mandibles with setal formula simple, dorsal tubercles on pereonite 2 and male abdomen appendages uni-articulate; it differs from the third species by the head and pereonite 1 smooth, and dorsal tubercles on pereonite 2.
Reports on the occurrence of
D. mayeri
in the Gulf of
Mexico
have been occasional and confusing.
Ortiz (1979)
based on
Steinberg and Dougherty (1957)
included this species in a checklist of amphipods for the Gulf of
Mexico
and Caribbean Sea. After that,
Posey et al. (1998)
in an ecological study reported this species occurring on sandy sediments of the northwestern continental shelf from Florida. More recently
Escobar-Briones et al. (2002)
included this species in their checklist of amphipods for
Mexico
; however, the most recent checklist for
Mexico
made by Winfield (2008) did not include
D. mayeri
. In a review of the genus
Deutella
,
Guerra-García (2003b)
confirmed the record of
D. mayeri
in the Gulf of
Mexico
, which was adopted by
Winfield and Ortiz (2013)
in their checklist of caprellids for the Gulf of
Mexico
.