A taxonomic study on the Phtisicidae (Crustacea: Amphipoda) of New South Wales, Australia
Author
Takeuchi, Ichiro
Department of Life Environment Conservation, Faculty of Agriculture, Ehime University, Matsuyama, Japan; & Center of Advanced Technology for the Environment, Faculty of Agriculture, Ehime University, Matsuyama, Japan;
Author
Lowry, James K.
Australian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, Sydney, NSW, Australia
text
Journal of Natural History
2015
2015-07-31
50
603
648
journal article
21307
10.1080/00222933.2015.1079338
c700f790-3418-4f26-bccc-cf001dd38057
1464-5262
3985737
975EE532-0FAD-4D4F-8E18-9DF3B790953F
Perotripus
sp.
(
Figures 22
and
23
)
Material examined
1? male,
AM
P49034,
33°45'S, 151°19'E
,
Long Reef
,
New South Wales
,
18 February 1996
, attached to sipunculid;? 1 premature female,
AM
P49035,
33°45'S
,
151°19'E
,
Long Reef
,
New South Wales
,
18 February 1996
, attached to a sipunculid
.
Figure 22.
Perotripus
sp. from east of Long Reef, New South Wales, Australia.? Male, 3.04 mm, AM P49034. Bar indicates 0.50 mm.
Figure 23.
Perotripus
sp. from east of Long Reef, New South Wales, Australia.? Male, 2.74 mm, AM P49034. Bars in A1, A2, G2, P6 and P7 indicate 0.10 mm and those in P3, P4 and P5 indicate 0.02 mm.
Locality
New South Wales
: Long Reef (this study).
? Male, body length
3.04 mm
,
AM
P49034.
Head/pereonite 1
combined length
0.34 mm
;
pereonite 2
,
0.40 mm
;
pereonite 3
,
0.31 mm
;
pereonite 4
,
0.55 mm
;
pereonite 5
,
0.69 mm
;
pereonite 6
,
0.64 mm
;
pereonite 7
,
0.10 mm
.
Eyes large, distinctive.
Antenna 1
0.15 × body length; peduncle article 2 longest; flagellum 0.33 × peduncular length, with two articles.
Antenna 2
0.8 × antenna 1 length; flagellum 0.12 × peduncular length, with two articles.
Pereon.
Pereonite 2
with anterolateral rounded projection, with dorsodistal hump.
Pereonite 3
with rounded anterolateral projection, with dorsodistal hump.
Pereonite 4
with anterolateral projection, with broad dorsal hump.
Pereonite 5
longest.
Gnathopod 2
gill small, subovate; coxa vestigial; basis without anterodistal projection; carpus 0.1 × propodus length; propodus large; length 1.3 × width; propodus anterodistal margin convex; palm proximal projection with two robust (grasping) setae; propodus palm smooth, slightly convex.
Pereopod 3
slender, 3- articulate; gill missing in this specimen.
Pereopod 4
shorter than pereopod 3; gill small, subovate; length about 1.2 × width.
Pereopod 5
slender.
Pereopod 6
basis slightly shorter than propodus; carpus subequal to basis; propodus with one robust seta on posterior margin; dactylus falcate.
Pereopod 7
similar to pereopod 6; merus subequal in length to basis.
Remarks
The genus
Perotripus
was established based on the single species,
P. brevis
(
La Follette, 1915
)
, which is distributed along the Californian to Alaskan coasts of the northeastern Pacific (
Dougherty and Steinberg 1953
;
Laubitz 1970
). Two additional species,
P. keablei
Guerra-García, 2006
and
P. koreanus
Lee and Hong, 2010
have so far been reported (
Guerra-García 2006
;
Guerra-García and Lowry 2009
;
Lee and Hong 2010
).
Of them, the present species,
Perotripus
sp., differs from
P. brevis
in the following distinctive characters: pereonite 2 is longer than pereonite
3 in
Perotripus
sp. from
New South Wales
, while pereonite 3 is longer than pereonite
2 in
P. brevis
. However, we have not described the present specimens as a new species because the specimens collected from
New South Wales
are only two small individuals. This indicates the possibility that these are juveniles, which have not developed specific diagnostic characters.
Perotripus keablei
was recorded from Lizard Island, on the northern part of the Great Barrier Reef,
Queensland
. Unlike
P. brevis
,
P. koreanus
and
Perotripus
sp. in the present study, pereopod 3 of
P. keablei
has one tiny article with two apical setae, which is very similar to that of pereopod 4. Recently, Lim et al. (2012) established the genus
Microtripus
which differs from
Perotripus
by 3-articulate flagellum of antenna 1 with three articles and pereopod 3 with one article. While
P. brevis
and
P. koreanus
have preopod 3 with three articles, corresponding pereopod of
P. keablei
with one article. Hence, this indicates that
P. keablei
possibly belongs to a different new genus from
Perotripus
.
In addition to these three species of
Perotripus
and
Perotripus
sp. reported in the current study, an undescribed species of
Perotripus
was recorded in the ecological and phylogenic studies and checklist from the Pacific coasts of central
Japan
(
Takeuchi et al. 1987
;
Takeuchi and Hirano 1995
;
Takeuchi 1999
;
Aoki and Takeda 2006
).
Key for the species of the
Phtisicidae
from
New South Wales
The species key provided here is based on the characteristics that could be observed without dissection of the mouthparts using binocular microscope.
1. Pereopod 3 well developed, with seven articles ........................................................... 2
–
Pereopod 3 vestigial, fewer than three articles ............................................................. 5
2. Pereopod 4 well developed, with seven articles ........................................................... 3
–
Pereopod 4 degenerated ......................................................................................................... 6
3. Gills on pereonites 2 to 4 ........................................................................................................ 4
–
Gills on pereonites 3 and 4 ............................................................................
Paraproto
sp.
4. Basis of gnathopod 2 about 2 × length of pereonite 2 ................................................... ..................................................................................................
Notoprotomima smithi
sp. nov.
–
Basis of gnathopod 2 shorter than length of pereonite .................................................. .......................................................................
Metaproto novaehollandiae
(
Haswell, 1879a
)
5. Flagellum of antenna 1 with more than two articles ........................................................ ...........................................................................................
Hircella cornigera
(
Haswell, 1879b
)
–
Flagellum of antenna 1 with two articles ................................................
Perotripus
sp.
6. Pereonites 3 and 4 with pair of mid-dorsal projections ................................................... ..................................................................................
Dodecas decacentrum
Stebbing, 1910b
–
Pereonites 3 and 4 lacking mid-dorsal projections ............................................................ ..........................................................................................
Dodecas hexacentrum
Mayer, 1903