A review of the Caligus productus species group, with the description of a new species, new synonymies and supplementary descriptions
Author
Boxshall, Geoff A
Author
El-Rashidy, Hoda H.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2271
1
26
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.190952
70e42274-cb72-4b9b-88df-c287a84a93d1
1175-5326
190952
Caligus dakari
van
Beneden, 1892
Syn:
Caligus mauritanicus
typical form
Brian 1924
Differential diagnosis:
Female genital complex and abdomen combined about 1.5 times longer than cephalothorax; body length 6.0–
6.5 mm
.
Male
body length 5.0 mm. Female genital complex (
Fig. 3
A) elongate with parallel lateral margins and narrow waist-like region anteriorly, lacking distinct postero-lateral lobes: abdomen 2-segmented, first segment nearly three times longer than second.
Male
abdomen 2- segmented (
Fig. 4
A); second segment longer than first. Post-antennal process large and strongly curved in both sexes (cf.
Figs 3
B, pap; 4B, pap). Additional process present between post-antennal process and base of antenna in female (
Fig. 3
B). Posterior process of maxillule (
Fig. 4
B, mxl) with distinct narrowing between proximal and sital parts; male with tiny blunt accessory process. Sternal furca with strongly incurved tines and wide gape; transverse thickenings of body surface present either side of furca (
Fig. 4
D). Female maxilliped with smooth medial margin.
Male
maxilliped with pointed process on myxal margin (
Fig. 4
C), opposing tip of claw; process minutely concave at tip. Exopod of leg 1 with seta at inner distal angle shorter than segment and about as long as terminal spine on distal margin; posterior margin with single plumose seta less than half length of adjacent seta (
Fig. 4
E). Exopod of leg 4 distinctive in both sexes (
Fig. 3
C, 4F): first exopodal segment large with marginal setules, second segment with concave margin proximal to first marginal spine: exopodal spines relatively stout, outer 2 spines of similar length and markedly shorter than terminal spine.
FIGURE 4.
Caligus dakari
van Beneden, 1892 male. A. genital complex and abdomen, ventral view; B. antenna, postantennal process (pap) and maxillule (mxl)
in situ
, ventral view; C. maxilliped; D. sternal furca
in situ
; E. second exopodal segment of leg 1 showing distal armature; F. leg 4.
Scale-bars
: A = 500 μm, B, C, D, F = 250 μm, E = 100 μm.
Material examined:
30 female
and
3 male
syntypes
labeled
Caligus mauritanicus
, in 2 vials deposited in the collections of the Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris, registration numbers,
MNHN
Cp.278 and Cp.280.
Distribution:
Eastern South Atlantic:
Mauritania
,
Senegal
.
Hosts:
Carangidae
:
Lichia amia
(Linnaeus, 1758)
;
Sciaenidae
:
Argyrosomus regius
(Asso, 1801)
(as
Sciaena aquila
).
Remarks:
The original description of
C. dakari
was incomplete and inadequate by modern standards and even though
Brian (1924)
recognised a remarkable similarity in gross form between
C. mauritanicus
and
C. dakari
, he preferred to establish a new species. Van Beneden’s (1892) description specified that the plumose setae were absent on the posterior margin of the distal exopodal segment of leg 1 of
C. dakari
, which allows us to place it in the
productus
-group. In addition, this is an unusually large species of
Caligus
. These two nominal species are the only species currently known from the Atlantic coast of Africa that lack these setae, share this shape of genital complex and elongate abdomen, and have a female body length of about 6.0 mm. We consider these species to be identical. The oldest available name for this species is
C. dakari
and we here recognise the typical form of
Caligus mauritanicus
Brian, 1924
as a junior subjective synonym.
Kirtisinghe (1964)
considered that the specimens of
Caligus arii
Bassett-Smith, 1898
reported from
South Africa
by
Barnard (1955)
belonged to
C. dakari
.