The sea lice (Copepoda: Caligidae) of Moreton Bay (Queensland, Australia), with descriptions of thirteen new species
Author
Boxshall, Geoff
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-03-19
4398
1
1
172
journal article
30482
10.11646/zootaxa.4398.1.1
e5a58990-d727-440a-aab9-7638a5698954
1175-5326
1202953
79E3EB78-D1C3-45CF-AB13-F8E61C936252
Caligus furcisetifer
Redkar, Rangnekar & Murti, 1949
(
Fig. 29
)
Syn.
Caligus lepeophtheiropsis
Pillai, 1967
Material examined.
2♀♀ from
Glaucostegus
typus
(Anonymous [Bennett], 1830) (TC17251)
18 January 2016
; 1♀ QM Reg. No. W53072, 1♀ NHMUK 2017.272; 2♂♂ (TC17425)
22 January 2016
; 1♂ QM Reg. No. W53073, 1♂ NHMUK 2017.273; 1♀ immature (TC 17360)
21 January 2016
, 1♀ immature (TC 17416)
22 January 2016
.
Site on host.
Body surface.
Differential diagnosis.
Cephalothorax dorsoventrally flattened with well-developed marginal membranes along margins of lateral zones of dorsal cephalothoracic shield; frontal plates with minute, inconspicuous lunules located laterally (
Fig. 29A
). Genital complex about as long as wide; abdomen small, 1-segmented, about 1.3 times longer than wide; genital complex about 2.7 times longer than abdomen. Antenna with tapering posterior process on proximal segment (
Fig. 29B
). Post-antennal process with large tapering tine; associated papillae multisensillate. Posterior process of maxillule simple; process on anterior sclerite extending over base of posterior process (
Fig. 29B
). Maxilliped of female with smooth myxal margin on proximal segment. Sternal furca with widely spaced, slightly divergent tines (
Fig. 29C
). Distal exopodal segment of leg 1 with 3 plumose setae on posterior margin; distal spine 1 stout, about as long as spine 2 (
Fig. 29D
); spine 3 shorter than spine 2, both with accessory process; seta 4 shorter than spine 3. Leg 2 with margin of endopodal segments 1 and 2 ornamented with setules; outer spine on exopodal segment 1 (
Fig. 29E
) directed obliquely over surface of ramus, spine on second segment aligned closer to longitudinal axis of ramus; proximal and distal outer spines on third segment well developed (
Fig. 29E
), with fine serrations along both margins. Leg 3 with well developed apron lacking distinctive ornamentation: rami located close together (
Fig. 29F
): exopod indistinctly 3-segmented; first segment with large tapering spine and inner plumose seta, second segment with outer spine and inner seta and incompletely separated from third segment, armed with 3 outer spines and 4 plumose setae. Endopod 2-segmented: first segment forming short velum and bearing inner seta; compound distal segment with 6 plumose setae. Leg 4 uniramous, 3-segmented; first exopodal segment with outer spine; second with 1 long and 2 short apical spines (
Fig 29G
); long spine more than 3 times longer than short spines. Mean body length of female
8.07 mm
, range
7.63 to 8.50 mm
(based on
2 specimens
). Mean body length of male
6.68 mm
, range
6.60 to 6.75 mm
(based on
2 specimens
).
Remarks.
Caligus furcisetifer
was originally described from
India
by
Redkar
et al.
(1949)
, based on
3 females
and
2 males
collected from
Eusphyra blochii
(Cuvier, 1816)
(as
Sphyrna blochii
) caught off
Bombay
. However, it was poorly characterised so that
Pillai (1967b
,
1968
) didn’t recognize it when he established a new species,
C. lepeophtheiropsis
Pillai, 1967
, to accommodate two females collected from an unidentified species of
Pristis
Linck, 1790 (
Pristidae
) caught at Trivandrum,
India
. Subsequently, in his monograph,
Pillai (1985)
placed
C. lepeophtheiropsis
in synonymy with
C. furcisetifer
.
The tiny size of the lunules on the frontal plates is a distinctive feature of this species. As
Pillai (1968)
commented, the lunules are inconspicuous and easily overlooked, and “the animal looks very much like a
Lepeophtheirus
”. The species was discovered in Australian waters by
Morgan
et al.
(2010)
who found both sexes on the body surface and head of the critically endangered largetooth sawfish,
Pristis microdon
Latham, 1794, in the brackish reaches of the Fitzroy River (
Western
Australia
) and the Leichhardt River opening into the
Gulf
of Carpentaria (
Queensland
). In Moreton
Bay
C. furcisetifer
occurred only on
Glaucostegus
typus
(
Rhinobatidae
). Although restricted to elasmobranch hosts,
C. furcisetifer
appears to exhibit relatively low host specificity having been recorded from three different orders,
Carcharhiniformes
,
Pristiformes
and
Rajiformes
.