The Caprellidea (Crustacea: Amphipoda) from Ceuta, North Africa, with the description of three species of Caprella, a key to the species of Caprella, and biogeographical discussion
Author
Guerra-García, J. M.
Author
Takeuchi, I.
text
Journal of Natural History
2002
2002-04-30
36
6
675
713
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00222930010025923
journal article
10.1080/00222930010025923
1464-5262
5299981
Caprella tuberculata
Bate and Westwood, 1868
(®gures 17±20)
Caprella tuberculata
GueÂrin, 1836
, pl. 28, ®gure 1;
Goodsir, 1842: 188
±189, pl. 3, ®gures 6±7;
Bate and Westwood, 1868: 68
±70;
Mayer, 1882: 56
±57, ®gures 15±16;
Chevreux and Fage, 1925: 460
±461, ®gure 437;
Schellenberg, 1942: 230
±239, ®gure 199.
Caprella acanthifera
:
Bate, 1862: 366
, pl. 57, ®gure 2.
Material examined.
2B
: ®ve males,
six females
;
15D
:
four males
,
six females
, four ovigerous females,
two juveniles
.
Diagnosis
Head with a short and acute rostrum in males, and small round protuberance in females. Except the ®rst, all body pereonites with strong and numerous dorsal tubercles. Males with a pair of lateral tubercles on pereonite 5. Pereonites 1 and 2 elongated in male, pereonite 2 with plumose setae in males. Palm of the propodus of gnathopod
2 in
males with large thumb-like protuberance de®ning the palm, and with long and dense, plumose setae. Anterior surface of basis and propodus also with plumose setae. Pereopods 5 and 6 with a pair of proximal grasping spines. Pereopod 7 with four grasping spines in males (in clusters of 2-1-1) and three in females (2-1).
Material examined
Male
`a’ from the hydroid
Sertularella gayi
Lamouroux
(35ss55¾
20
²
N
, 5ss22¾W).
Depth
28 metres,
July 1999
, coll.
Jose Manuel
Guerra-GarcõÂa.
Female
`b’ found together with male`a’.
Other
specimens:
four males
, ®ve females collected together with male`a’;
four males
,
ten females
and
two juveniles
on seaweed
Dilophus spiralis
Hamel
(35ss54¾N, 5ss16¾
35
²
W
),
August 1999
, coll.
Juan RodrõÂguez. Male
`a’, female`b’ and another
three specimens
are deposited in the
Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales
de
Madrid
,
Spain
(No.
MNCN 20.06
/4649)
,
the remaining specimens are in the
Laboratorio
de BiologõÂa
Marina, Universidad de Sevilla
,
Spain
.
FIG. 17.
Caprella tuberculata
Bate and Westwood, 1868
. Lateral view: a, male; b, female. Scale bar: 1 mm.
FIG. 18.
Caprella tuberculata
Bate and Westwood, 1868
. Male. a, lower lip; b, upper lip; c, maxilliped; d, left mandible; e, right mandible; f, maxilla 1; g, maxilla 2. Scale bars: 0.05 mm.
FIG. 19.
Caprella tuberculata
Bate and Westwood, 1868
. a±d, male. a, antenna 1; b, antenna 2; c, gnathopod 1; d, gnathopod 2. e, female gnathopod 2. Scale bars: a,b: 0.5 mm; c: 0.2 mm; d: 0.5 mm; e: 0.2 mm.
FIG. 20.
Caprella tuberculata
Bate and Westwood, 1868
. a±d, male. a, pereopod 5; b, pereopod 6; c, pereopod 7; d, abdomen (ventral view). e±f, female. e, pereopod VII; f, abdomen (ventral view). Scale bars: a±c, e: 0.5 mm; d,f: 0.05 mm.
Locality
Ceuta
,
North Africa
,
Mediterranean
(35ss55¾
20
²
N
, 5ss22¾W; 35ss54¾N, 5ss16¾
35
²
W
)
.
Redescription.
Male`a’
Body length.
5.9 mm.
Lateral view
. Head with a short, acute and curved rostrum. Except the ®rst one, all pereonites with tubercles following the formula 0-2.1-2.1-1.2.1- 2 (lateral).2.2- 4-2.2. Pereonites 1 and 2 elongated; pereonite 2 bearing long plumose setae dorsally and ventrally.
Gills.
Oval, length
ca
twice width.
Antennae.
Antenna 1 with the same length as cephalon and pereonite 2 together; peduncular articles setose; ¯agellum with 11 articles. Antenna 2 about half length of antenna 1; peduncular articles 3 and 4 carrying six pairs of long, serrated setae; ¯agellum two-articulate, setose.
Mouthparts.
Upper and lower lip similar to those in
Caprella ceutae
n. sp.
Pars incisiva and lacinia mobilis with ®ve teeth on each; left mandible with three pectinate setae and the right with two; a row of short and ®ne setae between the pectinate setae and the molar process. Maxilla 1 outer lobe with seven serrated spines distally; article 2 of palp with eight distal setae and a row of four lateral setae. Inner lobe of maxilla 2 shorter than outer, with 12 apical setae; outer lobe with nine apical setae. Inner plate of maxilliped shorter and a little wider than outer plate, with seven plumose setae and two teeth; outer plate with long simple setae and three teeth; article 2 and 3 of palp with long setae; article 4 with rows of setulae on grasping margin.
Gnathopods
. Merus and carpus of gnathopo d 1 with row of four setae on posterior margin; propodus with a pair of proximal grasping spines; palm of propodus with a few setae; dactylus partially serrated on the inner margin. Gnathopod 2 inserted on the posterior part of the pereonite; basis one-third length of pereonite 2, with carina and several plumose setae on anterior surface; ishium, merus and carpus rounded; merus about 1.5 times larger than ischium; carpus very short, length
ca
one-®fth of merus; palm of propodus de®ned proximally by a large, thumb-like protuberance and distally by a round projection; between these two projections, the palm of the propodus is very concave, covered with a mixture of dense ®ne plumose and simple setae; dorsal surface of propodus also with plumose setae; dactylus with medial protuberance and plumose setae.
Pereopods.
Pereopods 5, 6 and 7 increasing in length respectively; palm of propodus concave; a pair of proximal grasping spines on pereopods 5, 6 and 7; on pereopod 7, two additional grasping spines, four in total.
Abdomen.
With a pair of appendages, a pair of lateral lobes and a single dorsal lobe; appendage two-articulate, the two articles of each appendage rounded and approximately the same size; both articles carrying three setae; distal article serrated on the apical margin; lateral lobes carrying four simple setae and dorsal lobe with two plumose setae. Penes median, slender, length
ca
three times width.
Female`b’
Body length
. 4.1 mm. Head with a short dorsal protuberance in the middle. Pereonite 1 and 2 not elongated; tubercle formula on pereonites 0-1.2.1-2-1.2.1 - 2-4-2.2, pereonite 5 lacking lateral tubercles; pereonite 2 without setae. Peduncular articles of antenna 1 scarcely setose; ¯agellum of antenna 1 with eight articles. Gnathopod 2 inserted on anterior half of pereonite 2; palm de®ned by two small teeth instead of thumb-like protuberance, without distal projection at the dactylar hinge; basis, propodus and dactylus without ®ne, plumose setae. Pereopod 7 propodus with three grasping spines. Anterior brood lamellae setose all round, posterior pair not setose. Abdomen with a pair of lateral lobes which carry two setae and a dorsal lobe with two plumose setae.
Remarks
As
McCain and Steinberg (1970)
pointed out, the nomenclature of this species is one of the most confused among the caprellid species. Indeed,
Mayer (1882)
considered that the specimens described by
GueÂrin (1836)
and
Goodsir (1842)
were not
C. tuberculata
.
Stebbing (1888)
mentioned that GueÂrin’s
C. tuberculata
could be a synonym of
C. scaura
. The description of
C. tuberculata
given by
GueÂrin (1836)
is quite brief.
The specimens found in
Ceuta
are in agreement with the description of
C. tuberculata
given by
Bate and Westwood (1868)
for Atlantic specimens. However, we have observed several diOEerences. Following the descriptions of
Bate and Westwood (1868)
,
Chevreux and Fage (1925)
and
Harrison (1944)
the most striking diOEerence between
C. tuberculata
of Bate and Westwood and
C. tuberculata
found at
Ceuta
is the size; males of
Caprella tuberculata
from
Ceuta
do not exced 5.9 mm (although we have observed only
nine adult
males), while specimens from British and French coasts (
Bate and Westwood, 1868
) usually reach
15 mm
at adulthood.
Caprella tuberculata
from
Ceuta
is also distinguished from Atlantic specimens as follows: (1) males from
Ceuta
have a short and round rostrum on the head while Atlantic specimens have a very short, central, dorsal spine; (2) male`a’ and female`b’ from
Ceuta
have tubercles following the formula (0-2.1-2.1-1.2.1- 2 (lateral).2.2- 4-2.2 in male, and 0-1.2.1-2-1.2.1-2-0-2. 2 in female). These tubercles are always present in the other specimens examined but some small tubercles may occur depending on the individuals. There is no speci®c formula for tubercles in descriptions of Atlantic specimens; (3) in
C. tuberculata
from
Ceuta
the propodus of pereopod 7 has four grasping spines in males and three in females, while there is only a single pair of grasping spines in Atlantic specimens (both male and females); (4) the posterior brood lamella are not setose on the posterior edges in females from North Africa; a setose margin is present in Atlantic specimens.
Before this study,
Caprella tuberculata
had been found on the British and French coast but also at Santander, northern
Spain
(
Chevreux and Fage, 1925
).
Marques and Bellan-Santini (1985)
also reported
27 specimens
of
C. tuberculata
from between Peniche and Arrabida (Portuguese Atlantic coast). An extensive comparative study between Atlantic individuals of
C. tuberculata
and the specimens of the Strait of
Gibraltar
would be necessary in order to elucidate whether the above diOEerences are intra-speci®c or inter-specic. Recently, a detailed comparison has been successfully conducted for the species complex
Caprella acanthifera
(
Krapp-Schickel and Vader, 1998
)
collected from Atlantic and Mediterranean waters.