New records of two rare genera, Monstrotanais Kudinova-Pasternak, 1981 and Robustochelia Kudinova-Pasternak, 1983 (Tanaidacea: Crustacea)
Author
Wiak, Piotr Jó Ż
Author
Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena
text
Zootaxa
2007
1505
19
35
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.177166
ad53b532-537b-4e3a-828b-f9ead5b28317
1175-5326
177166
Genus:
Monstrotanais
Kudinova-Pasternak, 1981
Diagnosis:
Female. Carapace clearly tapering proximally, almost parallel with only slightly rounded lateral margin, pereonites lateral margin almost parallel. Cheliped basis separated from pereonite-1 by large gap ventrally. Antennule 4-articled. Antenna 6-articled, occasionally fusion line at midlength on article-4. Labrum relatively massive, covered by minute setae, with some longer setae distally. Mandible molar as long as incisor, with a few tubercles gradually elongated into five spines. Labium inner lobe slender (twice as long as wide). Labium outer lobe naked. Maxilliped endites with two short setae and one large conical tubercle. Cheliped massive; carpus only about 1.5 times as long as wide, 0.5 times as long as propodus; propodus large, with well calcified inner margin and strongly serrated keel ventrally; dactylus with strong tubercle on inner margin; unguis large, strongly calcified, as long as dactylus. Pereopods 1–6 compact; coxa present; merus, carpus and propodus with strong biserrated setae and numerous microtrichia along article. Pleopod rami paddle-shaped, with setae aggregated distally. Uropod endopod 2-articled, twice as long as exopod.
Male:
Unknown.
Type
species:
Monstrotanais mirabilicheles
Kudinova-Pasternak, 1981
.
Gender of generic name:
Masculine.
Genera included:
Monstrotanais mirabilicheles
Kudinova-Pasternak, 1981
;
Monstrotanais ingens
n. sp.
Remarks:
Monstrotanais
was erected for one specimen of
M. mirabilicheles
Kudinova-Pasternak,
1981
in the manca-II stage that was found during dredging in the North Pacific (
174° 36' E
–
22° 25' N
). The genus is well characterized by its compact pereopods, massive cheliped with large propodus and strongly calcified unguis, and strongly calcified serrated lower margins of chela.
In the classification of Paratanoidea by
Larsen and Wilson (2002)
Monstrotanais
, along with twenty six other genera, was not included to any of the newly defined families (
Anderson
et al
., 2006
: <http://tidepool.st.usm.edu/tanaids/incertaesedis.html>). In the preliminary phylogenetic efforts toward revising the classification
Monstrotanais
clearly associates with
Leptognathioides
Bird & Holdich, 1984
and
Singula
(
Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, 2005
)
sharing some peculiar characters such as: compact pereopods 1–3, a wide mandible molar with a few spines on the lower margin, a massive chela, the cheliped basis separated by a gap from pereonite-1 ventrally, and a one-articled uropod exopod (Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Larsen, study in progress). A similar set of characters can be observed in
Subulella
Holdich and Bird, 1986
and
Pseudoleptognathia
Sieg, 1986
although the first genus lacks compact pereopods and spines on the mandible molar, while the other has a rather slim chela and its cheliped basis reaches pereonite-1 ventrally. Compact pereopods and a stout chela occurs also in
Stenotanais
Holdich & Bird, 1984
(
incertae sedis
),
Leptognathiella
Hansen, 1913
(Colletteidae)
and
Filitanais
Kudinova-Pasternak, 1973
(Colletteidae)
but they all have a pointed mandible molar.
Nematotanais
Bird & Holdich, 1985
also has compact pereopods 1–3; in the classification by
Larsen and Wilson (2002)
it was included in the
Colletteidae
but it bears some peculiar characters distinguishing it from all genera mentioned above as well as from the others colletteids (lack of mandibles, reduced spines/ setae on merus and carpus of all pereopods, and exopod uropod modified to a ‘nonarticulated projection’).