treatments-xml/data/A4/0A/87/A40A87CAF30F3741D5E7FF6582B71582.xml
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<document id="060E36CEC2D126B60DEC6ED6609C3CCE" ID-DOI="10.3853/j.0067-1975.61.2009.1498" ID-ISSN="2201-4349" ID-Zenodo-Dep="5240268" IM.materialsCitations_approvedBy="felipe" IM.metadata_approvedBy="felipe" IM.taxonomicNames_approvedBy="felipe" checkinTime="1629587102830" checkinUser="felipe" docAuthor="Timms, Brian V." docDate="2009" docId="A40A87CAF30F3741D5E7FF6582B71582" docLanguage="en" docName="RecAustMus.61.1.49-72.pdf" docOrigin="Records of the Australian Museum 61 (1)" docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.0067-1975.61.2009.1498" docStyle="DocumentStyle:7863F7301B7BEE922F541F6F9B5AEEC6.2:RecAustMus.2008-2018.journal_article.0cover" docStyleId="7863F7301B7BEE922F541F6F9B5AEEC6" docStyleName="RecAustMus.2008-2018.journal_article.0cover" docStyleVersion="2" docTitle="Limnadopsis multilineata Timms 2009, n.sp." docType="treatment" docVersion="2" lastPageNumber="63" masterDocId="5833FFB2F302374FD673FFFF814D1777" masterDocTitle="A Revision of the Australian Endemic Clam Shrimp Genus Limnadopsis Spencer &amp; Hall (Crustacea: Branchiopoda: Spinicaudata: Limnadiidae)" masterLastPageNumber="72" masterPageNumber="49" pageNumber="62" updateTime="1699081611322" updateUser="plazi" zenodo-license-document="CC-BY-4.0" zenodo-license-figures="CC-BY-4.0">
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<mods:title id="E97C032201F0C35B58124D00E2F65C2C">A Revision of the Australian Endemic Clam Shrimp Genus Limnadopsis Spencer &amp; Hall (Crustacea: Branchiopoda: Spinicaudata: Limnadiidae)</mods:title>
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<mods:name id="61D601FBD9D6992D1771D8D06798A270" type="personal">
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<mods:namePart id="A442B2F91746F94999A1C5EADFF463D5">Timms, Brian V.</mods:namePart>
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<mods:title id="F2818322B205A121621778054192AC42">Records of the Australian Museum</mods:title>
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<mods:date id="7E7D85DC987B14AF28D26AC2AF3EE669">2009</mods:date>
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<mods:number id="82CA6F4ED0CE3B7AD5EA116C5CD83F58">2009-05-27</mods:number>
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<mods:number id="192E66C1B010A2706A1A7CF272ED9D20">61</mods:number>
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<treatment id="A40A87CAF30F3741D5E7FF6582B71582" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:A40A87CAF30F3741D5E7FF6582B71582" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/A40A87CAF30F3741D5E7FF6582B71582" lastPageId="14" lastPageNumber="63" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<subSubSection id="64B96557F30F3742D5E7FF65845E17C3" box="[916,1299,154,180]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D5E7FF65845E17C3" blockId="13.[916,1299,154,180]" box="[916,1299,154,180]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<heading id="775481B0F30F3742D5E7FF65845E17C3" box="[916,1299,154,180]" centered="true" fontSize="11" level="2" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" reason="2">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D5E7FF65845E17C3" bold="true" box="[916,1299,154,180]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30F3742D5E7FF65858217C3" ID-CoL="79b85f28-d370-4db4-89e8-bf873d6fd8cd" authority="Timms, 2009" authorityName="Timms" authorityYear="2009" box="[916,1231,154,180]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="multilineata" status="sp. nov.">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D5E7FF65858217C3" bold="true" box="[916,1231,154,180]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Limnadopsis multilineata</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
<taxonomicNameLabel id="05E457B5F30F3742D2A4FF65845E17C3" box="[1239,1299,154,180]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" rank="species">n.sp.</taxonomicNameLabel>
</emphasis>
</heading>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="64B96557F30F3742D581FF27845A16F6" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="description">
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D581FF2785F81785" blockId="13.[1010,1205,216,242]" box="[1010,1205,216,242]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30F3742D581FF2785151785" box="[1010,1112,216,242]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="2.[166,201,1758,1779]" captionTargetBox="[167,1467,151,1738]" captionTargetId="figure-9@2.[167,1467,151,1738]" captionTargetPageId="2" captionText="Fig. 2. Photographs of whole specimens of species of Limnadopsis. (A) L. birchii; (B) L. tatei; (C) L. parvispinus; (D) L. minuta; (E) L. multilineata; (F) L. occidentalis; (G) L. paradoxa; (H) L. pilbarensis. Scale bars 5 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240274" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240274/files/figure.png" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Figs. 2E</figureCitation>
,
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30F3742D216FF2785C71785" box="[1125,1162,216,242]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="5.[121,156,1755,1776]" captionTargetBox="[121,1421,151,1738]" captionTargetId="figure-10@5.[121,1421,151,1738]" captionTargetPageId="5" captionText="Fig. 5. SEMs of eggs. (A) Limnadopsis birchii, Twin Pans, Currawinya National Park, Qld; (B) L. birchii, Bluebush Bore Swamp, via Carnarvon, WA; (C) L. multilineata, Mitchell River Falls, Kimberley, WA; (D) L. tatei, Bloodwood Station, Paroo; (E) L. tatei, near Laverton, WA; (F) L. pilbarensis, Chichester Range, WA; (G) L. parvispinus, Bloodwood Station, via Bourke, NSW; (H) L. parvispinus, Coolringdon Station, via Cooma, NSW; (J) L. occidentalis, Boolathana Station, via Carnarvon, WA; (K) L. paradoxa, Sieda Farm, Grass Patch, WA; (L) L. paradoxa, East Lake Bryde, via Newdegate, WA; (M) L. minuta, Keep River National Park, NT. Scale bars 50 µm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240282" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240282/files/figure.png" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">5C</figureCitation>
,
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30F3742D2E4FF2785F81785" box="[1175,1205,216,242]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">11</figureCitation>
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D569FEEE845A16F6" blockId="13.[794,1423,273,385]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D569FEEE822F165E" bold="true" box="[794,866,273,297]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Types</emphasis>
.
<materialsCitation id="9CCB3C81F30F3742D504FEED845A16F6" accessionNumber="C39334, C39335, C38102" collectingDate="1973-01-14" collectionCode="WAM" latitude="-14.816667" location="Mitchell Falls" longLatPrecision="1286" longitude="125.7" municipality="Kimberley" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" specimenCount="1" specimenCount-female="1" stateProvince="Western Australia" typeStatus="holotype">
<typeStatus id="F318887EF30F3742D504FEED82AE165E" box="[887,995,274,297]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="holotype">Holotype</typeStatus>
3
<collectionCode id="4AB2AE19F30F3742D274FEED8507165E" box="[1031,1098,274,297]" country="Australia" httpUri="http://biocol.org/urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" lsid="urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" name="Western Australian Museum" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="Museum">WAM</collectionCode>
C39334;
<typeStatus id="F318887EF30F3742D2B4FEED846B165E" box="[1223,1318,274,297]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="allotype">allotype</typeStatus>
<specimenCount id="3AA5FD55F30F3742D341FEED8405165E" box="[1330,1352,274,297]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="female"></specimenCount>
<collectionCode id="4AB2AE19F30F3742D339FEED84C2165E" box="[1354,1423,274,297]" country="Australia" httpUri="http://biocol.org/urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" lsid="urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" name="Western Australian Museum" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="Museum">WAM</collectionCode>
C39335,
<typeStatus id="F318887EF30F3742D50DFED082A81631" box="[894,997,303,326]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="paratype">paratypes</typeStatus>
<collectionCode id="4AB2AE19F30F3742D59FFED085601631" box="[1004,1069,303,326]" country="Australia" httpUri="http://biocol.org/urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" lsid="urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" name="Western Australian Museum" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="Museum">WAM</collectionCode>
C38102. Type locality:
<collectingRegion id="EE67F83EF30F3742D345FED082CD1614" country="Australia" name="Western Australia" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Western Australia</collectingRegion>
,
<collectingMunicipality id="CC78ACA6F30F3742D5F9FEB382B31614" box="[906,1022,332,355]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Kimberley</collectingMunicipality>
,
<location id="297C6007F30F3742D27BFEB385EC1614" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:A40A87CAF30F3741D5E7FF6582B71582:297C6007F30F3742D27BFEB385EC1614" box="[1032,1185,332,355]" latitude="-14.816667" longLatPrecision="1286" longitude="125.7" municipality="Kimberley" name="Mitchell Falls" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" stateProvince="Western Australia">Mitchell Falls</location>
, rock pools at the top.
<geoCoordinate id="4997501BF30F3742D569FE95822316F6" box="[794,878,362,385]" degrees="14" direction="south" minutes="49" orientation="latitude" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" precision="925" value="-14.816667">14°49'S</geoCoordinate>
<geoCoordinate id="4997501BF30F3742D506FE95829616F6" box="[885,987,362,385]" degrees="125" direction="east" minutes="42" orientation="longitude" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" precision="925" value="125.7">125°42'E</geoCoordinate>
,
<date id="581D101CF30F3742D595FE95850316F6" box="[998,1102,362,385]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" value="1973-01-14">
<collectingDate id="4859E9F4F30F3742D595FE95850316F6" box="[998,1102,362,385]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" value="1973-01-14">14.i.1973</collectingDate>
</date>
, Smith-Johnstone.
</materialsCitation>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="64B96557F30F3742D569FE5E82F01684" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="materials_examined">
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D569FE5E82F01684" blockId="13.[794,1421,417,499]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D569FE5E828616CE" bold="true" box="[794,971,417,441]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Other material</emphasis>
.
<materialsCitation id="9CCB3C81F30F3742D5AEFE5E82F41684" accessionNumber="C38103" collectingDate="1996-03-28" collectionCode="WAM" collectorName="C. Brockway" latitude="-17.833334" location="Lake Campion" longLatPrecision="1277" longitude="122.75" municipality="Broome" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" specimenCount="1" stateProvince="Western Australia">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D5AEFE5E85FC16CE" bold="true" box="[989,1201,417,441]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<collectingRegion id="EE67F83EF30F3742D5AEFE5E85FC16CE" box="[989,1201,417,441]" country="Australia" name="Western Australia" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Western Australia</collectingRegion>
</emphasis>
: via
<collectingMunicipality id="CC78ACA6F30F3742D29CFE5D840416CE" box="[1263,1353,418,441]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Broome</collectingMunicipality>
,
<location id="297C6007F30F3742D324FE5D82CF16A1" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:A40A87CAF30F3741D5E7FF6582B71582:297C6007F30F3742D324FE5D82CF16A1" latitude="-17.833334" longLatPrecision="1277" longitude="122.75" municipality="Broome" name="Lake Campion" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" stateProvince="Western Australia">Lake Campion</location>
,
<geoCoordinate id="4997501BF30F3742D5E3FE4082AA16A1" box="[912,999,447,470]" degrees="17" direction="south" minutes="50" orientation="latitude" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" precision="925" value="-17.833334">17°50'S</geoCoordinate>
<geoCoordinate id="4997501BF30F3742D581FE40851716A1" box="[1010,1114,447,470]" degrees="122" direction="east" minutes="45" orientation="longitude" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" precision="925" value="122.75">122°45'E</geoCoordinate>
,
<date id="581D101CF30F3742D21AFE4085A916A1" box="[1129,1252,447,470]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" value="1996-03-28">
<collectingDate id="4859E9F4F30F3742D21AFE4085A916A1" box="[1129,1252,447,470]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" value="1996-03-28">28.iii.1996</collectingDate>
</date>
,
<collectorName id="8156530AF30F3742D280FE4084C416A1" box="[1267,1417,447,470]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">C. Brockway</collectorName>
,
<collectionCode id="4AB2AE19F30F3742D569FE2382161684" box="[794,859,476,499]" country="Australia" httpUri="http://biocol.org/urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" lsid="urn:lsid:biocol.org:col:34981" name="Western Australian Museum" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="Museum">WAM</collectionCode>
C38103
</materialsCitation>
.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="64B96557F30F3742D569FDEB8292153E" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="distribution">
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D569FDEB8292153E" blockId="13.[794,1421,532,585]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D569FDEB82E8155B" bold="true" box="[794,933,532,556]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Distribution</emphasis>
. Kimberley and adjacent area of northwestern
<collectingRegion id="EE67F83EF30F3742D569FDCD8296153E" box="[794,987,562,585]" country="Australia" name="Western Australia" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Western Australia</collectingRegion>
.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="64B96557F30F3741D569FD9684CE1608" lastPageId="14" lastPageNumber="63" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" type="etymology">
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D569FD96850C15E9" blockId="13.[794,1421,617,670]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D569FD9682D815F6" bold="true" box="[794,917,617,641]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Etymology</emphasis>
. The specific name refers to the large number of growth lines in this species.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D569FD4084121341" blockId="13.[794,1422,703,1078]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D569FD40821F15A1" box="[794,850,703,726]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Male</emphasis>
. Carapace of mature individuals (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30F3742D2A4FD40847315A1" box="[1239,1342,703,726]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Fig. 11A</figureCitation>
) about
<quantity id="EB5B9B39F30F3742D569FD2382DC1584" box="[794,913,732,755]" metricMagnitude="-2" metricUnit="m" metricValue="1.1" metricValueMax="1.2" metricValueMin="1.0" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" unit="mm" value="11.0" valueMax="12.0" valueMin="10.0">1012 mm</quantity>
long and
<quantity id="EB5B9B39F30F3742D277FD23852D1584" box="[1028,1120,732,755]" metricMagnitude="-3" metricUnit="m" metricValue="7.0" metricValueMax="8.0" metricValueMin="6.0" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" unit="mm" value="7.0" valueMax="8.0" valueMin="6.0">68 mm</quantity>
high, L:D ratio c. 1.51.6. Dorsal margin almost smooth and nearly straight, anterior angle distinct, about 100°, and dorsoposterior margin slightly depressed and ending in rounded protrusion. Umbo distinct, triangular in shape, but not protruding above the dorsal margin. Anterior edge of carapace evenly curved, ventral edge almost straight, and posterior edge protruding and rounded so that it is convex posteroventrally and concave dorsoposteriorly. About 20 distinct growth lines with a further 1012 closely spaced lines on outer 1015% of carapace. Carapace brown and surface apparently granular, but “grains” actually comprising numerous dendritic pigment cells.
</paragraph>
<caption id="78DC6654F30F3742D6A8F88182C710BF" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" ID-Zenodo-Dep="5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" startId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" targetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" targetPageId="13">
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30F3742D6A8F88182C710BF" blockId="13.[219,1323,1918,1992]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">
Fig. 11.
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30F3742D75DF881836E10E4" authority="Timms, 2009" authorityName="Timms" authorityYear="2009" box="[302,547,1918,1939]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="multilineata" status="sp. nov.">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D75DF881836E10E4" box="[302,547,1918,1939]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">Limnadopsis multilineata</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
<taxonomicNameLabel id="05E457B5F30F3742D458F881831710E4" box="[555,602,1918,1939]" pageId="13" pageNumber="62" rank="species">n.sp.</taxonomicNameLabel>
, Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D590F88182BF10E4" box="[995,1010,1918,1939]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">A</emphasis>
) carapace; (
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D218F881853710E4" box="[1131,1146,1918,1939]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">B</emphasis>
) head; (
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D2BFF881859110E4" box="[1228,1244,1918,1939]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">C</emphasis>
) telson; (
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D690F86781B910DA" box="[227,244,1944,1965]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">D</emphasis>
) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D48EF867824110DA" box="[765,780,1944,1965]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">E</emphasis>
) carapace; (
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30F3742D5F5F86782D810DA" box="[902,917,1944,1965]" italics="true" pageId="13" pageNumber="62">F</emphasis>
) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm.
</paragraph>
</caption>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D6B6FF6580C11683" blockId="14.[166,795,154,1057]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
Head (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30C3741D762FF65803517C6" box="[273,376,154,177]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Fig. 11B</figureCitation>
) with pyriform frontal organ placed posteriorly and protruding a little farther than eye mound. Anteriorside of eye mound and rostrum meeting at about 120°, junction angular. Rostrum protruding with almost parallel dorsal and ventral edges and downward curving apex. Naupliar eye triangular with largest surface ventral. First antenna subequal in length to peduncle of second antenna and having about six lobules. Second antenna with peduncle of 12 apparent segments and two flagella of about 20 flagellomeres each. Most second antennal segments, particularly in the region of each flagellum, bearing 35 spines anteriorly (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30C3741D76EFE2280CD1683" box="[285,384,477,500]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Fig. 11D</figureCitation>
).
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D6B6FE05834515A8" blockId="14.[166,795,154,1057]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
Trunk segments usually 26, each bearing pair of thoracopods, these decreasing in size posteriorly and with anterior two pairs modified as claspers. Posterodorsally each segment with large, rounded protuberance, this bearing 57 large spines on last five segments, many setae on next 5 segments anterior to these, and 13 setae on most other segments. Claspers of normal structure for
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30C3741D478FD5483DE15B5" authorityName="Spencer &amp; Hall" authorityYear="1896" box="[523,659,683,706]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D478FD5483DE15B5" box="[523,659,683,706]" italics="true" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Limnadopsis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, with single spine apically on movable finger.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D6B6FD1A80701356" blockId="14.[166,795,154,1057]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
Telson (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30C3741D76EFD1A8032158B" box="[285,383,741,764]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Fig. 11C</figureCitation>
) with about 15 spines in each dorsal row, largely saw-tooth in appearance, i.e. shaped like isosceles triangles, but first two narrower, first a little longer than second. Two telsonic setae inserted on protuberance situated about one fifth of way along dorsal side of telson. Caudal claws about 910 times longer than wide, fairly evenly curved ventrally and bearing about 1418 setae mediodorsally, followed by about 6 short spines dorsally and numerous denticles on the markedly curved apical quarter of claw. First one or two spines sometimes arising between last few setae.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D6D5FBC08057122A" blockId="14.[166,795,1086,1755]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D6D5FBC081B91321" box="[166,244,1087,1110]" italics="true" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Female</emphasis>
. Largely similar to male, except in carapace shape (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30C3741D6DDFBA380431304" box="[174,270,1116,1139]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Fig. 11E</figureCitation>
), rostrum shape (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30C3741D7B9FBA383641304" box="[458,553,1116,1139]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Fig. 11F</figureCitation>
), and lack of claspers. Dorsal margin of carapace evenly arched, almost smooth. Dorsoanterior angle distinct, about 110°, dorsoposterior angle as in male, but not so marked. Umbo as in male. Anteroventral area of carapace more convex than in male, while posteroventral area also expanded as in male but more posteriorly than ventrally, thus giving an appearance of greater posterior expansion than in male. Growth lines as in male.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D6B6FA9B837F1287" blockId="14.[166,795,1086,1755]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
Head (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30C3741D77FFA9B8025120C" box="[268,360,1380,1403]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="13.[219,254,1918,1939]" captionTargetBox="[154,1372,1150,1882]" captionTargetId="figure-454@13.[121,1421,1138,1895]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="Fig. 11. Limnadopsis multilineata n.sp., Mitchell Falls, Kimberley, WA. Male: (A) carapace; (B) head; (C) telson; (D) a middle flagellomere of second antenna. Female: (E) carapace; (F) head. For clarity, some growth lines are incompletely shown anterior to umbo and marginally. Scale bars 1 mm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240300" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240300/files/figure.png" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Fig. 11F</figureCitation>
) with proportionally smaller eye than in male, and thus with pyriform frontal organ protruding more dorsally than in male. Rostrum short, almost in form of isosceles triangle, with rounded apex. Naupliar eye triangular and occupying about half of rostrum.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D6B6FA09804011AC" blockId="14.[166,795,1086,1755]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
Eggs (
<figureCitation id="B4982A59F30C3741D77FFA09802C117A" box="[268,353,1526,1549]" captionStart="Fig" captionStartId="5.[121,156,1755,1776]" captionTargetBox="[121,1421,151,1738]" captionTargetId="figure-10@5.[121,1421,151,1738]" captionTargetPageId="5" captionText="Fig. 5. SEMs of eggs. (A) Limnadopsis birchii, Twin Pans, Currawinya National Park, Qld; (B) L. birchii, Bluebush Bore Swamp, via Carnarvon, WA; (C) L. multilineata, Mitchell River Falls, Kimberley, WA; (D) L. tatei, Bloodwood Station, Paroo; (E) L. tatei, near Laverton, WA; (F) L. pilbarensis, Chichester Range, WA; (G) L. parvispinus, Bloodwood Station, via Bourke, NSW; (H) L. parvispinus, Coolringdon Station, via Cooma, NSW; (J) L. occidentalis, Boolathana Station, via Carnarvon, WA; (K) L. paradoxa, Sieda Farm, Grass Patch, WA; (L) L. paradoxa, East Lake Bryde, via Newdegate, WA; (M) L. minuta, Keep River National Park, NT. Scale bars 50 µm." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5240282" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/5240282/files/figure.png" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Fig. 5C</figureCitation>
) most unusually shaped and structured; somewhat bell-shaped, about 240 µm high and about 220 µm in diameter (range 236242 µm high,
<quantity id="EB5B9B39F30C3741D44BF9CE83FC113F" box="[568,689,1585,1608]" metricMagnitude="0" metricUnit="m" metricValue="5.6007" metricValueMax="5.664199999999999" metricValueMin="5.5372" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" unit="in" value="220.5" valueMax="223.0" valueMin="218.0">218223 in</quantity>
diameter, n = 5), with about 7 (6 around the circumference and one ventrally) large grooves separated by unevenly developed sharp ridges, some of latter meeting at top in distinct point. Each groove containing smooth, weakly developed subsidiary ridge.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D6D5F90884CE1608" blockId="14.[166,794,1783,1983]" lastBlockId="14.[839,1467,154,383]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D6D5F908806D1078" bold="true" box="[166,288,1783,1807]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Variability</emphasis>
. Specimens from Broome are a little different from the
<typeStatus id="F318887EF30C3741D775F8EA8079105B" box="[262,308,1813,1836]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">type</typeStatus>
lot. The carapace tends to be slightly larger at
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by
<quantity id="EB5B9B39F30C3741D736F8CD80EF103E" box="[325,418,1842,1865]" metricMagnitude="-3" metricUnit="m" metricValue="7.5" metricValueMax="8.0" metricValueMin="7.0" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" unit="mm" value="7.5" valueMax="8.0" valueMin="7.0">78 mm</quantity>
, but the unusual shape is the same as in males and females from Kimberley. The dorsal margin is more irregular than in the Kimberley specimens, but still basically smooth. There are only 25 growth lines, with nearly 20 of these distinct and well spaced and 46 situated marginally and closely spaced; therefore they do at least feature the same unusual arrangement of many well-spaced lines and a few tightly-spaced lines. The first antennae have 7 lobules and the second antenna 18 flagellomeres, both figures being slightly different from the
<typeStatus id="F318887EF30C3741D21AFEEF85DA1650" box="[1129,1175,272,295]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">type</typeStatus>
lot. The telson also armed differently: 1618 dorsal spines with the first one 1.5 times larger than the rest, and caudal claw with about 15 long setae and 45 spines two-thirds of the way along its length.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="64B96557F30C3741D534FE6482B71582" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" type="discussion">
<paragraph id="2C1C36DCF30C3741D534FE6482B71582" blockId="14.[839,1467,411,757]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D534FE64828816C4" bold="true" box="[839,965,411,435]" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">Comments</emphasis>
. This species is distinctive by reason of its carapace shape and its possession of numerous growth lines arranged in two groups about 20 normally spaced lines and 410 marginal lines spaced very closely together. It has many (ca 56) spines midlength on the cercopods, as do
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D534FDD085DD1531" box="[839,1168,559,582]" italics="true" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30C3741D534FDD082A81531" box="[839,997,559,582]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="parvispinus">L. parvispinus</taxonomicName>
,
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30C3741D583FDD085DD1531" box="[1008,1168,559,582]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="occidentalis">L. occidentalis</taxonomicName>
</emphasis>
and
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30C3741D2B7FDD084611531" authorityName="Timms" authorityYear="2009" box="[1220,1324,559,582]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="minuta">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D2B7FDD084611531" box="[1220,1324,559,582]" italics="true" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">L. minuta</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, but is easily distinguished from these species by its unique carapace as mentioned above, and in contrast to
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30C3741D283FD9684C115F7" box="[1264,1420,617,640]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="parvispinus">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D283FD9684C115F7" box="[1264,1420,617,640]" italics="true" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">L. parvispinus</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
and
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30C3741D534FD7882A315E9" box="[839,1006,647,670]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="occidentalis">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D534FD7882A315E9" box="[839,1006,647,670]" italics="true" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">L. occidentalis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, by the well expressed growth lines (as opposed to faint lines), and 12 fewer spines on the middle flagellomeres. Features distinguishing it from
<taxonomicName id="EBA34D5FF30C3741D33CFD3E84F715AF" authorityName="Timms" authorityYear="2009" box="[1359,1466,705,728]" class="Branchiopoda" family="Limnadiidae" genus="Limnadopsis" higherTaxonomySource="GBIF" kingdom="Animalia" order="Diplostraca" pageId="14" pageNumber="63" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="minuta">
<emphasis id="1ED7EACEF30C3741D33CFD3E84F715AF" box="[1359,1466,705,728]" italics="true" pageId="14" pageNumber="63">L. minuta</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
are noted above.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>