Leydigia Kurz, 1875

Sinev, Artem Y., 2016, Key for identification of Cladocera of the subfamily Aloninae (Anomopoda: Chydoridae) from South-East Asia, Zootaxa 4200 (4), pp. 451-486 : 477

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4200.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5DF1767F-71A9-451F-A418-D1D47A853586

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6057017

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C2878B-FFB5-BB2A-759D-FF29FA93FCB2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leydigia Kurz, 1875
status

 

Leydigia Kurz, 1875 View in CoL View at ENA

Parthenogenetic female short description. Body high, egg-shaped ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12. A – D E); maximum height at third fourth of the body; head and valves without keel. Valves without sculpture. Posteroventral angle of valves without denticles. Rostrum short. Three main head pores with a narrow connection between them; lateral head pores minute. Labral keel wide, with rounded apex, without clusters of setulae on posterior margin; unlike in all other genera, its anterior margin covered by dense thin setulae.

Postabdomen ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12. A – D F) very large, broad, with convex postanal margin, convex distal margin and broadly rounded distal angle; length about 2.5 heights. Preanal and postanal angle weakly defined. Postanal denticles minute, in clusters. Lateral groups of setulae in distal half of postanal portion with extremely long and thick distalmost seta, with length about 3–4 widths of base of postabdominal claw. Postabdominal claw long, almost straight, with rudimentary basal spine.

Antennule with nine terminal aesthetascs of similar length. Antennal seta arising from well-defined tubercule. Antenna with thin seta on basal segment of endopodite. Spine on basal segment of exopodite about 1.5 lengths of middle segment. Spines on apical segments longer than apical segments. IDL of limb I with three setae, seta 1 long; seta 2–3 thin, armed with thin setulae.

Single species, Leydigia ciliata Gauthier, 1939 ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12. A – D E–F). Length of adult 0.65–1.1 mm. Common species in the region, found in lakes and ponds, rivers and paddy fields. Benthic species, associated with muddy or clay bottom. For detailed description see Kotov et al. (2003). Known from Africa and tropical Asia (Kotov 2009).

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