Hexapleomera

Bamber, Roger N., 2012, A re-assessment of Hexapleomera Dudich, 1931 (Crustacea: Tanaidacea: Tanaidae), with designation of three new species, Zootaxa 3583, pp. 51-70 : 52-54

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.283096

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B5CF2478-32C6-4010-B54D-3F886EAE90C0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5127514

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C6C774-A066-FFE4-FF61-BB80FE997C68

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hexapleomera
status

 

Species within Hexapleomera View in CoL

Unfortunately, the type-material of H. robusta is lost ( Sieg 1980). Sieg (1980) redescribed what he referred to as this species from material either from the Atlantic coast of Brazil, or from the Galapagos Islands, unfortunately without specifying which (presumably as he considered the specimens conspecific).

Edgar (2008) described male and female material which he attributed to H. robusta from Queensland, Australia, discussing the issues with Sieg’s material, and pointing out a number of differences in the setation, inter alia, between the Australian material and Sieg’s description, but was justifiably uncertain whether these features represented inter-specific or interpopulation differences. Taking Sieg’s (1980) analysis of interspecific differences in Zeuxo Templeton, 1840 as a reasonable yardstick for criteria within the Tanaidae (and in the light of the other material examined herein), I consider Edgar’s material to represent a distinct species, diagnosed below.

Edgar (2008) also described as new Pancoloides moverleyi , based only on males, discussing that it appeared to have attributes of both Pancoloides Sieg, 1980 and Hexapleomera , and assigning it to the former on the selfadmitted “arguably trivial grounds” of its being free-living. A significant distinction defined by Sieg (1980) between these two genera was the presence of a reduced distal uropod segment in Pancoloides but not in Hexapleomera ; as Edgar’s species is without such a reduced segment, and in the light of free-living specimens of Hexapleomera found in the Eastern Mediterranean ( Bamber et al. 2009 and below), this species is herein transferred to Hexapleomera .

Significant morphological features of these taxa, as well as of material from the Eastern Mediterranean and the new species from Plymouth, UK, are shown in Table 1 View TABLE 1 . Of these features, the number of uropod segments (for convenience referred to here as the basis plus ramus) in adults of the Tanaidae is stable and species-specific (e.g. Bamber 1990; Edgar 2008). As all previous descriptions of Hexapleomera robusta have demonstrated four uropod segments in total, the presence of five uropod segments in adults of two of the taxa analyzed herein is considered significant. Equally, the number of inner setae on the pleopod endopod is stable and species-specific, one seta in all but one of the present taxa, but two in H. robusta sensu Edgar 2008 . The third pleopod of Hexapleomera shows slight reduction in setation: the inner seta of the basis is absent in most taxa, but present in both Australian taxa herein.

Taxon H. robusta H. robusta H. robusta H. robusta View in CoL Pancoloides sensu View in CoL Moore, sensu Sieg , sensu Bamber sensu Edgar , moverleyi 1894 View in CoL 1980 et al., 2009 2008 Edgar, 2008 The lack of an apophysis on the coxa of pereopod 1 is cited as genus-diagnostic by Sieg (1980), and used by him as a species-characterizing feature of Zeuxo View in CoL (inter alia); however, such an apophysis is clearly present in three of the present taxa.

The distal setae on the maxillule palp are prone to detachment on dissection, but all recently-described taxa herein have only four or five such setae, compared with eight in H. robusta sensu stricto, a difference too consistent and too great to be attributable to occasional detachment. The distal setae on the maxilliped coxa and basis are not so prone to detachment, and the differences found here (three or two, and two or one respectively) are considered to be real. The presence or absence of small spinules on the maxilliped endite is also a relevant character.

Edgar (2008) found the number of aesthetascs present on antennulae to be a useful distinguishing feature in this family: they are considered here as supporting characters, although I know of no study of intraspecific variation in this feature.

While the length:width ratio of pereonites 1 to 3 together is diagnostic of the genus, some of the present taxa are less compact than others (although all have this ratio <1).

The tooth-like proximal apophysis on the fixed finger of the chela of the male is shown as conspicuous by Sieg (1980; see also Dollfus 1898; Dudich 1931), who also indicates such an apophysis in the female; no other Hexapleomera View in CoL taxon is shown to have such a conspicuous apophysis. Interestingly, Moore (1894) gives an elaborate description of the distal end of the cutting edge, but neither describes not figures such a tooth-like apophysis in either gender. Conversely, spinulation on the cutting edge of the chela dactylus is shown by all descriptions except for that of Pancoloides moverleyi View in CoL (vide Edgar 2008), and is considered herein to be significant for that species.

TABLE 1. Significant meristic and morphological characters of populations and taxa of Hexapleomera.

Proposed name H. robusta Moore, 1894 View in CoL H. robusta View in CoL (Moore, 1894?) Sieg, 1980 H. satella View in CoL sp. nov. H. edgari View in CoL sp. nov. H. moverleyi View in CoL comb. nov. H. wombat View in CoL sp. nov.
Uropod segments 4 4 4 4 5 5
Pleopod endopod inner setae 1 1 1 2 1 1
Pleopod 3 basis inner setae   0 0 1 1 0
Coxa 1 apophysis   no yes yes yes no
Maxillule palp setae 8 8 4 5 5 5
Maxilliped basis setae   2 2 2 1 1
Maxilliped coxa setae   2 2 3 2 3
Maxilliped endite distal spines   no no yes yes no
Aesthetascs on 3 antennule   5 4 6 5 6
Aesthetascs on Ƥ antennule   8 3 6   4
Ventral setae on cheliped fixed finger 5(?) 5 3 5 5 4
Tooth-like apophysis on fixed finger of Ƥ cheliped no yes no no no no
Tooth-like apophysis on fixed finger of 3 cheliped slight? yes no no slight? no
Spinulation of 3 cheliped dactylus   present present present absent present
Adult body length, mm ≤4.7 2.5–3.5 1.7–2.3 4.7 2.4 2.4–3.8
Habitat on turtles on turtles benthic/ epifaunal on turtles epifaunal on yacht hulls

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Tanaidacea

Family

Tanaididae

Loc

Hexapleomera

Bamber, Roger N. 2012
2012
Loc

H. robusta

Moore 1894
1894
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