Capitoniscidae, Boyko & Williams, 2023

Boyko, Christopher B. & Williams, Jason D., 2023, Nomenclatural and taxonomic changes in parasitic isopods (Isopoda: Epicaridea) including two new families and note on the questionable association between monogeneans and bopyrids, Zootaxa 5258 (3), pp. 251-269 : 260

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5258.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:240213D7-D155-4C08-BF56-EABBAA4AC00F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7781617

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/74A054D1-D0A9-4034-BC19-0B809F43FA3E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:74A054D1-D0A9-4034-BC19-0B809F43FA3E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Capitoniscidae
status

fam. nov.

Family Capitoniscidae n. fam.

( Fig 4A–D, I View FIGURE 4 )

http://zoobank.org/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:74A054D1-D0A9-4034-BC19-0B809F43FA3E

Diagnosis: Cryptoniscus larva /male body elongate. Head wider than long, anteroposteriorly inflated, posterior margin wider than pereomere 1; eyes absent. Antennule article 1 short, rounded, without marginal teeth; dense setal brush present. Coxal plates with weak marginal crenulations but without teeth. Pereopods 1–3 gnathopodal, 1 and 2 with globular propodi and thick dactyli extending to distal margin of merus, pereopod 3 with ovate propodus and slender dactylus extending to distal margin of carpus; pereopods 4–7 ambulatory with propodi tapering distally; all pereopodal dactyli bearing a distal tooth. Pleotelson triangular, with or without distal row of few stout teeth. Mature female spheroid in dorsal view, unsegmented, possibly with two pairs of pereopods and two pairs of posterior tubercles. Parasitizing cumaceans.

Included genera and species: Capitoniscus Bourdon, 1972 , type genus (type species = Capitoniscus cumacei Bourdon, 1972 by monotypy); Capitoniscus australis Bourdon, 1981 ; Capitoniscus peruvicus ( Menzies & George, 1972) n. comb.; Carocryptus Schultz, 1977 (type species = Carocryptus laticephalus Schultz, 1977 by original designation).

Distribution: Off coast of South Africa (35°44’S, 34°16’E), 3800 m ( C. cumacei ) ( Bourdon 1972); South Pacific Ocean (50°06’S, 127°31’W – 50°12’S, 127°30’W), 3914 m ( C. australis ) ( Bourdon 1981a); off coast of Peru (09°05’S, 80°43’W), 5586–5648 m ( C. peruvicus n. comb.) ( Menzies and George 1972); Southern Ocean (64°58’S, 114°13’W – 65°19’S, 114°06’W), 3312 m ( C. laticephalus ) ( Schultz 1977).

Host: Cumacea : Bathylamprops natalensis Jones, 1969 ( Bourdon, 1972) for C. cumacei ; hosts of other species not known.

Remarks: The three species of Capitoniscus and one of Carocryptus are very similar in all known characters. Of these species, only C. cumacei was described based on a male associated with a female; all others are known only from the cryptoniscus larval stage collected in plankton samples. Cryptoniscus larvae/males of these species are characterized by their inflated heads ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ), antennules ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ), and pereopod morphologies ( Fig. 4C–E View FIGURE 4 ), a unique combination of characters within Cryptoniscoidea ; thus, the new family Capitoniscidae is herein erected for these two genera that were previously placed as Cryptoniscoidea incertae sedis. Capitoniscus peruvicus n. comb. was very incompletely described and figured but is clearly congeneric with C. cumacei and C. australis , albeit that C. peruvicus n. comb. has the most inflated head of all these species ( Fig. 4F View FIGURE 4 ).

The species of Capitoniscus and Carocryptus can be distinguished by the following characters of the cryptoniscus larvae: coxal plates not visible in dorsal view ( Capitoniscus ; Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ) vs. visible in dorsal view ( Carocryptus ; Fig. 4G View FIGURE 4 ) and pleotelson distal margin with few blunt teeth ( Capitoniscus ; Fig. 4H View FIGURE 4 ) vs. smooth ( Carocryptus ; Fig. 4G View FIGURE 4 ). The female of C. cumacei ( Fig. 4I View FIGURE 4 ) was incompletely described and figured due to the specimen being lost after a preliminary sketch was made ( Bourdon 1972).

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