Lucicutia bradyana Cleve, 1904

Markhaseva, E. L. & Ferrari, Frank D., 2005, New species of Lucicutia and taxonomic status of L. grandis (Copepoda, Calanoida, Lucicutiidae), Journal of Natural History 39 (15), pp. 1077-1100 : 1084-1091

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930400005740

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DA7B8794-FF99-FFDC-FE02-FB268DB589B7

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lucicutia bradyana Cleve, 1904
status

 

Lucicutia bradyana Cleve, 1904

( Figures 3 View Figure 3 –7)

Lucicutia bradyana Cleve 1904, p 204 –206, Plate 6, Figures 33, 34.

Lucicutia flavicornis (non Claus 1863): Brady 1883, p 50 –51, Figure 1 View Figure 1 (female only) Lucicutia maxima (non Steuer 1904): Wolfenden 1911, p 318, Figure 60.

Lucicutia grandis (non Giesbrecht 1895): Bradford-Grieve 1999, p 100, Figure 66 (A–E). Lucicutia rara Hulsemann 1966, p 735 –736, Figures 45, 46, 103 (new syn.).

Female

Total length 5.5–6.1 mm. Prosome 1.45–1.60 longer than urosome. Cephalosome with slightly angular or rounded protrusions ( Figure 3A–C View Figure 3 ). Rostral rami divergent and widely spaced ( Figure 4A–C View Figure 4 ). Genital double-somite with rounded plug ( Figure 4D–F View Figure 4 ). Anal somite nearly as long as, or slightly longer than two preceding somites together ( Figure 3A, B, D View Figure 3 ), with ventral side significantly swollen ( Figure 4D–F View Figure 4 ). Caudal rami in dorsal view 1.25–1.50 times longer than anal somite ( Figure 3A, B, D View Figure 3 ) and about 5.8–6.6 times longer

Figure 7. Lucicutia bradyana . Male. P5: (A 1 –C 1) right P5, (A 2 –C 2) left P5. (A 1, A 2) specimen from Indian Ocean, Ob cruise 1, station 129; remaining figures, specimens from south-eastern Pacific Ocean, Eltanin cruise 10, station 868. Scale bars: 0.1 mm.

than wide. Antennule exceeding body length by about two to three segments. Medial seta on exopodal segment 2 of P5 robust ( Figure 4G–I View Figure 4 ).

Male

Total length 5.1–5.2 mm. Prosome 1.28–1.30 times longer than urosome. In some specimens urosome somites distinctively hirsute ( Figure 5A View Figure 5 ). Cephalosome with triangular or rounded protrusions ( Figure 5A, B View Figure 5 ). Rostrum of moderately divergent, nearly parallel rami ( Figure 5C View Figure 5 ). Caudal rami 6.2 times longer than wide. Antennule of 21 articulated segments reaching about the middle length of caudal rami, an indication of a subdivision is visible in segment 18 ( Figure 5E, F View Figure 5 ). Length of exopodal segment 1 of right P5 shorter than second. Surface of endopodal segment 2 hirsute. Basipod with knob at mid-length of medial margin; shape of knob variable ( Figures 6A, C View Figure 6 , 7A 1 –C 1). Shape of exopodal segment 3 of left P5 elongate, oval-triangular; medial distal part of basipod with elongate projection with variable number of teeth at the tip ( Figures 6B, D View Figure 6 , 7A 2 –C 2).

Remarks

Total length of the type specimen is 5.7 mm ( Cleve 1904); largest recorded size of a female is 6.2 mm ( Wolfenden 1911, as Lucicutia maxima ); smallest 5.0– 6.15 mm ( Bradford-Grieve 1999, as Lucicutia grandis ). Total length published for males: 5.2 mm ( Cleve 1904); 4.7– 5.45 mm ( Bradford-Grieve 1999, as Lucicutia grandis ). The characters distinguishing L. bradyana from L. grandis are given above in the remarks for L. grandis . Hulsemann placed L. bradyana in synonymy with L. grandis but mentioned that it ‘‘is doubtfully included in this synonymy’’, and ‘‘ L. bradyana Cleve which is doubtfully referred to L. grandis in this paper…’’ ( Hulsemann 1966, p 717, 721, 736). In the present study, significant variability in P5 structure of males suggests those doubts were justified. Shape of the left and right basipod of male P5 distinguishes L. bradyana from L. grandis , but those shapes vary within a species. Among specimens of L. bradyana studied here is a male whose P5 (Figure 7A 2) is similar to that illustrated by Cleve (1904, Figure 34) in the original description of L. bradyana . Despite this variability, the left basipod of all specimens of L. bradyana has an elongate projection medially with teeth on the tip; right basipod has a distinct knob at mid-length. The medial distal edge of the basipod of the left P5 of L. grandis has a saw-like, toothed margin; the medial edge of the basipod of the right P5 has a small bump.

Lucicutia rara was described from the male gender only, and its similarity to L. bradyana noted ( Hulsemann 1966, p 735–736, Figures 45, 46, 103). The holotype of L. rara (NMNH 113545) and two males identified as L. rara by Hulsemann from Anton Bruun station 355C were re-examined ( Figure 6C, D View Figure 6 ) and compared with L. bradyana . That comparison shows that these specimens are conspecific.

Distribution

The type locality of L. bradyana Cleve, 1904 is east of South Africa in the Agulhas Current. The species is recorded from the South Atlantic Ocean between 10 ° S and about 35 ° S (as L. maxima ) by Wolfenden (1911); from the south-western Pacific Ocean (as L. grandis ) by Bradford-Grieve (1999), and now from the Indian Ocean between 19 ° S and 40 ° S

(Table III). Lucicutia bradyana is common in the South Atlantic Ocean and the South Pacific Ocean between 55 ° S and 62 ° S ( Table I) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Hexanauplia

Order

Calanoida

Family

Lucicutiidae

Genus

Lucicutia

Loc

Lucicutia bradyana Cleve, 1904

Markhaseva, E. L. & Ferrari, Frank D. 2005
2005
Loc

Lucicutia grandis

Bradford-Grieve JM 1999: 100
Hulsemann K 1966: 735
1999
Loc

Lucicutia bradyana

Cleve C 1904: 204
1904
Loc

Lucicutia flavicornis

Wolfenden RN 1911: 318
Brady GS 1883: 50
1883
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