Rhopalophthalmus murudana, Panampunnayil & Biju, 2006

Panampunnayil, S. U. & Biju, A., 2006, Four new species of the genus Rhopalophthalmus (Mysidacea: Crustacea) from the northwest coast of India, Journal of Natural History 40 (23 - 24), pp. 1389-1406 : 1399-1402

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930600929301

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F89F49-FF8F-FFD6-FE5C-EE3AFBFFFABF

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Rhopalophthalmus murudana
status

sp. nov.

Rhopalophthalmus murudana sp. nov.

( Figures 41–52 View Figures 41–47 View Figures 48–52 )

Material

Holotype: adult male (IOBC-0505-10-50-1999). Allotype: adult female (IOBC-0505 A- 10-50-1999).

Murud: (18 ° 16.39 9 –18 ° 18.30 9 N, 72 ° 55.28 9 –72 ° 59.72 9 E); March 1990, six adult males, eight adult females, 13 immature males, six immature females, and nine juveniles.

Description

General form robust. Carapace anteriorly produced into broad triangular rostrum covering basal part of eye stalks; dorsal median nodules present. Eyes stout, as long as first antennular segment, cornea wider than stalk ( Figure 41 View Figures 41–47 ). First segment of male antennule little longer than rest of peduncle, base of outer flagellum swollen and hirsute and all segments furnished with long plumose setae ( Figure 42 View Figures 41–47 ). In female, peduncle longer and more slender than male, first segment 1.5 times longer than rest of peduncle. Antennal scale as long as antennular peduncle, five times as long as broad; antennal peduncle onethird length of scale; antennal sympod with two long and two short spines ( Figure 43 View Figures 41–47 ).

Mouthparts and first and second thoracic endopods as in R. mumbayensis . Third to seventh endopods slender, third with two, and fourth to seventh with three propodal segments ( Figures 44, 45 View Figures 41–47 ). Eighth endopod three-segmented; second segment short with five long plumose setae on outer distal margin; third segment cylindrical and bent at right angle, with one stout seta at tip and two on inner margin, when straightened shorter than basal segment of exopod ( Figure 46 View Figures 41–47 ). Eighth endopod in female unsegmented, straight, shorter than basal segment of exopod ( Figure 47 View Figures 41–47 ).

Pleopods in male biramous, first pleopod with unsegmented endopod and 10-segmented exopod ( Figure 48 View Figures 48–52 ). Endopod of second pleopod 11-segmented; exopod long and 12- segmented, segments becoming longer posteriorly, distal segment with three long barbed setae ( Figure 49 View Figures 48–52 ). Pleopods three to five with 10-segmented exopod and endopod ( Figure 50 View Figures 48–52 ). In female, pleopods simple, unsegmented and rod-shaped becoming longer in posterior pairs.

Telson 1.5 times longer than last abdominal somite, 2.7 times as long as broad at base, more than distal half of lateral margin armed with 15–16 slender spines gradually increasing in length distally, first two spines very small; inner pair of distal spines slightly longer than outer pair, subsidiary teeth becoming flattened distally ( Figure 51 View Figures 48–52 ).

Uropods longer than telson, two-segmented, endopod with stout spine on inner margin, exopod longer than endopod ( Figure 52 View Figures 48–52 ).

Length: adult male and female 8.5–9.3 mm.

Etymology

This species is named after the type locality.

Remarks

This species closely resembles R. orientalis, O. Tattersall. The vestigial endopod of the eighth thoracic limb, the number of carpopropodal segments of third to seventh thoracic endopods, and the spines on the telson are very similar in the two species. But in R. orientalis the rostrum is relatively low, eyes are longer, and the subsidiary teeth on the telson are broader and truncate. This species also resembles R. mumbayensis sp. nov. but differs in having fewer carpopropodal segments, spines on the lateral border of the telson are more slender and more in number, and the inner pair of distal spines on the telson are longer than the outer pair.

Ecological note

This species occurred in temperatures and salinity of 25.2–28.5 ° C and 35.7–36.3 psu, respectively, and was collected from 5 to 9 m depth where the bottom was clayey silt.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Mysida

Family

Mysidae

Genus

Rhopalophthalmus

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