Akanthoparapseudes, Heard, Richard W. & Morales-Núñez, Andrés G., 2011

Heard, Richard W. & Morales-Núñez, Andrés G., 2011, Akanthoparapseudes alfaroae, a new genus and species of apseudomorphan tanaidacean (Crustacea: Malacostraca: Peracarida) from Puerto Rican coastal waters, Zootaxa 3111, pp. 49-63 : 51-52

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.207142

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6191496

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038587E8-FFFC-5110-2593-FF74FCDBFD89

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Akanthoparapseudes
status

gen. nov.

Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL , new genus

Diagnosis (Subadult). Apseudomorpha, Parapseudidae , Parapseudini . Carapace without spinous processes. Triangular, apically-subacute rostrum. Epistomal spine present. Pereonites 2–6 with posterolateral margins armed with small, but distinct spiniform seta. Left mandible with tridentate lacinia mobilis, palp with article 1 having cluster of 10 or more simple distally-attenuated setae. Eye lobe distinct; eyes appearing poorly developed, lacking distinct pigment (in preserved specimens), ommatidia (about 8) small, poorly-formed. Maxilliped having distolateral margin of article 2 with strongly-developed spiniform seta. Pereopod 1 with strongly-developed spiniform setae on anterior margin of basis, coxa with reduced process present, not visible in dorsal view. Pereopod 2 with spine on anterior margin of basis; pereopods 2–6 with ischium bearing one, occasionally two narrow, acute spines on the anterior margin. Crenulate, rod-like, spiniform setae present on the merus, carpus and/or propodus of pereopods 2– 6. Pereopod 4 with dactylus, not greatly reduced, but with some adjacent setae about equal or greater in length. Uropodal peduncle with subdistal and distal setae only. Pereopod 6 having long simple setae along anterior margin. First pleonite lacking distinct transverse row of small setulate setae.

Type-species. Akanthoparapseudes alfaroae , n. sp.

Etymology. Akantho, from the Greek = spiny, plus the generic name Parapseudes , from the Greek; gender feminine.

Remarks. Although Akanthoparapseudes , n. gen., also appears to share several characters with the Apseudidae , with reservations we refer it to the Parapseudidae . Previously 22 genera have been referred to this family (see Anderson 2011). Of these genera, Akanthoparapseudes appears, at least superficially, to have affinities with Brachylicoa Guţu, 2006 , Longipedis Larsen and Shimomura, 2006 , and Podictenius Guţu, 2006 , all of which lack a distinct dorsal row of setae on the first pleonite. The new genus can be distinguished from these and from the other members of the family by a combination of characters, including having (1) pereopod 1 with a strongly developed spiniform seta on the anterior margin of the basis, (2) long, distally blunt, rod-like setae on the pereopods, and (3) pereopods 2–6 with the anterior margin of the ischium armed with one, occasionally two, spiniform setae. The following key may be used to distinguish Akanthoparapseudes further from Brachylicoa , Podictenius , and Longipedis .

Key to parapseudid genera within the Tribe Parapseudini View in CoL sensu Gu ţ u lacking a distinct, dense transverse row of setae dorsally on the first pleonite

1. Pereopod 4 with dactylus greatly reduced, shorter than adjacent setae. Often with diffuse transverse row of setae on the first pleonite. Usually only four pairs of pleopods present....................................... Parapseudes Sars, 1882 View in CoL

- Pereopod 4 with dactylus not greatly reduced, not distinctly shorter than adjacent setae. Five pairs of pleopods present. No obvious dorsal transverse row of setae on first pleonite........................................................ 2

2. Mandibular palp with article 1 bearing single long seta........................ Longipedis Larsen and Shimomura, 2000 View in CoL

- Mandibular palp with article 1 having 5–15 simple setae....................................................... 3

3. Palp of maxilliped with tip of outer margin of article 1 armed with well-developed spiniform seta. Pereopod 2 with anterior margin of basis armed with distinct spine........................................... Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL , n. gen.

- Palp of maxilliped with article 1 having distal corner of outer margin armed with minute spiniform seta. Pereopod 2 with anterior margin of basis lacking distinct spine................................................................. 4

4. Pereopod 1 with anterior margin of basis armed with row of 5–12 spiniform setae often increasing in length distally. Mandibular palp with first article bearing five or six simple setae..................................... Podictenius Guţu, 2006 View in CoL

- Pereopod 1 with anterior margin of basis lacking spiniform setae. Mandibular palp with first article bearing cluster (about 15) of simple setae..................................................................... Brachylicoa Guţu, 2006 View in CoL

Though the presence on the pereopods of spines on the anterior margin of the ischium is quite pronounced in the new genus; it is not unique and occurs in other apseudomorphans genera, including the apseudid genus, Bunakenia View in CoL (see Guţu 1995, 1996; Bamber 2005) and the parapseudid genera, Brachylicoa View in CoL (see Guţu 2006); Saltipedis Guţu, 1995 View in CoL (see Guţu 1998; Morales-Nuñez et al. 2010); Gutuapseudes Edgar, 1997 View in CoL (see Guţu and Angsupanich 2004b); and Swireapseudes View in CoL (see Guţu and Iliffe 2008). It should be noted that within the genus Parapseudes View in CoL , the anterior margin of the ischium on some pereopods bears a long simple seta; in some species this seta can extend well-past the merus (see Lang 1966, Shiino 1952); these long setae may be unique to Parapseudes View in CoL , and possibly homologous with the ischial spines discussed above. Also, in at least in one apseudid species, Androgynella fecunda Guţu, 2006 , a plumose seta is present on the anterior face of the ischium of pereopod 6 (see Guţu 2006); this may be an independently-derived character.

Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL also appears to have some affinities with the family Apseudidae View in CoL ; however, pending further study we tentatively refer it to the family Parapseudidae View in CoL , within the Tribe Parapseudini Guţu, 2008 View in CoL . This Tribe was characterized by Guţu (2008) as having the pereonites distinctly broader and longer than those of the pleon, which is compressed (i.e. usually less than half the length of thorax) with the pleonites being distinctly wider than long). The Parapseudini View in CoL also contains tube- or burrow-dwelling genera such as Halmyrapseudes Bačescu and Guţu, 1974 View in CoL and Discapseudes Bačescu and Guţu, 1975 View in CoL that have a distinct transverse row of tightly spaced, short setulate setae present on the dorsoproximal surface of at least the first pleonite. Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL , along with three other genera, Brachylicoa Guţu, 2006 View in CoL ; Podictenius Guţu, 2006 View in CoL ; and Longipedis View in CoL are characterized by lacking a distinct dense row of setulate setae. Within the genus Parapseudes Sars, 1882 View in CoL some species appear to have a weak transverse row of setae (e.g., P. latifrons sensu Lang 1966 View in CoL ), but they are simple and not setulose as in the known tubedwelling genera and others only have a few diffuse setae (e. g. P. neglectus Miller, 1940 View in CoL , R. Heard, per. obser.).

As exemplified by Parapseudes View in CoL , the overall presence or absence of the transverse row of setae on the first pleonite may not be as an important phylogenetic character as previously thought. Whether the other genera assigned to the Parapseudini View in CoL (e. g., Ctenapseudes Bamber et al., 1996 View in CoL ; Pseudohalmyrapseudes Larsen & Hansknecht, 2004 View in CoL ; Saltipedis Guţu, 1995 View in CoL ) having a dense transverse row of finely setulate setae on the first pleonite are tube, burrow, or" “nest” builders remains to be discovered. Notwithstanding this, for the species attributed to the Parapseudini View in CoL , this condition appears to be an important and distinctive character, which may be associated with a tube, burrow, or “nest” dwelling as exemplified by the genera Halmyrapseudes View in CoL , Discapseudes View in CoL , and Pseudoapseudes View in CoL ( Bačescu and Guţu 1974, 1975; R. Heard, per. obser.). Based on observations of living specimens of Halmyrapseudes bahamensis Bačescu and Guţu 1974 View in CoL from southern Florida, the transverse dorsal rows of setulate setae on the pleon appear to filter out silt and other fine particles. This might be a mechanism to prevent fouling of the pleopods and, possibly, to retain potential food particles (R. Heard, per. obser.).

Such setae appear to be absent in members of the Tribe Pakistanapseudini View in CoL , which, beside the distinctive sexual dimorphism of the male antenna and body form mentioned previously, appear to have no tube- or burrow-dwelling representatives. In our opinion the Pakistanapseudini View in CoL appear to form a more natural group than the more heterogeneous genera currently placed within the Parapseudini View in CoL .

A small, reduced coxal process or lobe is present on the first pereopod of Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL , but it is not visible from the dorsal aspect ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 H). A similar more reduced coxal process has been reported for a few other parapseudids (e.g., Longipedis fragilis Larsen and Shimomura, 2006 View in CoL ; Saltipedis puertoricensis Morales-Núñez View in CoL , Heard, and Alfaro, 2010). It is possible, however, that this structure may have been overlooked in other parapseudid taxa.

Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL appears to be related to “Parapseudid? species A” sensu Heard et al. (2004) from the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Except for the lack of a strongly developed and dorsally visible, coxal spine or process, Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL and “Parapseudid? sp. A” appear to share several characters with some members of the apseudid genus Bunakenia Guţu, 1995 View in CoL , especially those species attributed to the subgenus Extensibasella Guţu, 1998 . The possible affinity of Bunakenia View in CoL with the family Parapseudidae View in CoL also has been broached previously by Guţu (2006). These morphological similarities are most event in the mouth parts (e.g., tridentate or bidentate lacinia mobilis), setation and shape of the maxilliped, and the setation of the pereopods (e.g., presence of spiniform setae on the anterior margin of the ischium for pereopods 2–6,), and propodal setae on pereopod 4 extending to or beyond the dactylus. Since members of the genus Bunakenia View in CoL appear to share some distinctive homologous characters with them, Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL and “Parapseudid? species A” may represent transitional links between the families Apseudidae View in CoL and Parapseudidae View in CoL

Some of the systematic problems exhibited by several apseudomorphan families are exemplified by overlapping characters within the Parapseudidae View in CoL and Apseudidae View in CoL . As indicated by Guţu (2007), the designation of a variety of apseudomophan genera during the past 20 years, has eroded and diluted some of the basic differences between these two families. This is especially true for some of the genera discussed in this paper. M. Guţu (per. comm., 2011) considers the most consistent family character for the Parapseudidae View in CoL to be the extension of the propodal setae on pereopod 4 to or beyond the tip of the dactylus. Except for the small deep-water family Gigantapseudidae View in CoL and the apseudid genus Bunakenia View in CoL , this character appears to hold for all of the presently known parapseudid species (see Guţu and Heard 2002; Guţu 1998, 2006; Guţu and Angsupanich 2004 a, b). The occurrence of a reduced coxal process of the first pereopod on some parapseudids (e.g., Longipedis View in CoL , Akanthoparapseudes View in CoL ), weakens this once definitive morphological maker for the separation of the two families making it difficult to identify unique delineating characters to distinguish them. As mentioned by Bamber (1998) and Guţu and Heard (2002), another factor complicating apseudomorphan systematics, is the presence of a distinctive leaf-shaped spine on the inner distal margin of the maxillipedal endite in some parapseudid genera (e.g., Pakistanapseudes View in CoL , Saltipedis View in CoL ). This “leaf-shaped spine appears to be similar to those found in the same location on members of the apseudid subfamily Leviapseudinae Sieg, 1983 View in CoL and family Whiteleggiidae Guţu, 1972 View in CoL ; whether this condition is due to homoplasy or has systematic significance remains to be seen. Based our present limited knowledge, an adequate understanding of the present systematic status of the family Parapseudidae View in CoL is beyond the scope of this study. Its resolution will require detailed morphological studies with robust systematic analyses (e.g., cladistics), coupled with new information derived from comparative molecular genetic studies.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Tanaidacea

Family

Parapseudidae

Loc

Akanthoparapseudes

Heard, Richard W. & Morales-Núñez, Andrés G. 2011
2011
Loc

Parapseudini Guţu, 2008

Gutu 2008
2008
Loc

Brachylicoa Guţu, 2006

Gutu 2006
2006
Loc

Podictenius Guţu, 2006

Gutu 2006
2006
Loc

Longipedis fragilis

Larsen and Shimomura 2006
2006
Loc

Pseudohalmyrapseudes

Larsen & Hansknecht 2004
2004
Loc

Extensibasella Guţu, 1998

Gutu 1998
1998
Loc

Ctenapseudes

Bamber et al. 1996
1996
Loc

Saltipedis Guţu, 1995

Gutu 1995
1995
Loc

Bunakenia Guţu, 1995

Gutu 1995
1995
Loc

Leviapseudinae

Sieg 1983
1983
Loc

Discapseudes Bačescu and Guţu, 1975

Bacescu and Gutu 1975
1975
Loc

Halmyrapseudes Bačescu and Guţu, 1974

Bacescu and Gutu 1974
1974
Loc

Halmyrapseudes bahamensis Bačescu and Guţu 1974

Bacescu and Gutu 1974
1974
Loc

Whiteleggiidae Guţu, 1972

Gutu 1972
1972
Loc

P. latifrons sensu

Lang 1966
1966
Loc

P. neglectus

Miller 1940
1940
Loc

Parapseudes

Sars 1882
1882
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF