Elasmopus Costa, 1853

Hughes, L. E. & Lowry, J. K., 2011, The genus Elasmopus (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Maeridae) in Australian waters, Journal of Natural History 45 (9 - 10), pp. 579-628 : 580-583

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2010.534825

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EC878E-FF9C-1810-FE08-2B81F439FDC0

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Elasmopus Costa, 1853
status

 

Genus Elasmopus Costa, 1853

Remarks

Schellenberg (1938) stabilized the Elasmopus generic concept by including the character mandibular palp article 3 falcate with pectinate setae along the anterior margin, which clearly distinguished Elasmopus from Maera Leach, 1814 . With nearly 100 described species, Elasmopus has become cumbersome and the only subgenus Dentelasmopus Ledoyer, 1983 , is monotypic, including only E. (D.) spinipalpus Ledoyer, 1983 . In this paper we discuss three discrete informal species groups that account for 21 of the 99 known species.

The Elasmopus pectenicrus group

The E. pectenicrus group is defined by the characters: mandibular palp article 3 short, length less than three times as long as broad; male gnathopod 2 propodus with long slender bunches of setae; pereopods 5–7 basis posterior margin with at least one margin crenulated, without long setae and telson lobes apically truncate.

The E. pectenicrus group includes 10 species: E. brasiliensis (Dana, 1853) ; E. canarius Krapp-Schickel and Ruffo, 1990 ; E. carteri sp. nov.; E. crenulatus Berents, 1983 ; E. leveque sp. nov.; E. nanshaensis Ren, 1998 ; E. otus sp. nov.; E. pectenicrus (Bate, 1862) ; E. spinibasus Sivaprakasam, 1970 and E. yunde J.L. Barnard, 1974 . The E. pectenicrus group is an example of a species complex with lost type material and vague species descriptions. The species E. pectenicrus was originally described from material collected in Papua New Guinea, but there are now four species in the geographic region that conform to the type description, which identifies a crenulated pereopod 6 basis with a quadrate posterodistal corner: E. carteri sp. nov; E. leveque sp. nov; E. pectenicrus (of Lowry and Hughes 2009) and E. crenulatus . Material from Torres Strait attributed to E. pectenicrus by Lowry and Hughes (2009) are the closest specimens to the type locality; however, a neotype was not established in the hope that material from Papua New Guinea would be obtained.

The Elasmopus rapax group

The E. rapax group is defined by: mandibular palp article 3 short, length less than three times as long as broad; gnathopod 2 male propodus with two or more palmar teeth; pereopods 5–7 with long, stiff, slender setae along the basis posterior margin and telson with rounded inner lobes.

The group includes 11 species: E. arafura sp. nov.; E. bampo J.L. Barnard, 1979 ; E. calliactis Edmondson, 1951 ; E. hooheno J.L. Barnard, 1970 ; E. integer Myers, 1989 ; E. mayo J.L. Barnard, 1979 ; E. molokai J.L. Barnard, 1970 ; E. mutatus J.L. Barnard, 1962 ; E. ocoroni J.L. Barnard, 1979 ; E. pseudinteger Appadoo and Myers, 2003 and E. rapax Costa, 1853 .

The E. rapax species complex was discussed at length by Barnard (1979) and recently reviewed by Hughes and Lowry (2010). Although some identifications of E. rapax (sensu stricto) may be dubious, the extensive citation of material attributed to this species at least acknowledges a closely related fauna with a worldwide distribution.

The Elasmopus delaplata group

The E. delaplata group is defined only by the mandibular palp article 3 elongate, at least three times as long as broad. Other characters within this group are more varied with the male gnathopod 2 propodus palm with either setal bunch, teeth or sculpturing, pereopods 5–7 posterior margin smooth, crenulated or setose, without setae and telson lobes truncate, rounded or concave. The E. delaplata , elongate mandibular palp, group includes 15 species: E. aduncus Myers, 1995 ; E. alalo Myers, 1986 ; E. balkomanus Thomas and Barnard, 1988 ; E. bollonsi Chilton, 1915 ; E. delaplata Stebbing, 1888 ; E. hawaiensis Schellenberg, 1938 ; E. karamani Souza- Filho and Senna, 2009; E. neglectus Chilton, 1915 ; E. piikoi J.L. Barnard, 1970 ; E. shepherdi sp. nov.; E. slatyeri Lowry and Hughes, 2009 ; E. thomasi Ortiz and Lalana, 1994 ; E. varanocephalensis Lowry and Hughes, 2009 ; E. wahine J.L. Barnard, 1972 and E. woodjonesi sp. nov. Most species in the group occur in the Indo-Pacific region, the exception is E. thomasi from the Caribbean Sea.

The elongate mandibular palp may be a shared derived character, particularly where it occurs in conjunction with other features such as the unicarinate urosomite 1, as in E. neglectus , E. shepherdi sp. nov. and E. woodjonesi sp. nov., species from southern New Zealand and southern Australia. Although the elongate mandibular palp can be used to define a group within Elasmopus , this character may have limited value as an evolutionary homology because it represents a lengthening of a feeding appendage and it is highly plausible that there were multiple independent origins of this character. Therefore we have chosen to define this fauna as an informal grouping, which can facilitate species identification.

Morphological variation

Material examined for this paper further demonstrated that some Elasmopus species show juvenile and adult forms where extreme examples of developing characters could cause adults and juveniles to be misidentified as separate species. Characters that are affected by maturation and vary with growth stage include: gnathopod 2 propodus palmar and subpalmar sculpturing becoming more pronounced / exaggerated; uropod 3 short inner ramus becoming more subequal in length to the outer ramus with increasing size; elongation of telson with reduction in number of apical robust setae with increasing age ( Barnard 1970). Elasmopus species that show some or all of the development changes include E. alalo (see Ledoyer 1983; Myers,1995), E. dubius Walker, 1904 (see Ledoyer 1983), E. hooheno , E. carteri sp. nov., E. pectenicrus , E. pocillimanus (Bate, 1862) (as reported by Barnard 1970) and E. rapax (see Hughes and Lowry 2010).

Informative species level characters within Elasmopus outlined by Barnard (1979) are: eyes, size and colour in live specimens; mandibular palp article 3 length; the lower lip, which can have one or two pair of ducts (cones); male gnathopod 1 propodus teeth and setation; pereopods 5–7 setation and breadth; epimeron 3 sculpturing and telson form. We further recognize the following characters as useful for species level identifications: mandibular palp article 3 length, gnathopod 1 propodus medial surface with or without setae comb and uropod 1 peduncle with one or two basofacial robust setae.

The presence / absence of the gnathopod 1 setal comb and variation of either a single or paired ducts on the lower lip within Elasmopus is also known within Mallacoota J.L. Barnard, 1972 a closely related maerid genus. The presence of two basofacial robust setae on uropod 1 has not been reported previously; however this character may have been overlooked by earlier workers. Many specimens were examined to confirm that this character was not an aberration or misinterpretation of individuals penultimate to moulting.

Australian fauna

Australia now has nearly 25% of the described world species of Elasmopus . Twelve species occur in tropical Australia, compared with the 10 species reported by Ortiz et al. (2007) for the western tropical Atlantic Ocean. Ten species are known from temperate Australia, twice as many as reported by Karaman (1982) from the Mediterranean Sea. There appears to be no species overlap between temperate and tropical Australia except E. menurte J.L. Barnard, 1974 with a distribution extending along the Western Australian coast. Fifteen species of Elasmopus are endemic to Australia. Of the seven non-endemic species, five species are confined to the Indo- West Pacific and two species, E. pectenicrus and E. rapax , have been reported from the tropical Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Amphipoda

Family

Melitidae

Loc

Elasmopus Costa, 1853

Hughes, L. E. & Lowry, J. K. 2011
2011
Loc

E. carteri

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. leveque

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. otus

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. carteri

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. leveque

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. shepherdi

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. woodjonesi

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. shepherdi

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. woodjonesi

Hughes & Lowry 2011
2011
Loc

E. karamani

Souza-Filho & Senna 2009
2009
Loc

E. slatyeri

Lowry and Hughes 2009
2009
Loc

E. varanocephalensis

Lowry and Hughes 2009
2009
Loc

E. nanshaensis

Ren 1998
1998
Loc

E. aduncus

Myers 1995
1995
Loc

E. thomasi

Ortiz and Lalana 1994
1994
Loc

E. thomasi

Ortiz and Lalana 1994
1994
Loc

E. canarius

Krapp-Schickel and Ruffo 1990
1990
Loc

E. balkomanus

Thomas and Barnard 1988
1988
Loc

E. alalo

Myers 1986
1986
Loc

E. crenulatus

Berents 1983
1983
Loc

E. crenulatus

Berents 1983
1983
Loc

E. yunde J.L. Barnard, 1974

J. L. Barnard 1974
1974
Loc

E. wahine J.L. Barnard, 1972

J. L. Barnard 1972
1972
Loc

E. spinibasus

Sivaprakasam 1970
1970
Loc

E. piikoi J.L. Barnard, 1970

J. L. Barnard 1970
1970
Loc

Elasmopus rapax

Sivaprakasam 1969
1969
Loc

E. rapax

Sivaprakasam 1969
1969
Loc

E. rapax

Sivaprakasam 1969
1969
Loc

E. hawaiensis

Schellenberg 1938
1938
Loc

E. bollonsi

Chilton 1915
1915
Loc

E. neglectus

Chilton 1915
1915
Loc

E. neglectus

Chilton 1915
1915
Loc

Elasmopus delaplata

Stebbing 1888
1888
Loc

E. delaplata

Stebbing 1888
1888
Loc

E. delaplata

Stebbing 1888
1888
Loc

E. delaplata

Stebbing 1888
1888
Loc

Elasmopus

Costa 1853
1853
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