Bathytropa rifensis, Taiti & Rossano, 2015

Taiti, Stefano & Rossano, Claudia, 2015, Terrestrial isopods from the Oued Laou basin, north-eastern Morocco (Crustacea: Oniscidea), with descriptions of two new genera and seven new species, Journal of Natural History 49 (33), pp. 2067-2138 : 2086-2090

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2015.1009512

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DCBF3103-1463-4A32-9BC0-A4CFE8B762AE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4337140

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BDF07FAA-7795-486C-B8D4-D7F64D720980

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:BDF07FAA-7795-486C-B8D4-D7F64D720980

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Bathytropa rifensis
status

sp. nov.

Bathytropa rifensis View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figures 12–14 View Figure 12 View Figure 13 View Figure 14 )

Material examined

Holotype: ♂, St. 15, sieved ground near stream, leg. S. Taiti, 27 April 2004 ( MZUF 9474 View Materials ) . Paratypes: 2 ♂♂, 5 ♀♀, same data as holotype ( MZUF 9474 View Materials ) .

Description

Maximum length: ♂, 2.8 mm; ♀, 4.0 mm. Colour pale. Body strongly convex with epimera of pereon and pleon enlarged, obliquely directed, clinger type ( Schmalfuss 1984). Dorsal surface of cephalon, pereon and pleon with large tubercles and ribs arranged as in Figure 12A View Figure 12 . Back covered with triangular scale-setae ( Figure 12B View Figure 12 ); posterior margins of the body segments with rectangular scale-setae ( Figure 12C View Figure 12 ); one line of noduli laterales per side arranged on top of the outmost tubercle of the posterior row of each pereonite. Cephalon ( Figure 12D, E View Figure 12 ) with median lobe raised up, broadly rounded in dorsal view and rectangular in frontal view; quadrangular lateral lobes, obliquely directed and slightly more protruding frontwards than median lobe; no suprantennal line; eye small with five ommatidia. Pereon with quadrangular epimera progressively pointing backwards from first to seventh; posterior margin of the first pereonite slightly sinuous at sides. Pleonites 3–5 with subrectangular epimera continuing the outline of the pereon. Telson slightly wider than long, triangular with straight sides and broadly rounded apex ( Figure 12F View Figure 12 ). Antennule ( Figure 12G View Figure 12 ) with second article much shorter than first and third; third article with an apical tuft of four aesthetascs. Antenna ( Figure 12H View Figure 12 ) with flagellum about as long as fifth article of peduncle; second flagellar article about four times as long as first, bearing a row of four aesthetascs in the middle. Mandibles with molar penicil consisting of four or five hairy setae; left mandible ( Figure 13A View Figure 13 ) with 2 + 1 free penicils; right mandible ( Figure 13B View Figure 13 ) with 1 + 1 free penicils. Maxillule ( Figure 13C View Figure 13 ) outer branch with 4 + 7 (3 cleft) teeth; inner branch with two short stout penicils and a distinct apical point. Maxilla ( Figure 13D View Figure 13 ) distally bilobate with setose apex; inner lobe much wider than outer one. Maxilliped ( Figure 13E View Figure 13 ) endite with three triangular stout teeth on distal margin and no penicil; first article of palp with two setae, the medial one much longer than the outer one. Pleopodal exopods with no respiratory structures as in most species of the genus.

Male: Pereopod 1 ( Figure 13F View Figure 13 ) with no distinct sexual modifications. Pereopod 7 ( Figure 14A View Figure 14 ) ischium enlarged in the distal part, with straight sternal margin. Pleopod 1 ( Figure 14B View Figure 14 ) exopod subtriangular with rounded distal part; endopod with pointed apical part slightly bent outwards. Pleopod 2 ( Figure 14C View Figure 14 ) endopod with apical part flagelliform, slightly longer than exopod. Pleopod 3–5 exopods as in Figure 14D–F View Figure 14 .

Etymology

The name refers to Rif where the specimens have been collected.

Remarks

At present the genus Bathytropa includes 10 species distributed in the Mediterranean area ( Schmalfuss 2003). According to Vandel (1962), B. meinertii Budde-Lund, 1885 includes two subspecies: B. m. meinertii and B. m. costata Budde-Lund, 1885. The new species is readily distinguishable from B. meinertii costata , B. tuberculata Racovitza, 1908 , and B. schembrii Caruso and Lombardo, 1982 in the presence of two paramedian tubercles instead of a single median tubercle on pleonites; from B. granulata Aubert and Dollfus, 1890 and B. graevei ( Verhoeff, 1940) in having distinct dorsal ribs and tubercles instead of granulations; from B. wahrmani Strouhal, 1968 in the telson triangular with rounded apex, instead of hour-glass-shaped, and the absence of respiratory structures on the pleopods; from B. meinertii meinertii , B. colasi Vandel, 1954 , B. dollfusi Strouhal, 1936 , B. patanei Caruso, 1973a and B. ruffoi Caruso, 1973b in the number and disposition of dorsal ornamentation. In northern Africa three species of Bathytropa were previously recorded: B. tuberculata and B. meinertii , with both subspecies B. m. meinertii and B. m. costata, from Algeria, and B. colasi Vandel, 1954 from ‘Berberie’ ( Vandel 1955b).

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