Eluma praticola, Taiti & Rossano, 2015
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.4337168 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/657CDEF9-75C7-403C-86BE-28A6CA6ABB93 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:657CDEF9-75C7-403C-86BE-28A6CA6ABB93 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Eluma praticola |
status |
sp. nov. |
Eluma praticola View in CoL sp. nov.
( Figures 34–36 View Figure 34 View Figure 35 View Figure 36 )
Material examined
Holotype: ♂, St. 25, under stones in meadow, leg. S. Taiti, 30 April 2004 ( MZUF 9568 View Materials ) . Paratypes: 9 ♂♂, 19 ♀♀, same data as holotype ( MZUF 9568 View Materials ) .
Description
Maximum length: ♂, 5.5 mm; ovigerous ♀, 7 mm. Body very convex, able to roll up into a ball, euspheric type ( Figure 34A View Figure 34 ). Colour brown with paler epimera of pereonites 2–7. Dorsal surface without ornamentation and with numerous round pits and tiny pointed scale-setae ( Figure 35A View Figure 35 ); one line of noduli laterales per side far from the lateral margin of pereonites 1–6, two noduli laterales per side on pereonite 7 ( Figure 34D View Figure 34 ); no visible gland pores. Cephalon ( Figure 34B, C View Figure 34 ) with a wide triangular scutellum distinctly separated from and not bent over vertex; no postscutellar line; antennary lobes quadrangular, directed frontwards; eye consisting of a single large ocellus. Pereonite 1 ( Figures 34B View Figure 34 , 35B View Figure 35 ) with a flattened lateral margin and a schisma on posterior corners; inner lobe of schisma rounded, more protruding backwards than the outer one; a small triangular lobe on ventral surface; posterior margin slightly sinuous at sides. Pereonite 2 ( Figure 35B View Figure 35 ) with rounded epimera, a small triangular ventral lobe and straight posterior margin. Pereonite 3 with rounded epimera and straight posterior margin; pereonites 4–7 with quadrangular epimera and straight posterior margins. Pleonites 3–5 with rectangular epimera, slightly divergent. Telson ( Figure 34E View Figure 34 ) triangular, almost 1.5 as wide as long, with straight sides and broadly rounded apex. Antennule ( Figure 35C View Figure 35 ) of three articles, second article much shorter than first and third, third article with a tuft of superimposed aesthetascs subapically. Antenna ( Figure 35D View Figure 35 ) short and stout with flagellum slightly shorter than fifth article of peduncle, second flagellar article almost three times longer than first and bearing two rows of aesthetascs. Mandibles ( Figure 35E, F View Figure 35 ) with semidichotomized molar penicil and four free penicils; right mandible with one penicil and left mandible with two penicils on the hairy lobe. Maxillule ( Figure 35G View Figure 35 ) outer lobe with 4 + 6 (5 cleft) teeth; inner lobe with two subequal penicils and a small triangular distal point. Maxilla ( Figure 35H View Figure 35 ) apically setose, with quadrangular inner lobe, much smaller than rounded outer lobe. Maxilliped ( Figure 35I View Figure 35 ) with quadrangular endite bearing three short triangular setae on distal margin and a longer subapical seta near the inner corner; basal article of palp with two long setae. Uropod ( Figures 34E View Figure 34 , 36A View Figure 36 ) flattened; exopod about twice as wide as long, with concave distal margin; endopod distinctly more protruding backwards compared with exopod.
Male: Pereopod 1 ( Figure 36B View Figure 36 ) with a line of pointed setae on sternal margin of carpus and, to a lesser extent, merus. Pereopod 7 ( Figure 34F, G View Figure 34 ) ischium distally with a ridge on caudal surface, sternal margin slightly concave with numerous long setae; merus with no ridges or lobes, sternal margin slightly convex with some long setae. Pleopod 1 ( Figure 36C View Figure 36 ) exopod with a short, rounded medial lobe; endopod with distal part pointed and bent outwards. Pleopod 2 ( Figure 36D View Figure 36 ) exopod triangular and slightly shorter than endopod. Pleopod 3–5 exopods as in Figure 36E–G View Figure 36 .
Etymology
From the Latin pratum = meadow + stem of colere = to live. The name refers to the habitat where the specimens have been collected.
Remarks
Up to date the genus Eluma included only two species, the widespread E. caelata and E. tuberculata Cruz, 1991 from Fatima, Portugal. The new species is similar to E. caelata from which it differs in smaller size (maximum length in ovigerous females 7 mm vs 16 mm), the dorsal surface with shorter and less numerous scale-setae (compare Figure 34A–E View Figure 34 and Figure 32A–D View Figure 32 ), shorter uropodal exopod (compare Figures 34E View Figure 34 and Figure 32C View Figure 32 ), male pereopod 7 without a basal triangular lobe on merus and less sharp ridge on the caudal surface of the ischium (compare Figure 34F, G View Figure 34 and Figure 32E–G View Figure 32 ), and pleopod 1 exopod with a shorter and round medial lobe (compare Figure 36C View Figure 36 and Figure 33C View Figure 33 ).
Eluma praticola is readily distinguishable from E. tuberculata in the dorsal surface without ornamentation and lateral margin of pereonite 1 not grooved. No comparison is possible with the male characters since E. tubercolata was described on female specimens ( Cruz 1991).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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