Cymothoa hermani Hadfield, Bruce & Smit, 2011

Martin, Melissa B., Bruce, Niel L. & Nowak, Barbara F., 2016, Review of the fish-parasitic genus Cymothoa Fabricius, 1793 (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothoidae) from Australia, Zootaxa 4119 (1), pp. 1-72 : 25-28

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4119.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:20921969-1AA4-429F-B908-1EF1045B5098

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3512048

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7615575A-E66E-FFEE-14AB-FC64063F4242

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cymothoa hermani Hadfield, Bruce & Smit, 2011
status

 

Cymothoa hermani Hadfield, Bruce & Smit, 2011 View in CoL

Figures 14–15 View FIGURE 14 View FIGURE 15

Cymothoa hermani Hadfield, Bruce & Smit, 2011: 57 View in CoL View Cited Treatment , figs. 1–7.— Hadfield, Bruce & Smit, 2013: 163 View Cited Treatment .

Type material. Holotype: 1 ♀ (ovig. 28 mm; not examined), Miwi Island, Kiwani Bay, Zanzibar, Tanzania, 06°21’S, 39°20’E, 26 April 2008, host marbled parrotfish Leptoscarus vaigiensis (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) , coll. H. Van der Bank ( SAMC A47890).

Paratypes: 1 ovig. ♀ (23 mm), 2 mature ♂ (14, 15 mm; not examined), same data as holotype ( SAMC A47891).

Material examined. Southeastern Queensland material. 1 ♀ ovig. (37 mm), off Gladstone, March 1979, from parrotfish, coll. A. Kilvert (MTQ W8961). 1 ♂ (18 mm), off Gladstone, March 1971 or 1979, from parrotfish, coll. A. Kilvert (MTQ W34275).

Diagnosis and description. Hadfield et al. (2011, 2013) provided figures and a detailed description of the type material. We include here illustrations and a brief diagnosis of the Australian female specimen (MTQ W8961).

Body ovoid, 1.8 times as long as greatest width, dorsal surface rugose, laterally convex, widest at pereonite 4, most narrow at pereonite 1. Cephalon subtriangular, 1.2 times longer than wide, moderately visible from dorsal view. Frontal margin rounded, ventrally folded. Eyes absent. Pereonite 1 anterolateral margins broad, reaching anterior margin of cephalon; pereonites 1–4 subequal in length, posterior margin moderately linear; pereonites 5–7 subequal in length. Coxae 2–3 posteroventral margins subtruncate; 5 and 6 with broadly acute carinae. Pleonites 1– 5 progressively wider, visible in dorsal view; pleonites posterior margin irregular. Pleotelson 0.6 times as long as anterior width, anterior margin irregular, lateral margin convex, posterior margin rounded, without median point. Antennula comprised of 6 articles. Antenna comprised of 7 articles. Pereopods 1 and 2 dactyli slender; carpus with straight proximal margin; merus proximal margin without bulbous protrusion; basis superior proximal basis smooth, not raised, without acute carinae. Pereopods 3–5 similar to pereopod 2, gradually increasing in size, without robust or simple setae. Pereopods 6 and 7 superior proximal basis without broad and raised carinae; merus proximal margin without bulbous protrusion; dactyli narrow. Uropod half as long as pleotelson length; peduncle 1.1 times as long as exopod; exopod 1.3 times as long as endopod, apices narrowly rounded.

Colour. Ivory white to yellowish-tan.

Size. Ovigerous females: 23–37 mm; adult males 14–18 mm ( Hadfield et al. 2011 and present study).

Remarks. Cymothoa hermani can be identified by the unique bulbous ornamentation on pereonite 1, pereonite 1 anterolateral margins rounded and extending past rostrum, long and slender dactyli and the numerous lobes on pleopods 4 and 5 in the ovigerous female ( Hadfield et al. 2011, 2013).

The Australian specimens and Tanzanian holotype are similar in having a subtriangular cephalon, pereonite 1 anterolateral margins rounded and extending past rostrum and pleonites subparallel. Differences include the Australian specimens having a more ovoid body shape (compared to the subparallel lateral margins), pereonite 1 anterolateral margins reaching rostrum (compared to pereonite 1 producing past rostrum), the more acute posteroventral margins of coxae 4–7 (compared to the straight and smooth margins), pereopods 6 and 7 with a less developed carinae basis, and the rounded pleotelson posterior margin (compared to the subquadrate pleotelson posterior margin). Male specimens from Australia (MTQ W34275) and Hadfield’s et al. (2011) paratype are similar.

Cymothoa borbonica Schioedte & Meinert, 1884 View in CoL and C. epimerica View in CoL are the most similar species to C. hermani View in CoL in the subtriangular cephalon, pereonite 1 anterolateral margins reaching rostrum, and the ovate body shape. Cymothoa borbonica View in CoL has no bulbous ornamentation on pereonite 1, the lengths of pereonites 6 and 7 are more than half the length of pereonite 4, acute posterior margins on coxae 4–7, sharp carinae basis on pereopods 6 and 7 and the body is dorsomedially flattened (compared to the medial ridge on pereonites 2–4 on C. hermani View in CoL , visible from the lateral view). Cymothoa epimerica View in CoL has posterior margins of coxae acute, basis of pereopods 6 and 7 acute and dorsally visible, pleon trisinuate and pleopod margins appearing irregular.

Distribution. Known from southeastern Queensland and the Northern Territory, Australia (present study) and Tanzania, Africa.

Hosts. Known from the host from the family Scaridae ( Hadfield et al. 2011; present study). The host Leptoscarus vaigiensis is known to occur from the northern Red Sea to South Africa and eastwards to Japan and New Zealand ( Hadfield et al. 2011).

SAMC

Iziko Museums of Cape Town

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Isopoda

Family

Cymothoidae

Genus

Cymothoa

Loc

Cymothoa hermani Hadfield, Bruce & Smit, 2011

Martin, Melissa B., Bruce, Niel L. & Nowak, Barbara F. 2016
2016
Loc

Cymothoa hermani

Hadfield 2013: 163
Hadfield 2011: 57
2011
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