Eurythenes maldoror, D’Acoz, Cédric D’Udekem & Havermans, Charlotte, 2015

D’Acoz, Cédric D’Udekem & Havermans, Charlotte, 2015, Contribution to the systematics of the genus Eurythenes S. I. Smith in Scudder, 1882 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea: Eurytheneidae), Zootaxa 3971 (1), pp. 1-80 : 50-63

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3971.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:61D379B9-D9BA-41FB-B6A9-57BF87131B42

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5470188

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/852B87B0-FF94-FF9D-6CE3-FAD3FDFC2577

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eurythenes maldoror
status

sp. nov.

Eurythenes maldoror sp. nov.

( Figs 33–45 View FIGURE 33 View FIGURE 34 View FIGURE 35 View FIGURE 36 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 View FIGURE 39 View FIGURE 40 View FIGURE 41 View FIGURE 42 View FIGURE 43 View FIGURE 44 View FIGURE 45 )

Eurythenes gryllus clade Eg3.— Havermans et al., 2013: 12–13, fig. 5 (1B)(2B)(3C)(4B)(6B)(8B)(9B)(10B)(11B) (12B)(14B)(15B), table 4.

Material examined. HOLOTYPE. RV Meteor, expedition ME 79-1, DIVA 3, Argentine Basin, sta. 531, 35°56.50’S 48°53.90’W, amphipod trap, 4605.2 m, 15.vii.2009: 1 adult male, 100 mm, HOLOTYPE, partly dissected (dissected parts in alcohol), fixed first 96% denatured ethanol, coll. Ed Hendrycks, DZMB-HH 8048, ZMH K 44280 View Materials ; ArgB-7, EG-1810111, JX887151 View Materials ( COI), JX887069 View Materials (16S).

PARATYPES. Same station as holotype: 1 immature specimen (illustrated in detail), sex unknown, 41 mm, sample 1, ZMH K 44281 View Materials ; EG- 21012010 -12 (sequencing failed).—Same station: 1 immature specimen, previously dissected, sample 2, ZMH K 44282 View Materials .—Same station: 1 immature specimen, sample 3, ZMH K 44283 View Materials .—Same station: 1 immature specimen, sample 4, ZMH K 44284 View Materials , ArgB-1, EG-1102101, JX887121 View Materials ( COI), JX887105 View Materials (28S), JX887067 View Materials (16S).—Same station: 30 immature specimens, sample 5, ZMH K 44285 View Materials .—Same station: 5 immature specimens, sample 6, CMNC 2014-0099.—RV Polarstern, expedition PS61, ANT-XIX/4, ANDEEP II, sta. 131-1, East of Antarctic Peninsula, 65°17'S 51°35'W, 3070 m, 08.iii.2002, baited traps M16, M17, MP10, MP35: 2 immature specimens, sample 7, RBINS, INV. 122791; Ant-a3, EG-0112102, JX887123 View Materials ( COI), JX887103 View Materials (28S), JX887067 View Materials (16S); Ant-a4, EG-P3049, GU109270 View Materials ( COI), JX887104 View Materials (28S), JX887067 View Materials (16S).—RV Polarstern, expedition PS67, ANT-XXII/3, ANDEEP III, Eastern Weddell Sea, sta. 59-1/59-15, 67°30'00"S 00°00'06"E to 67°30'03"S 00°00'02"E, 4625 m, baited trap, 14–16.ii.2005: 2 immature specimens, sample 8, RBINS, INV. 122792; not sequenced, previously mixed with 7 E. andhakarae .—ANT-XXII/3, sta. 110-1/110-9, 64°56'21"S 43°08'01"W to 64°56'26"S 43°08'07"W, 4693–4696 m, baited trap 09–10.iii.2005: 1 immature specimen, sample 9, RBINS, INV. 122793; not sequenced.

Voucher DNA sequences. Holotype, ArgB-7, EG-1810111.

COI (GenBANK JX887151 View Materials ):

GACCTTATACTTCGTCTTAGGTGCCTGAGCTAGGGTCGTCGGCACATCTCTTAGTGTAATTATTCGATCT GAACTCAGTAGACCGGGAAACCTAATTGGAGATGATCAGGTCTATAACGTGATAGTAACTGCCCACGC CTTTGTTATAATCTTCTTTATAGTTATACCTATTATAATTGGCGGTTTTGGAAATTGACTAGTCCCCCTTAT ACTTGGGAGCCCCGACATAGCTTTCCCGCGCATAAACAACATAAGATTCTGACTACTACCCCCCTCAC TAACCTTATTACTAATAAGAGGCCTAGTAGAAAGGGGGGTAGGAACTGGTTGAACCGTTTACCCTCCC TTAGCCGCAGCCGCAGCCCACAGTGGGGGATCTGTTGACCTGGCGATCTTCTCTCTCCACCTAGCAGG TGCTTCTTCCATTTTAGGTGCCATCAATTTTATCTCCACTGTAATTAACATACGAACCCCTGGTATATATA TAGACCGAGTGCCCTTATTTGTCTGGTCCGTCTTCATCACAGCCATTCTGCTCCTCTTATCTCTACCTGT ACTAGCTGGTGCAATTACCATACTCCTAACAGACCGAAATCTAAATACTTCCTTCTTCGATCCTAGGGG TGGAGGTGACCCTATCCTTTACCAACACCTATTC

28S (GenBANK JX887069 View Materials ):

TGCTATAAGGGTAGTGTATGGTAAGGCCTGCCCAGTGATTAATTAAACGGCTGCGGTATATTGACC GTGCTAAGGTAGCATAGTCATTTGTCTTTTAATTGGAGGCTGGAATGAAGGGTTTAACAAAGGATAGT GTCTTTGTTTTAAATTTGTAATTTATAACAAGAGTAAAAATACTCTGGTGTGATTAAGGGACGACAAGA CCCTAAAAGCTTTATTTTTAAGATAAGTTTGAGTTTAATATAGAATAGAGAGTTTAACTGGGGTAGTTTT TTTGTAAAATCTGAGGTTGTAAAAGGCATGTAAAGTGGGGTTAGGTCCTTTAGATAAGGATAATTTGA GTGAGTTACTTTAGGGATAACAGCGTAATAGTCCTAGGGAGATCGTATCTATGGGATTGATTGCGACCT CGATGTTGAATTAAAAGATCAGTGTAGAGCAGGAGCTACAGGGTGAGGGTTTGTTCAACCTTTAAATT TTTA

Type locality. NW of Argentinian Basin, off Argentina, not far from the maritime border between Argentina and Uruguay, 35°56.50’S 048°53.90’W, 4605 m.

Etymology. Maldoror , ghastly character of the tale ‘Les Chants de Maldoror’ by Lautréamont, nom de plume of Isidore Lucien Ducasse (French poet born in Uruguay, 04.04.1846 – 24.11.1870). Maldoror is a phonetic transposition of ‘mal d’aurore’, which can be translated as ‘pain of the dawn’ or even 'pain caused by the glow of dawn'. This name has been coined bearing in mind that this species thrives at great depths where sunlight is absent. The name is a noun in apposition.

Description. If not specified, the description applies both to the 100 mm male holotype and to the 41 mm immature paratype examined and dissected.

Body: pleosomite 3 with anterior concavity; other pleosomites and pereonites without anterior concavity.

Head: anterior lobe of head strongly produced; ventral corner of eye blunt and pointing obliquely backwards.

Mandible: article 2 of palp strongly expanded posteriorly and strongly tapering distally.

Maxilliped: inner plate with 8–9 (adult holotype) or 3 (immature) nodular spines, which are not protruding.

Gnathopod 1: coxa very weakly concave anteriorly; basis narrow, 3.3 x as long as wide; palm well developed, slightly but distinctly produced.

Gnathopod 2: coxa narrow and strongly curved ventrally; propodus elongate and not expanded distally in holotype, much broader and flaring in immature, 2.8 (immature) to 5.2 (adult) x as long as wide, palm slightly curved and transverse, defined by 2 spines only, both in immature and in adult holotype.

Pereopod 3: coxa narrow, 2.0 (immature) to 2.2 (adult holotype) x as deep as wide; basis slender, 3.2 (immature) to 3.8 (adult holotype) x as long as wide; propodus slender, 4.9 (immature) to 6.5 (adult) x as long as wide; dactylus slender.

Pereopod 4: coxa narrow, 1.3 x as deep as wide; junction between anterior and ventral border rounded, indistinct (adult holotype) or nearly indistinct (immature); ventral border distinctly curved; posteroventral border very weakly concave (adult holotype) or straight (immature), scarcely oblique; leg almost identical with pereopod 3.

Pereopod 5: basis with posterior border weakly crenulated (immature) or completely smooth (adult holotype); merus broad, 1.9 x as long as wide, with posterior border forming a regular curve; propodus slender, 6.1 (immature) to 8.3 (adult holotype) x as long as wide, with 9 (immature) to 13 (adult holotype) groups of spines anteriorly; dactylus slender.

Pereopod 6: basis with posterior border scarcely crenulated (crenulation especially faint, scarcely distinct in adult); merus broad, 1.7 (immature) to 1.9 (adult) x as long as wide, with posterior border extremely convex, becoming less convex near its distal end; propodus slender, 6.6 (immature) to 8.5 (adult holotype) x as long as wide; with 10 (immature) to 11 (adult holotype) groups of spines anteriorly; dactylus slender.

Pereopod 7: basis elongate, with posterior border weakly expanded, with posterior border scarcely crenulated (crenulation especially faint, scarcely distinct in adult), with ornamentation of anterior border reduced (especially in adult holotype: just a few setae and no spines), 1.6 x as long as wide; with posterodistal corner of lobe scarcely produced and rounded (with very weak trace of angular discontinuity) in adult holotype), regularly rounded in immatures, ratio length of lobe of basis / total length of basis = 0.21 (immature) to 0.25 (adult holotype); merus stout, 1.7 (adult holotype) to 1.8 x as long as wide, with posterior border forming a regular curve (very convex in adult holotype); propodus slender, 5.7 (immature) to 6.8 (adult) x as long as wide, with 9 (immature) to 11 (adult holotype) groups of spines anteriorly; dactylus slender.

Epimeron 3: straight ventrally (adult holotype) or scarcely curved (immatures), without small posteroventral tooth in specimens between 25 and 35 mm.

Uropod 3: spines of distolateral angle of peduncle rather long and very slender.

Colour pattern. The holotype was entirely pink, with the pigmentation more intense on the posterior margin of body segments, on the margins of coxae, on antennae, mouthparts, the tips of pereopods and uropods. Eye pale yellow.

Size. Up to 100 mm (holotype).

Distribution and depth range. Specimens examined were collected in the Weddell Sea and in the north of the Argentinian basin, between 3076–4693 m. DNA sequences of GenBank suggests that the species is also widely distributed in the North Atlantic and the North Pacific ( Havermans et al. 2013) and can descend down to 5117 m depth. A photograph accessible at: http://lysianassidae.myspecies.info/sites/lysianassidae.myspecies.info/files/ Amphipod%20-%20MDSC0728.jpg [accessed on 28.01.2013] possibly shows a specimen of E. maldoror sp. nov. The sampling locality of this specimen is the Peru – Chile Trench, 04°27.016’S 81°54.719’W, at 5329 m (Kilgallen, pers. comm.).

Biology. E. maldoror sp. nov. is a scavenger, which enters baited traps, albeit not in large numbers. With the exception of one adult male, all specimens examined by us were immature, which suggests some kind of biological segregation of size classes.

Remarks. Unlike several other Eurythenes species, E. maldoror sp. nov. exhibits a very clear-cut diagnostic character separating it a first glance from similar species described so far. Indeed whilst other Eurythenes of the gryllus -complex have coxa 2 ventrally broadened and weakly convex, in E. maldoror sp. nov. the same structure is ventrally narrow and strongly convex.

ZMH

Zoologisches Museum Hamburg

COI

University of Coimbra Botany Department

RBINS

Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

DNA

Department of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport

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