Genus
Meterythrops Smith, 1879
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Meterythrops Smith 1879, p 93
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; Holt and W. Tattersall 1905, p 116; Zimmer 1909, p 85; Hansen 1910, p 63; Banner 1948, p 376; W. Tattersall and O. Tattersall 1951, p 209; Ii 1964, p 312; Pillai 1965, p 1706; Murano 1977, p 166; Kathman et al. 1986, p 187.
Type species.
Meterythrops robusta Smith, 1879
.
Diagnosis
Body robust, with constriction between thorax and abdomen. Anterolateral corner of carapace pointed. Eyes developed. Antennular and antennal peduncles thick. Lateral margin of antennal scale without setae, almost straight or serrated, terminating in spiniform process (except for
M. megalops
). Labrum without spiniform process on anterior margin. Second segment of endopod of maxilla longer than broad, without spines. Endopod of third to eighth thoracopods slender; carpopropodus divided into three subsegments. Female with two pairs of developed oostegites. Male pleopods biramous; endopod of first pleopod reduced to unsegmented small lobe; exopod of first pleopod and both rami of second to fifth pleopods developed, multi-segmented; fifth pleopod or both fourth and fifth pleopods furnished with several modified setae, which are slightly thicker than normal setae and furnished with minute setae. All pleopods of female uniramous, reduced to unsegmented lobe. Endopod of uropod armed or unarmed with spines on mesial ventral margin. Telson triangular with narrowly truncate apex; lateral margin smooth or finely serrated; apex with two pairs of spines and median pair of plumose setae. Gender is masculine.
Remarks
The diagnosis of
Meterythrops
is revised with respect to the marsupium of the female and the pleopods of the male.
Smith (1879) described the brood pouch of
Meterythrops
as being composed of four lamellae, as in
Mysis Latreille, 1802
, but later authors reported the number of lamellae to be three pairs ( Zimmer 1909; Banner 1948; Ii 1964; Kathman et al. 1986) or three or four pairs ( Tattersall and Tattersall 1951). We confirm that females in all
Meterythrops
species, except
M. megalops
in which only a young specimen has been described, have two pairs of developed oostegites. In addition to the developed oostegites, females have a reduced oostegite in
Meterythrops
sp. Murano, 1977 and
M. tenuispinis
, and a tuft of setae in
M. microphtahlmus
,
M. pictus
, and
M. intermedius
on the sixth thoracopod.
Ii (1964) reported that male
Meterythrops
have pleopods lacking modified setae. However, we report modified setae on the fifth pleopod in
M. microphthalmus
and
M. robustus
, and on the fourth and fifth pleopods in
M. pictus
. It is unknown whether the other two species,
M. japonicus
and
M. megalops
, have these modified setae because adult males have not yet been collected.
Meterythrops
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resembles
Amathimysis Brattegard, 1969
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,
Katerythrops Holt and W. Tattersall, 1905
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, and
Parerythrops Sars, 1869
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in the shape and armature of the telson. It differs, however, from
Amathimysis
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and
Katerythrops
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by having a median pair of plumose setae on the telson apex. It differs from
Parerythrops
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in that the first pleopod of males has a multi-segmented exopod.
Meterythrops
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is also similar to
Pleurerythrops Ii, 1964
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in the shape and armature of the telson. However, there is taxonomic confusion within
Pleurerythrops
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, which currently includes five species:
P. inscita Ii, 1964
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,
P. secunda Murano, 1970
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,
P. constricta Panampunnayil, 1977
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,
P. americana Zoppi de Roa and Delgado, 1989
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, and
P. monospinosa Liu and Wang, 1986
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.
Pleurerythrops inscita
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and
P. secunda
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have a long, bare, or slightly barbed seta on the ultimate and penultimate segments of the fifth pleopod in males ( Ii 1964; Murano 1970a; Panampunnayil 1998).
Pleurerythrops americana
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males also have two modified setae on the ultimate segment of the endopod of the fifth pleopod, but unlike all other
Pleurerythrops
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species, do not have a pair of plumose setae on the apex of the telson ( Zoppi de Roa and Delgado 1989). The pleopods of male
Pleurerythrops monospinosa
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lack modified setae ( Liu and Wang 1986). Only female
Pleurerythrops constricta
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are known ( Panampunnayil 1977).
Meterythrops
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is distinct from
Pleurerythrops
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s. str. (comprising
P. inscita
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and
P. secunda
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) in both body shape and in the characters of the pleopods of males.
Meterythrops
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has a cylindrical body, as opposed to the somewhat depressed body in
Pleurerythrops
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. The pleopods of male
Meterythrops
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are densely covered in minute, modified setae, whereas those of
Pleurerythrops
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are remarkably long and either bare or sparsely barbed distally.