Cristapseudes omercooperi ( Larwood, 1954 )

DRUMM, DAVID T. & HEARD, RICHARD W., 2011, Systematic revision of the family Kalliapseudidae (Crustacea: Tanaidacea), Zootaxa 3142 (1), pp. 1-172 : 59-64

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3142.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AF5F87C3-DE51-FFC8-B19F-C0E3FCFA9735

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Cristapseudes omercooperi ( Larwood, 1954 )
status

 

Cristapseudes omercooperi ( Larwood, 1954) View in CoL

( Figs 36–39 View FIGURE 36 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 View FIGURE 39 )

Cristapseudes omercooperi Băcescu, 1980: 362–365 View in CoL , 375, 377–378, Figs. 1–2. Guţu, 1996a: 74. Bamber, 1998: 184. Bamber et al., 2003: 52, 2009: 1–3 View Cited Treatment , 9–10. Bamber et al., 2009: 1 View Cited Treatment , 9, 10. Kalliapseudes omer –cooperi Larwood, 1954: 562–567, Figs. 1–2. Lang, 1956a: 205, 209, 222. Shiino, 1964: 191, Fig. 101 View FIGURE 101 ,

1966: 487. Băcescu, 1978: 211. Guţu, 1981: 92. Kalliapseudes (Kalliapseudes) omer –cooperi. Lang, 1956a: 210, 216. Kalliapseudes Omer View in CoL –cooperi Băcescu, 1961: 161, 163–165, Figs. 65–77 View FIGURE 65 View FIGURE 66 View FIGURE 67 View FIGURE 68 View FIGURE 69 View FIGURE 70 View FIGURE 71 View FIGURE 72 View FIGURE 73 View FIGURE 75 View FIGURE 76 View FIGURE 77 . Kalliapseudes Omer View in CoL –Coperi. Băcescu, 1961: 167. Kalliapseudes Omer View in CoL –Cooperi Băcescu, 1961: 162, 164, 166. Kalliapseudes omercooperi View in CoL . Lauterbach, 1970: 120, Makkaveeva, 1971: 97, Băcescu, 1978: 206. Bamber, 1998: 184.

Type material. Neotype (present study).

Material examined. Neotype: adult female with oostegites ( NHM 2010.279 ), station NMI H27, 31°41.634'N 34°32.763'E, 20 m depth, Israel, 17 August 2005, coll. Dr. Roger Bamber ( NHM); non–type material:> 100 specimens (adult males, females, juveniles, mancas), GCRL 2990 same collection data as neotype; 34 permanent slides (adult female, adult male, neutrum), Kuwait Bay, Persian Gulf, det. Jurgen Sieg, MFN. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. Pleotelson with two terminal long plumose setae. Female antennule first peduncle article with one very long and several short distoventral spiniform setae not arranged in a linear fashion. Antenna first peduncle article with one long simple seta on outer distal corner. Maxillule inner endite with three setae. Pereopods 2 and 3 propodus with two distal “W” shaped setae. Pereopod 4 propodus with dorsodistal ring of short pectinate setae. Pereopod 5 without dorsodistal ring of short pectinate setae. Pereopod 6 dactylus longer than ischium, merus, carpus and propodus combined; without subterminal seta; no apparent sexual dimorphism. Male cheliped with normal fixed finger having one small dentiform apophysis between fixed finger and dactylus; dactylus unguis long, pointed.

Type locality. Port Taufiq , Gulf of Suez, NE Egypt, northern Indian Ocean .

Geographic distribution. NW Indian Ocean (Gulf of Suez, Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, Gulf of Oman, Kuwait Bay, Persian Gulf), Mediterranean waters of Israel, and Alexandria, Egypt, 9–67 m depth (Fig. 1, number 12).

Remarks. This species appears to be most closely related to C siamensis but it can be distinguished by: 1) the shape of the male chela ( Fig. 39B View FIGURE 39 ), 2) pereopod 6 with longer dactylus ( Fig. 38G View FIGURE 38 ), and 3) pereopods 2 and 3 with propodus having two spiniform setae with three prong–like extensions giving them a “W” shape appearance ( Fig. 38B View FIGURE 38 ). Cristapseudes omercooperi also has more sensory setae on the dactylus of pereopods 4 and 5 ( Figs. 38C–F View FIGURE 38 , ~ 10 in C. omercooperi and four in C. siamensis ). Another minor difference is the number of setae of the inner endite of the maxillule ( Fig. 36I View FIGURE 36 , three in C. omercooperi and four in C. siamensis ). We also did not notice a small terminal spiniform seta on the labial palp ( Fig. 36H View FIGURE 36 ) or a long, smooth spiniform seta on the epignath ( Fig. 37E View FIGURE 37 ), as in C. siamensis . The number of articles of the antenna flagellum ( Fig. 36C View FIGURE 36 ) showed intraspecific variation (5 or 6 articles).

In their key to the species of Cristapseudes, Gutu and Angsupanich (2005) did not mention the female antennule of C. omercooperi as having any distoventral spiniform setae on the first peduncle article. Examination of the antennule ( Fig. 36B View FIGURE 36 ) from a ventral aspect revealed the presence of spiniform setae, albeit of a different nature than C. siamensis . The spiniform setae of C. siamensis are arranged linearly while those of C. omercooperi have an irregular arrangement. Cristapseudes omercooperi also has one very long and several short spiniform setae, while C. siamensis has only short spiniform setae. Unfortunately, Larwood (1954) did not describe or illustrate the female antennule.

Larwood (1954) mentioned that ciliates were attached to the antennae and uropods. The material we examined also had peritrich ciliates attached to the antennae and most of the pereopods (illustrated in Fig. 38A View FIGURE 38 on the basis of pereopod 3).

Of the material examined here, an adult female was selected as the neotype from near the type locality. Cristapseudes omercooperi is the type species of the genus so the designation of a neotype is important in order to create stability within the genus. Larwood (1954) did not designate any type material. Băcescu (1961, 1980) examined material of C. omercooperi from the Mediterranean waters of Israel and the Gulf of Aden but did not designate a neotype and did not register the material in the collections of the museum (Guţu, pers. comm.). Băcescu noticed large–sized (5.5–7mm) and small–sized (3.5–4mm) populations coexisting in the Gulf of Aden and mentioned that the small–sized population was more similar to the Mediterranean population (also 3.5–4mm body length). Hyposphaenia are absent or reduced in this species (only a very small caudally directed spine on the second and third thoracic sternites). Băcescu (1980) also mentions that this species is tubiculous.

Cristapseudes siamensis Gu ţ u and Angsupanich, 2005

Cristapseudes siamensis Guţu and Angsupanich 2005: 44 View in CoL , Figs. 1–4.

Kalliapseudes View in CoL (K.) sp. 1. Guţu and Angsupanich 2004b: 76.

Type material. Holotype female no. 250.270, MHN Grigore Antipa; allotype male no. 250.271, MHN Grigore Antipa; paratypes no. 250.272 (8 females, 1 male and 1 juvenile), MHN Grigore Antipa and no. PSUZC 20050329.01 (4 females and 2 males), Prince of Songkla University Natural History Museum, Hat Yai, Thailand.

Material examined. None available for study. Diagnosis prepared from original description ( Gutu and Angsupanich, 2005).

Diagnosis. Pleotelson with two terminal long plumose setae. Female antennule first peduncle article with several short distoventral spiniform setae arranged in a linear fashion. Antenna first peduncle article without one long simple seta on outer distal corner. Maxillule inner endite with four setae. Pereopods 2 and 3 propodus without two distal “W” shaped setae. Pereopod 4 propodus with dorsodistal ring of short pectinate setae. Pereopod 6 dactylus approximately as long as merus, carpus and propodus combined; without subterminal seta. Male cheliped with normal fixed finger having one small dentiform apophysis between fixed finger and dactylus; dactylus unguis long, pointed. Male cheliped with reduced fixed finger having one long spiniform apophysis on the anterodistal corner,

near dactylus insertion; dactylus unguis very small, tubercle–like.

Cristapseudes unicus Gu ţ u, 2006

Cristapseudes unicus Guţu 2006: 153 View in CoL , Figs. 238–252.

Type material. Holotype female no. W27979, Queensland Museum , Brisbane, Australia.

Material examined. None available for study. Diagnosis prepared from original description ( Gutu, 2006).

Diagnosis (adult female). Antennule first peduncle article with one short distoventral spiniform seta. Antenna first peduncle article without one long simple seta on outer distal corner. Pereopod 4 propodus with dorsodistal ring of short pectinate setae. Pereopod 6 dactylus approximately as long as ischium, merus, carpus and propodus combined; with subterminal seta.

Type locality. Mackay , Coral Sea, Australia, 100–180 m depth (Fig. 1, number 14) .

Geographic distribution. Known from type locality only.

NHM

University of Nottingham

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Tanaidacea

Family

Kalliapseudidae

Genus

Cristapseudes

Loc

Cristapseudes omercooperi ( Larwood, 1954 )

DRUMM, DAVID T. & HEARD, RICHARD W. 2011
2011
Loc

Cristapseudes unicus Guţu 2006: 153

Gutu, M. 2006: 153
2006
Loc

Cristapseudes siamensis Guţu and Angsupanich 2005: 44

Gutu, M. & Angsupanich, S. 2005: 44
2005
Loc

Kalliapseudes

Gutu, M. & Angsupanich, S. 2004: 76
2004
Loc

Cristapseudes omercooperi Băcescu, 1980: 362–365

Bamber, R. N. & Bird, G. J. & Blazewicz & Paszkowycz, M. & Galil, B. 2009: 1
Bamber, R. N. & Bird, G. J. & Blazewicz & Paszkowycz, M. & Galil, B. 2009: 1
Bamber, R. N. & Bird, G. J. & Angsupanich, S. 2003: 52
Bamber, R. N. 1998: 184
Gutu, M. 1996: 74
Bacescu, M. 1980: 365
Lang, K. 1956: 205
Larwood, H. J. C. 1954: 562
1980
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