Contoura globosa, Kim & Boxshall, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/megataxa.4.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6422149 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C487CB-ED64-3802-FF4D-F858FF39F871 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Contoura globosa |
status |
gen. et sp. nov. |
Contoura globosa gen. et sp. nov.
( Figs. 379 View FIGURE 379 , 380 View FIGURE 380 )
Typematerial. Holotype (intact ♀, MNHN-IU-2009-5056 ) , paratypes (10 intact ♀♀, MNHN-IU-2014-21416), and dissected paratypes (2 ♀♀, figured) from Aplidium antillense (Gravier, 1955) (MNHN-IT-2008-170 = MNHN A1/ APL.B/166), St. François, S Grande Terre, Guadeloupe, Monniot coll., 25 December 1980.
Additional material. 12 ♀♀ (MNHN-IU-2018- 1911) from A. antillense, St. François , Guadeloupe.
Etymology. The specific name is derived from the Latin glob (=a ball), referring the spherical body of the adult female of the new species.
Descriptionoffemale. Body ( Fig. 379A, B View FIGURE 379 ) swollen with almost spherical brood pouch; body length 3.03 mm in dissected specimen. Prosome obscurely divided by 4 constrictions or wrinkles demarcating cephalosome and metasome; cephalosome small, narrower than anterior pedigerous somites. Fourthpedigerous somite (brood pouch) extremely expanded, spherical, 2.02×1.89 mm. Urosome ( Fig. 379C View FIGURE 379 ) rudimentary, very small, 2- segmented: first urosomite short, notarticulated from prosome, with traces of 2 or 3 suture lines on surface; second urosomite narrowing posteriorly. Caudal rami completely fused to anal somite, wider than long and narrowing distally, unarmed but ornamented with minute setules on surfaces.
Rostrum ( Fig. 379D, E View FIGURE 379 ) large, 135×85 μm, tapering, bluntly tipped, with minute spinules on ventral surface. Antennule ( Fig. 379F View FIGURE 379 ) 71×83 μm, shortand broad, leaf-like, with 3 partial sutures (or constrictions) along posterior surface, armed distally with 5 or 6 small setae, ornamented with minute spinules on all surfaces. Antenna ( Fig. 379G View FIGURE 379 ) stout, 3-segmented; coxa very short; basis 66×54 μm, unarmed; unsegmentedendopod much narrowerthan proximal segments, 50×31 μm; armed with 1 smallseta distally plus small terminal claw.
Labrum ( Fig. 379H View FIGURE 379 ) broad, bilobate at each posterolateral corner, outer posterolateral lobe fringed with fine spinules along distal margin; ornamented with patch of minute spinules in mid ventral surface. Mandible ( Fig. 379I View FIGURE 379 ) with coxal gnathobase broadening out towards oblique medial margin; margin serrate, with protruded proximal, pectinate part: palp reduced and unsegmented, with small, outer knob (vestige of exopod) in middle, bearing 1 or 2 minute setae; distal half (endopodal region) narrowing, bearing 2 small subdistal setae on medial margin, 2 or 3 minute setae apically; with few small spinules on medial surface. Maxillule consisting of precoxa and palp: precoxa ( Fig. 380A View FIGURE 380 ) with patch of minute setules proximally and bearing 3 strong, spiniform teeth on mediodistal arthrite: palp ( Fig. 380B View FIGURE 380 ) distally bilobed; outer lobe (exopod) with 2 smallsetae apically and 3 small spinules subdistally; inner lobe (basis+endopod) broad, with 1 large seta subdistally on medial margin and 4 tubercles apically, 3 outer tubercles each tipped with 1 small seta. Maxilla ( Fig. 380C View FIGURE 380 ) 4- segmented, consistingof syncoxa, basis, and 2-segmented endopod; syncoxawith 1 seta medially; basis drawn out to massive, curved claw bearing 1 seta proximally and 2 rows of denticles along distal part of convex proximal margin; endopod small, with broad seta on first segment and 1 broad and 2 small setae on second. Maxilliped ( Fig. 380D View FIGURE 380 ) represented by small lobe tipped with 1 seta
Leg 1 ( Fig. 380E View FIGURE 380 ) as broad plate bearing blunt outer distal lobe (exopod) and ornamented with minute spinules scatteredonventral surface.Leg 2 ( Fig.380F View FIGURE 380 ) assmalllobe tipped with 3 minute, nipple-like processes (rudimentary setae) and ornamented with several minute spinules. Legs 3 and 4 absent. Leg 5 ( Fig. 380G View FIGURE 380 ) represented by pair of conical, highly sclerotized processes.
Male. Unknown.
Remarks. The host of the new species, Aplidium antillense , is distributed in the western Atlantic from Georgia ( United States of America) in the north to Brazil in the south ( Sanamyan & Gleason, 2009; Da Rocha et al., 2012).
MNHN |
Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle |
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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