Paralimnadia multispinosa, Timms, Brian V., 2016

Timms, Brian V., 2016, A review of the Australian endemic clam shrimp, Paralimnadia Sars 1896 (Crustacea: Branchiopoda: Spinicaudata), Zootaxa 4161 (4), pp. 451-508 : 487-490

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4161.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8B9BDEA7-5F2B-465C-B2A8-757B733CCCE7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4685628

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E4878E-FFE3-FFDE-FF70-033516D4FE60

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Paralimnadia multispinosa
status

sp. nov.

Paralimnadia multispinosa View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs. 4 View FIGURE 4 , 19 View FIGURE 19 , 20 View FIGURE 20 )

Etymology. This species has more than 24 spines on the telson, making it unusual among Paralimnadia , hence the specific epithet of ‘ multispinosa

Type material. Holotype: WAM C61754, male, length 7.1 mm, height 4.3 mm, Western Australia, Paynes Find , 12 km E on Great Northern Highway, a roadside burrow pit, 29°17’12”S, 117°33’52”E, 21 August 2011 GoogleMaps , BVT. Allotype: WAM C61755, female, length 6.9 mm, height 4.0 mm, collected with holotype. Paratypes: male, 7.3 × 4.5 mm, female, 6.3 × 3.9 mm, from Western Australia, Paynes Find , 12 km E on Great Northern Highway, a roadside burrow pit, 29°17’12”S, 117°33’ 52”E, 21 August 2011, BVT, AM P99019. GoogleMaps

Other material examined. Western Australia, Paynes Find , 12 km E on Great Northern Highway, a roadside burrow pit, 29°17’12”S, 117°33’52”E, 21 August 2011, BVT, 7 males, 4 females, WAM C61756 GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Egg spherical with about 80 elongated polygons with irregular walls and on smooth surface. Telson with about 26 pairs of closely spaced spines and telsonic setae inserted at 6th–8th spine. Cercopod with about 6 setae about as long as basal diameter of cercopod and confined to basal quarter leaving next quarter inerm until single spine at 50% length.

Description. Male: Head ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 B) with ocular tubercle prominent; spherical compound eye occupying about 80%. Rostrum protruding little more than ocular tubercle and at an angle of 115° from base, triangular, apex blunt. Ocellus about two thirds size of compound eye and lying at base of rostrum. Dorsal organ posterior to eye by about its height, pedunculate and asymmetrical and about half as high as ocular tubercle.

First antennae ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 B) about 1.5 × the length of peduncle of second antennae, and with 8 lobes. Second antennae with spinose peduncle; both dorsal and ventral flagella with 12 antennomeres, each armed with 2–4 short spines dorsally and 2–8 setae ventrally. Distal antennomeres with minimal spines and maximal setae, though most common arrangement 3 spines and 5 or 6 setae.

Carapace ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 A) elongated oval, pellucid, hardly any indication of growth lines externally, though few visible internally. Adductor muscle scar at about 45° to carapace long axis, only visible when animal removed from carapace.

Thoracopods. Eighteen pairs of thoracopods. C laspers ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 D) with palm trapezoidal with distinct rounded endite III distomedially. Apical club spherical with many stout denticles apically, few long spines medially. Small palp with many short aciculate spines apically. Finger arcuate with blunt apex bearing many rounded pits ventrally. Both long palps of claspers inserted on apical edge of palm, palp of 1st clasper with 2 palpomeres and about twice as long as the palm; palp of 2nd clapser with 3 palpomeres and about 2.3 × palm length. Both palps inerm at palpomere junctions but with many limp filiform spines on flattened palaform apical area. Other thoracopods of typical structure for Paralimnadia , decreasing is size and complexity posteriorly. Last three segments dorsally with 1–3 short spines medially; next 5 segments with 3–9 longer spines/setae medially.

Telson ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 C) spine ridges with about 26 pairs of spines; anteriormost spine not much larger than the next few; penultimate spines little longer than most spines. All spines crowded, with spinules. Telsonic filaments originating from mound little higher than dorsal floor of telson positioned after sixth spine. Floor of telson posterior to mound with declivity, followed by distinctly convex telsonic floor. Cercopods almost as long as dorsum of telson, basal 50% narrowing to small spine then tapering to acute apex. About 6 short setae, each little longer than basal diameter of cercopod. These setae confined to basal quarter of cercopod, next quarter inerm, small spine dorsally at half-length, many tiny denticles dorsolaterally on apical half. Setae geniculate and plumose on upper two-thirds. Posteroventral corner of telson rounded and hardly protruding.

Female. Head ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 F) with ocular tubercle prominent, with compound eye occupying about 80%. Rostrum a rounded asymmetrical bulge, protruding about same as ocular tubercle. Ocellus large, about half size of compound eye, located in basodorsal area of rostrum. Dorsal organ posterior to eye by about its height, pedunculate and asymmetrical and about half height of ocular tubercle.

First antennae ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 F) little shorter than peduncle of second antennae, with about 4 small lobes. Second antennae largely as in male, but with ventral flagellum with 13 antennomeres; dorsal spines 1–5 and ventral setae 1–6, with typical number of 3 spines and 4 or 5 setae.

Carapace ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 E) virtually identical to that of male.

Thoracopods. Eighteen thoracopods of typical Paralimnadia structure. Trunk dorsum with segments 1–9 naked, segments 10–15; with 3–9 long spines/setae distomedially; segments 16–18 with 1–3 short spines medioterminally. Thoracopods 9 and 10 with long flabellum dorsally.

Telson ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 G) as in male, though telsonic setae inserted between 7th and 8th spine.

Egg ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 A) diameter 276 µm, range 253–282 µm, n = 5. Spherical with about 80 elongated polygons, sometimes in rows of 3–5 but generally randomly arranged, each with uneven discrete walls and flat floors. Slight elevations where walls meet. (In the vernacular, the walls look like amateur strings of icing added to a smooth ball) Variability. This species is known only from one locality, so its full morphological variability is unknown. Little departure in numbers of meristic features was noted, i.e., always 8 or 9 first antennae lobes in male and 3 or 4 in females, 11–13 antennomeres, 26 or 27 pairs of telsonic spines, and 6 cercopod setae. One specimen had only two palpomeres in the long palp of the 2nd clasper, instead of three.

Differential diagnosis. No other species has a spherical egg with superficial elongated polygons (ca. 80) demarcated by irregular ropey walls and inner surface flat. The large number (ca. 26) of telsonic spines and an inerm partial section of the cercopod is shared by only P. westraliensis n. sp., from which it is distinguished by its shorter and less numerous cercopod setae.

Distribution and ecology. This species is known only from the Paynes Find area in Western Australia ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ). The habitat was semiturbid water of a roadside burrow pit. Its natural habitat is unknown.

WAM

Western Australian Museum

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