Indiacypris dispar Hartmann, 1964

George, Sunny & Martens, Koen, 2004, On the taxonomic position of Indiacypridinae (Crustacea, Ostracoda), with the description of a new species of Indiacypris Hartmann, 1964 from Chalakkudy River (Kerala, India), Journal of Natural History 38 (5), pp. 537-548 : 539-541

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/0022293021000013870

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4675501

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F587F6-FFE0-334F-910C-FD0DFCB4F966

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Indiacypris dispar Hartmann
status

 

Indiacypris dispar Hartmann

( figures 1A–D, F–H View FIG , 2A–J View FIG )

Material investigated

About 20 parthenogenetic females from Chalakkudy River, about 50 m downstream of the confluence of Kannankuzhi Thodu and the main river, Kerala, India. All specimens, along with those of I. chalakkudensis n. sp., were collected with a hand net on 4 July 1999 from the benthic region along the river bank. Illustrated specimens are presently curated in the Ostracod Collection of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (Brussels, Belgium): six females either dissected or stored dry in micropalaeontological slides (nos OC.2435–2441), five females in ethanol (no. OC.2450) .

Abbreviated re-description

Valves strongly asymmetrical ( figure 1F, G View FIG ), with RV ( figure 1B View FIG ) with an asymmetrical indentation of the antero-ventral valve margin and with ventral margin rather sinuous. LV ( figure 1A View FIG ) with caudal margin asymmetrically produced in the lower two-thirds, anterior inner margin matching the curve of the anterior margin of the RV, thus allowing tight closure ( figure 1C, D, H View FIG ).

Natatory setae on A1 ( figure 2A View FIG ) and on A2 ( figure 2B, C View FIG ) of medium length, natatory seta 3 on A2 being the longest and not reaching middle of the endclaws. T2 ( figure 2F View FIG ) with endclaw rather short. Penultimate segment of T3 ( figure 2D, E View FIG ) approximately three times as long as its greatest width, distally clearly dilated. Caudal ramus ( figure 2G View FIG ) with proximal seta inserted close to the attachment, at about one-third of the total length of the ramus.

Male ( figure 2H–J View FIG , redrawn after Hartmann, 1964): hemipenis with largest lobe beak-shaped, rather pointed and with rounded distal margin, smaller lobe with short thumb-like process, distal margin concave. Left prehensile palp with distal segment rounded, relatively wide; right prehensile palp with distal segment very narrow, almost tubular, carrying long sensory organ.

Measurements (female, all in µm)

LV: Le=916, H=493. RV: Le=850, H=482. Cp: Le=901–940, W=282–292 (N =2).

Remarks

The parthenogenetic specimens illustrated here are nearly identical to the sexual ones illustrated by Hartmann (1964). The species thus constitutes a cluster of both sexual and asexual lineages. It is rather common in India and can be found in caves and wells, as well as in pools and rivers.

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