Laophontella horrida dentata Mielke, 1992

Karanovic, Tomislav, 2019, Three new harpacticoid copepods for Korea from marine interstitial habitats, Journal of Species Research 8 (3), pp. 268-282 : 279

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.12651/JSR.2019.8.3.268

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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/78366243-B768-FFBB-9CD3-E77F1F4FFCBC

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Felipe

scientific name

Laophontella horrida dentata Mielke, 1992
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Laophontella horrida dentata Mielke, 1992 View in CoL

( Figs. 6 View Fig & 7 View Fig )

Specimens examined. One adult male on one SEM stub and one juvenile female in alcohol from Korea, South Sea, Goseong, Dongdong, Bongam-ri, tiny gravel beach next to a fishing harbor, 34°59.629 ʹ N 128°26.201 ʹ E, 4 April 2012, collected by T. Karanovic GoogleMaps .

Supplementary description. Male. Body length, measured from tip of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami (excluding caudal seate and appendages) about 800 μm. Habitus ( Fig. 6A, D View Fig ) spindle-shaped, widest at distal part of cephalothorax. Cephalothoracic shield ( Figs. 6B, E, F View Fig , 7A View Fig ) strongly chitinized and heavily sculptured, with numerous ridges and deep pits of various sizes among large sensilla, with anterior notch and pointed postero-lateral processes. Free prosomites ( Fig. 6G View Fig ) and all urosomites ( Fig. 6D View Fig ), except anal somite, with postero-lateral processes, becoming smaller towards posterior end. All posterior processes heavily sculptured and with sensilla ( Fig. 6H View Fig ). Anal somite ( Fig. 6D View Fig ) nearly as long as two preceding somites combined, without prominent postero-lateral processes, but with lateral central bulge instead.

Caudal rami ( Figs. 6C View Fig , 7D- F View Fig ) conical, about three times as long as wide, 1.3 times as long as anal somite, heavily sculptured and with several small processes, with two proximal lateral setae (one very small, see Fig. 7E View Fig ) inserted at about 1/5 of ramus length; dorsal seta about as long as distal lateral seta, while larger proximal lateral seta only half as long, and smaller proximal lateral seta only about as big as average sensilla; principal apical seta without breaking planes, very strong, with longitudinal ridges; all setae, except principal apical one, smooth and slender.

Antennula ( Fig. 7A View Fig ) short and strongly chirocer, with numerous small and slender setae.

First swimming leg ( Fig. 7B View Fig ) with comb-like inner margin and smooth outer margin on both apical endopodal setae.

Fourth swimming leg ( Fig. 7C View Fig ) with extremely large and slightly curved outer spine on second exopodal segment; third exopodal segment with two slender and short outer elements, two slender and long apical elements, and one strong and long inner element.

Sixth leg ( Fig. 7C View Fig ) simple cuticular plate, with three slender and smooth setae.

Discussion. Laophontella horrida ( Por, 1964) was described from Israel by Por (1964) in the newly proposed genus Willeyella Por, 1964 , which proved to be a junior synonym of Laophontella Thompson and Scott A., 1903 (see Lang, 1965: p. 386). The genus today contains only three species, two of them with recognized subspecies ( Walter and Boxshall, 2019). Laophontella horrida was later also found in other parts of the Mediterranean (Bodi- ou and Soyer, 1973) and possibly even in the Northern Atlantic ( Por, 1984). Mielke (1992) described a new subspecies, L. h. dentata Mielke, 1992, from the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica, and Kunz (1994) described another new subspecies, L. h. namibiensis Kunz, 1994 from Namibia. Both Mielke (1992) and Kunz (1994) agreed that French specimens, illustrated by Bodin (1964) and report- ed as “ Phyllopodopsyllus sp ?”, belong to the nominotypical subspecies of L. horrida . Major differences between these populations were listed in a table by Kunz (1994). Korean specimens agree more with those from Costa Rica than with the other two subspecies, especially in the elongated caudal rami. This is the second record of L. horrida dentata , which extends its range into the Western Pacific. Also, this is the first record of the genus in Korea.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

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