Jassa Leach, 1814

Conlan, Kathleen E., Desiderato, Andrea & Beermann, Jan, 2021, Jassa (Crustacea: Amphipoda): a new morphological and molecular assessment of the genus, Zootaxa 4939 (1), pp. 1-191 : 43-44

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4939.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F33F42D0-A139-4CE3-97D7-1314C12CF86B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4580554

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B487DA-FF9F-D933-C9C8-1944FA83FA65

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Jassa Leach, 1814
status

 

Genus Jassa Leach, 1814 View in CoL

Lusyta Nardo, 1847b, p. 20 View in CoL .

Cratophium Dana, 1852b, p. 309 View in CoL .

Macleayia Haswell, 1880, p. 32 .

Bruzeliella Norman, 1905, p. 83 .

Description of adult male. Body length at maturity 2–24 mm.

Head lobe: oval or squared, but with dorsal angle more acute and ventral angle more broadly rounded.

Antenna 1: accessory flagellum 2-articled, second minute, only second setose.

Antenna 2: stouter and longer than antenna 1, bearing finely pectinate “filter setae” on peduncular articles 3–5 and shorter, pectinate “brush setae” on flagellum, in many species these being interspersed with feathery plumose setae on distal part of peduncular article 5 and proximal part of flagellum; flagellum with at least 2 of its distal articles bearing posteriorly curved spines, first article considerably longer than any of the distal articles.

Mandible: at least 1 molar with 1 seta and 1 lateral flake.

Maxilla 1: inner plate bearing a few short fine setae, palp with 1 or more rows of setae.

Gnathopod 1: coxa rectangular, often anterodistally produced; propodus, palm defined by 3 spines that are usually arranged in medial-lateral-medial sequence.

Gnathopod 2: coxa deeper posteriorly, with 1 gill; basis, setae, when present, simple or short and plumose, and located on the anterolateral flange only; carpus less than 0.25 of length of propodus; propodus with triangular, shallowly bifid tooth directly posterior to dactyl hinge and larger thumb incised anteriorly to palmar defining spines (or associated setae if spines absent), inner margin of thumb not setose, outer margin with 3-4 discrete clusters; dactyl shorter than propodus, extending beyond the thumb to rest against the thumb’s posterior margin when closed, inner margin expanded at location of hinge tooth or more centrally and acutely as a tooth into palmar incision, dactyl cusps reduced to small buttons interspersed with a few short setae.

Pereopods 3 and 4: coxa 3 usually deepest posterior of centre; coxa 4 deepest centrally; basis, margins convex, or anterior margin straight or shallowly concave in large specimens; merus anterodistally produced to half to fully overlap the carpus, anterior margin bearing numerous setae in clusters or singly; propodus not posteriorly spinose.

Pereopods 5–7: basis of at least one of peraeopods 5–7 posterodistally produced; merus and carpus, posterior margin not spinose; propodus variably expanded; dactyl, posterior (outer) margin not cusped distally, anterior (inner) margin bearing 1 seta at the unguis or short setae along its length.

Pleopods: well developed, with 2 peduncular coupling hooks each in most species, but more in large species.

Urosome: segment 1 bearing a pair of erect setae dorsally.

Uropod 1: peduncle usually extended ventrally as a spinous process under the rami.

Uropod 2: ventral spinous process short or absent.

Uropod 3: peduncle finely setose ventrally, but without spines middorsally, and with a crown of spines around the dorsodistal margin and a cluster of setae distolaterally; outer ramus not setose mid-dorsally, tipped by a basally immersed, dorsally recurved spine, 2 large cusps, and many additional minute cusps; inner ramus tipped by 1 single short spine which is not recurved and not accompanied by cusps.

Telson: each corner with 1 pair of button-like cusps accompanied by 1 long pectinate seta and 1 or 2 short plumose setae, but without spines.

Description of adult female. Body length at maturity 2–21 mm. Character states as in the male except as follows.

Brood plates: broad, setae abundant, tips hooked.

Antenna 2: peduncle, posterior filter setae long.

Gnathopod 2: propodus much larger and different in shape from the propodus of gnathopod 1, palm concave or sinuous, without a thumb, defining spines not lost with age; dactyl fitting into a depression between the palmar angle and spines.

Peraeopod 3: basis broadly expanded, margins convex, not straight or concave.

Variation. Antenna 2 may develop plumose setae on article 5 and the flagellum when individuals are approaching maturity, though small individuals that appear to be otherwise adult may not develop plumosity. This occurs in both sexes. The mandibular palp article 2 may bear a row of setae on the dorsal margin in a few species. The maxilla 1 may bear a cluster of setae at its base though most species lack these setae. Akey character is the presence or absence and length of a single or cluster of setae on the anterodistal margin of the carpus at the junction of the propodus in gnathopod 1. If present, these setae may be slightly medial or lateral. The bases of gnathopods 1 and 2 may or may not possess a row of setae and the presence and length of these setae is a key character for species definition. The propodus of gnathopod 2 may have a concave or sinuous palm in the juveniles and adult females. Large subadult males may have a small thumb, termed a “pre-thumb” at the location where the much larger thumb will appear at the last molt. Small subadults of the same species do not exhibit a pre-thumb. At the terminal molt, the thumb may be long or short, sinuous or straight, incised, acute or squared at the tip. “Major form males” have larger thumbs than “minor forms”, but being at the terminal molt, a minor form does not transition into a major form. The minor form may have a tooth on the dactyl that fits into the palmar incision. In the major form, the dactyl is expanded on its inner margin close to the hinge. Most terminal molt species lose their palmar defining spines that are present in the juvenile; the female always retains these spines. For all species the number of spines defining the gnathopod palms may be occasionally 2 or 4 rather than the usual 3. The bases of pereopods 3 and 4 are wide with convex margins in juveniles and females but the bases are slenderer in the thumbed male. In a few species the propodus of pereopods 5–7 may be prehensile. The peduncular spinous process of uropod 1 is absent in some species. The number of major cusps adjacent to the recurved spine that tips the third uropod outer ramus may be rarely 3 or 4 rather than 2. The inner ramus bears extra spines mid-dorsally in some species. Unless noted otherwise, these interspecific differences apply to both sexes and all ages of a species.

Species treatments. The key characters of the 24 species are presented following, with the species grouped by commonality of distribution: trans-hemispheric ( Table 10 View TABLE 10 and Figs 15–36 View FIGURE 15 View FIGURE 16 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 View FIGURE 22 View FIGURE 23 View FIGURE 24 View FIGURE 25 View FIGURE 26 View FIGURE 27 View FIGURE 28 View FIGURE 29 View FIGURE 30 View FIGURE 31 View FIGURE 32 View FIGURE 33 View FIGURE 34 View FIGURE 35 View FIGURE 36 ), North Atlantic ( Table 11 View TABLE 11 and Figs 37–59 View FIGURE 37 View FIGURE 38 View FIGURE 39 View FIGURE 40 View FIGURE 41 View FIGURE 42 View FIGURE 43 View FIGURE 44 View FIGURE 45 View FIGURE 46 View FIGURE 47 View FIGURE 48 View FIGURE 49 View FIGURE 50 View FIGURE 51 View FIGURE 52 View FIGURE 53 View FIGURE 54 View FIGURE 55 View FIGURE 56 View FIGURE 57 View FIGURE 58 View FIGURE 59 ), North Pacific ( Table 12 View TABLE 12 and Figs 60–87 View FIGURE 60 View FIGURE 61 View FIGURE 62 View FIGURE 63 View FIGURE 64 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 74 View FIGURE 75 View FIGURE 76 View FIGURE 77 View FIGURE 78 View FIGURE 79 View FIGURE 80 View FIGURE 81 View FIGURE 82 View FIGURE 83 View FIGURE 84 View FIGURE 85 View FIGURE 86 View FIGURE 87 ) and Southern Hemisphere ( Table 13 View TABLE 13 and Figs 88–104 View FIGURE 88 View FIGURE 89 View FIGURE 90 View FIGURE 91 View FIGURE 92 View FIGURE 93 View FIGURE 94 View FIGURE 95 View FIGURE 96 View FIGURE 97 View FIGURE 98 View FIGURE 99 View FIGURE 100 View FIGURE 101 View FIGURE 102 View FIGURE 103 View FIGURE 104 ). Key characters are not affected by age or gender and so can be used for the identification of most specimens, with the possible exceptionofhatchlings. Someadditionalgenderandage-specificcharactersareaddedtoassistwithidentification. Followingthespeciestreatmentsisakeytoall 24 species. Whilethedistributionalformatisaimedtosimplify regional identifications, the key should be checked in case the specimen is a new species or a new introduction.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Amphipoda

Family

Ischyroceridae

Tribe

Ischyrocerini

Loc

Jassa Leach, 1814

Conlan, Kathleen E., Desiderato, Andrea & Beermann, Jan 2021
2021
Loc

Bruzeliella

Norman 1905: 83
1905
Loc

Macleayia

Haswell 1880: 32
1880
Loc

Cratophium

Dana 1852: 309
1852
Loc

Lusyta

Nardo 1847: 20
1847
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