Anaspides jarmani Ahyong, 2015

Ahyong, Shane T., 2016, The Tasmanian Mountain Shrimps, Anaspides Thomson, 1894 (Crustacea, Syncarida, Anaspididae), Records of the Australian Museum 68 (7), pp. 313-364 : 332-336

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.2201-4349.68.2016.1669

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CDD45B-7044-1C61-FF0F-9E2C09E9F846

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Anaspides jarmani Ahyong, 2015
status

 

Anaspides jarmani Ahyong, 2015

Figs 13–17 View Figure 13 View Figure 14 View Figure 15 View Figure 16 View Figure 17 , 36 View Figure 36

Anaspides tasmaniae . — Smith, 1909a: 64, 70 (Harz [sic] Mountains). Thomson, 1926: 161 (Hartz Lake only). — Knott et al., 1978: 703, 705, tab. 5. — Eberhard et al., 1992: tab. 2. —Jarman & Elliot, 2000: fig. 4 (clade D, part), tab. 1 (part, Adamsons Peak, Hartz Mtns).

Anaspides sp. — Eberhard et al., 1992: tab. 2.

Anaspides sp. (telson ‘normal’ type). — Eberhard et al., 1991: 48 (Judds Cavern, Newdegate Cave).

Anaspides sp. (telson type intermediate). — Eberhard et al., 1991: 48 (Mystery Creek Cave).

Anaspides jarmani Ahyong, 2015: 598 View Cited Treatment : fig. 1E–H (type locality: Adamsons Peak).

Type material. HOLOTYPE: AM P73039, ♂ (24 mm), Adamsons Peak, 43°20.94'S 146°49.94'E, stream, 1200 m asl, coll. S. Jarman. GoogleMaps PARATYPES: AM P73040, 1♂ (26 mm), 1 juv.♂ (18 mm), 3♀♀ (27–30 mm), 5 juv.♀♀ (7–19 mm),type locality .

Other material examined. Adamsons Peak: TMAG G6395 View Materials , 5 juv. ♂♂ (6–12 mm), 11 juv. ♀♀ (7–11 mm), Adamsons Peak, 50 yards from track signposted “water”, 43°21.2'S 146°49.3' E, coll GoogleMaps . R. Swain & J. Ong, 8 Feb 1970 .

Hartz Mountains: AM P73041, 3♂♂ (20–23 mm), 1 juv. ♂ (18 mm), 3♀♀ (19–24 mm), 6 juv. ♀♀ (8–18 mm), Ladies Tarn , 43°14.83'S 146°46.18'E, 955 m asl, coll. S. Jarman GoogleMaps ; ZSRO 375 , 3♂♂ (19–24 mm), 1 juv. ♂ (20 mm), 4♀♀ (22–24 mm), Ladies Tarn , 43°14.83' S 146°46.18'E, 24 Feb 2006 GoogleMaps ; QVM 10 View Materials :49055, 1♂ (19 mm), 1 juv. ♂ (16 mm), 1 juv. ♀ (18 mm),2 indet juv.(5 mm), Ladies Tarn , 43°14.34' S 146°46.03'E, 980 m, rock fauna, coll. S. Chilcott, Inland Fisheries Commission, 14 Jan 1988 GoogleMaps ; QVM 10 View Materials :49056, 1 juv. ♂ (21 mm), 6 juv. ♀♀ (12–16 mm), Hartz Lake , 43°14.55' S 146°45.15' E, rock fauna, 940 m asl, coll. S. Chilcott, Inland Fisheries Commission, 14 Jan 1988 GoogleMaps ; TMAG G6399 View Materials , 3 juv. ♂♂ (16–25 mm), 7 juv. ♀♀ (16–25 mm), Hartz Lake , 43°14.55'S 146°45.15'E, 940 m asl, coll. D. Coleman, 9 Jan 1974 GoogleMaps .

Ida Bay Karst : AM P99299, 3 juv. ♀♀ (c. 18–25 mm, poor condition), Mystery Creek Cave (IB10), Cephalopod Creek side passage, Ida Bay karst , 43°27.8'S 146°50.9'E, 1196-14, coll. A. Clarke, 2 Nov 1996 GoogleMaps ; AM P99300, 3 damaged juveniles (c. 12–13 mm), Mystery Creek Cave (IB10), Ida Bay Karst , 43°27.8'S 146°50.9'E,1196-15,coll. A. Clarke, 2 Nov 1996 GoogleMaps ; AM P99301, 1 juv. ♂ (18 mm), Mystery Creek Cave (IB10), Ida Bay karst , 43°27.8'S 146°50.9'E, 105-04, coll. A. Clarke GoogleMaps & T. Murakami , 5 Jan 2005 ; AM P99302, 1 juv. ♀ (c. 16 mm, shrivelled, poor condition), Mystery Creek Cave (IB10), Cephalopod Creek passage, Ida Bay Karst , 43°27.8'S 146°50.9'E, pool, 998-28, coll. A. Clarke, 21 Sep 1998 GoogleMaps ; AM P99303, 2 juv. ♂♂ (12–16 mm), Mystery Creek Cave (IB10), Cephalopod Creek side passage, 43°27.8' S 146°50.9' E,plunge pool & streamlet, 1004-04, coll. A.Clarke, 21 Oct 2004 GoogleMaps ; AM P99304, 1 juv. ♂ (shrivelled, poor condition, c. 17 mm), 1 juv. ♀ (shrivelled, poor condition, c. 16 mm), Mystery Creek Cave (IB10), 43°27.8'S 146°50.9'E, pool on side of main streamway, 400 m into cave, dark,1196-09, coll. A. Clarke, 2 Nov 1996 GoogleMaps ; QVM 10 View Materials :12175, 1 juv. ♀ (10 mm), Entrance Cave [= Mystery Creek Cave] (IB10-4), Ida Bay , 43°27.8'S 146°50.9'E, cave stream, coll. S. Eberhard, 11 Nov 1986 GoogleMaps ; USNM 1277680 View Materials , 2♂♂ (20–23 mm), 1♀ (24 mm), 1 juv. ♀ (14 mm), 1 indet juv.(6 mm), Mystery Creek Cave , Ida Bay , 43°27.7'S 146°50.8'E, 0–0.2 m, stn 87-254, coll GoogleMaps . T. Iliffe , 29 Dec 1987 .

Hastings Karst: TMAG G6493 View Materials , 1♀ (21 mm), Hell’s Half Acre, Newdegate Cave , 43°23.0'S 146°50.5'E, small creek, coll. A. Goede, 1 Nov 1970 GoogleMaps .

Vanishing Falls karst,Salisbury River: QVM 10 View Materials :13005, 1♂ (26 mm), Salisbury River Cave , 43°22.8'S 146°37.5' E GoogleMaps , VF-X2 ,coll. S. Eberhard, 25Apr 1992 ; QVM 10 View Materials :13014, 2♂♂ (21–22 mm), 2♀♀ (c. 24–27 mm), Salisbury River Cave , 43°22.8' S 146°37.5'E, VF6, flood overflow passage, coll. S.M. Eberhard GoogleMaps & V. Wong , 21 Apr 1992 .

Cracroft: QVM 10 View Materials :12326, 1♂ (28 mm), Wargata Mina,Judds Cavern ,in main stream, 1.5 km from entrance, 43°15.3'S 146°35.0'E, 380 m asl, C1-8, coll. S. Eberhard, 4 Apr 1989 GoogleMaps ; QVM 10 View Materials :12327, 1♀ (22 mm), Wargata Mina (C-001), Judds Cavern, main stream, 43°15.3'S 146°35.0' E,C 1-19, 380 m asl,coll. J. Jackson, 25 Nov 1989 GoogleMaps ; TMAG G6495 View Materials , 1♀ (31mm), Judds Cavern , 43°15.3'S 146°35.0'E,C1-28, route 66, 2 Mar 1990 GoogleMaps . Precipitous Bluff : QVM 10 View Materials :13279, 1♂ (26 mm), 1♀ (27 mm), Bauhaus Cave ( PB6 ), Persephone Stream, Precipitous Bluff, 43°29.0'S 146°37.0'E, Screaming Stals streamway, stn 4,coll. S.Eberhard, 23 Dec 1991 GoogleMaps ; QVM 10 View Materials :12322, 1 indet juv.(7 mm), Persephone Cave , Precipitous Bluff, 43°28.9'S 146°35.2' E,deep stream, PB17-6, coll. S.M. Eberhard, 3 Jan 1990 GoogleMaps .

Southern Ranges: TMAG G6366 View Materials , 4♀♀ (23–28 mm), Ooze Lake , 43°30.2' S 146°42.0'E, 900 m asl, coll. P. Davies, Oct 1985 GoogleMaps .

Description. Eyes with well-developed cornea, pigmented, wider than and longer than half length of stalk (epigean specimens) to narrower than stalk, strongly reduced, shorter than half length of stalk (in some subterranean forms); stalk with subparallel margins.

Rostrum narrow in adults, apex blunt.

Pleonites 1–5 unarmed, with sparsely setose pleural margins, rounded. Pleonite 6 posterior and posterolateral margins unarmed, setose. Pleonal sternites 3–5 with low, median processes between pleopod bases, bilobed and widest on sternite 3, bilobed on sternite 4, unilobate on sternite 5. Pleonal sternites 3–4 with distinctly bilobed median processes between pleopod bases, widest on sternite 3; sternite 5 with narrow rounded lobe.

Telson length and width subequal or slightly longer than wide, pentagonal, widest proximally; lateral margins sinuous in dorsal outline, distally subparallel to convergent; transition from lateral to posterior margin obtusely angular; posterior margin acutely to obtusely angular, blunt medially; posterior spine row with 17–37 slender, evenly graded, closely spaced spines, longest medially.

Antennule inner flagellum about 0.2 × body length (20 in holotype) in epigean specimens, 0.5–0.8 × body length in subterranean specimens; scaphocerite ovate, lateral spine usually near distal one-fourth, slightly distal to midlength in specimens from Hartz Mountains; apex slightly overreaching penultimate peduncular article. Right mandibular incisor process with proximal tooth distally bifid to quadrifid.

Pleopods 1–4 or 5 with endopod in adults. Adult male pleopod 1 distally widened, scoop-like, lateral margins expanded, obscuring retinacular lobe in lateral view.

Uropodal protopod dorsally unarmed; exopod with 2 or 3 movable spines on outer margin near position of partial diaeresis; exopod length 3–4 times width, slightly wider than endopod, apex rounded, relatively narrow.

Measurements. Male (n = 32) 16–28 mm, female (n = 66) 7–31 mm, indet (n = 4) 5–7 mm.

Remarks. Anaspides jarmani and A. clarkei are unique in the genus in their male pleopod 1 morphology in which the lateral margins obscure the retinacular lobe in lateral view ( Fig. 15I View Figure 15 ), the presence of 3–5 (usually 4) closely set antennular clasping spines ( Fig. 14D View Figure 14 ) and complete absence of spines or denticles on the pleonites, unlike other species of the genus in which one or more pleonites have some degree of spination. Anaspides jarmani differs from A. clarkei in the spination of the posterior margin of the telson (lined with numerous, fine, closely set spines rather than stout, well-spaced spines), in having well-developed or only slightly reduced eyes (rather than strongly reduced), and in the presence in adults of endopods on pleopods 3–4 or 3–5 depending on locality. In adult A. clarkei , the endopod of pleopod 4–5 (usually 3–5) is absent. Note that in the smallest juveniles (7–10 mm) of A. jarmani from all localities as well as larger juveniles from Mystery Creek Cave ( Ida Bay ), the endopods of pleopods 4–5 are as yet undeveloped. In A. jarmani , the posterior margin of the telson becomes angular by 8 mm body length, more or less attaining its adult shape by about 17 mm. Maturity is reached by 19–25 mm. The angle of the posterior margin of the telson in adults is slightly acute to approximately right angled in eastern specimens (Adamsons Peak, Ida Bay, Hartz and Hastings ), and obtuse in westerly specimens, most of which are from caves (Cracroft, Vanishing Falls, Precipitous Bluff, Southern Ranges).

Anaspides jarmani has a narrow distribution in southern Tasmania, constrained in the northeast by the Hartz Mountains, the southeast by Ida Bay and in the west by the New River. Adult A. jarmani from the southeastern part of its range (Adamson’s Peak and Newdegate cave, Hastings) differ from those from other localities in the presence of the endopod on pleopod 5 and a proportionally broader scaphocerite in adults (noting that the scaphocerite is typically more slender in juveniles than adults). Adults of A. jarmani from other localities lack the pleopod 5 endopod except for three specimens from the Hartz Mountains (18 mm female, AM P73041; 16 mm juvenile female, QVM 10:49056; 21 mm juvenile female, TMAG G6399) in which the endopod is present on the right side, absent on the left. These differences in pleopod 5 endopod condition and subtle proportional differences in the scaphocerite might reflect significant population differences, but all are presently considered to represent a single species, A. jarmani , pending further study.

Although normally epigean, Anaspides jarmani has entered caves throughout its range: Hastings (Newdegate Cave), Ida Bay (Mystery Creek Cave) , Cracroft (Judds Cavern), Vanishing Falls Karst (Salisbury River Cave) and Precipitous Bluff (Bauhaus Cave, Persephone) ( Fig. 17 View Figure 17 ). Specimens from Newdegate Cave ( Fig. 17E View Figure 17 ) agree well with epigean forms, including pigmented eyes, differing only in body depigmentation and longer antennular flagella; they are readily distinguished from A. clarkei by the much better developed cornea, telson spination and presence of the pleopod 5 endopod. Distinct corneal reduction is evident in unpigmented specimens from Judds Cavern and some specimens from Salisbury River Cave ( Fig. 17A,B View Figure 17 ) as in cave forms of A. richardsoni from the Honeycomb and Wet Caves, Mole Creek. In addition to the cave-adapted form in Salisbury River Cave ( Fig. 17B View Figure 17 ), pigmented epigean forms ( Fig. 17C View Figure 17 ) are also present, the former from streamways and the latter from seeps ( Eberhard et al., 1991, 1992). Specimens from Precipitous Bluff ( Fig. 17D View Figure 17 ) are unusual, with the seemingly mature male from Bauhaus Cave having two antennular clasping spines, but a typical pleopod 1 endopod; they may represent a separate species but tentatively assigned to A. jarmani pending further study. As in epigean specimens from Ooze Lake ( Fig. 16C View Figure 16 ) and the Hartz Mountains ( Fig. 16D View Figure 16 ), cave specimens from Cracroft, Salisbury and Precipitous Bluff lack the endopod on pleopod 5, whereas the endopod is present in the Newdegate Cave specimen as in the adjacent epigean specimens from Adamsons Peak. Specimens of A. jarmani from Mystery Creek Cave, Ida Bay , are juveniles and apart from depigmentation and an incomplete complement of pleopod endopods, agree well with surface forms.

Distribution. Southern Tasmania in epigean habitats from the Hartz Mountains to Adamson’s Peak and Ooze Lake, and from caves in the Hastings, Ida Bay, Cracroft, Salisbury karst systems and Precipitous Bluff; 160–380 m asl (subterranean), 900–1340 m asl (epigean).

AM

Australian Museum

TMAG

Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Anaspidacea

Family

Anaspididae

Genus

Anaspides

Loc

Anaspides jarmani Ahyong, 2015

Ahyong, Shane T. 2016
2016
Loc

Anaspides jarmani

Ahyong, S 2015: 598
2015
Loc

Anaspides sp.

Eberhard, S 1991: 48
1991
Loc

Anaspides sp.

Eberhard, S 1991: 48
1991
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