Glorandaniotes traudlae, Jørgen Berge, 2003

Jørgen Berge, 2003, Stegocephalidae (Crustacea: Amphipoda) from Australia and New Zealand, With Descriptions of Eight New Species, Records of the Australian Museum 55, pp. 85-112 : 97-99

publication ID

2201-4349

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A081255-8628-FFF5-9012-66A6FA7BD4CD

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Glorandaniotes traudlae
status

sp. nov.

Glorandaniotes traudlae View in CoL n.sp.

Figs. 8–10

Type material. HOLOTYPE: AM P47042, ♀ 4 mm, 34°32.09'S 151°12.55'E, 200 m (NSW-797), off Wollongong , New South Wales, Australia, 07 May 1993. Collector: P. Freewater & party on MV “Robin E” ( SEAS project, trap 1, transect 2) GoogleMaps . PARATYPES: AM P60468, 122 specimens (33 and ♀♀), 3–5 mm, 34°32.09'S 151°12.55'E, 200 m (NSW-797), off Wollongong , New South Wales, Australia, 07 May 1993. Collector: P. Freewater & party on GoogleMaps MV “Robin E” ( SEAS project, trap 1, transect 2).

Distribution. Known only from the type locality.

Diagnosis. Pleonites dorsally smooth. Antenna 1 flagellum with 4 articles. Antenna 2 peduncle article 4 shorter than article 5. Epistome produced laterally, epistomal plate present. Labrum shorter than broad, both lobes reduced. Mandibular incisor smooth, transverse. Lacinia mobilis reduced, not expanded laterally. Maxilla 1 outer plate with ST in two parallel rows, palp uni-articulate. Maxilla 2 outer plate not gaping and geniculate. Coxa 4 distally broad. Pereopod 6 basis expanded. Uropod 3 outer ramus 2- articulate. Articulation between urosomites 2 and 3 absent. Telson about as long as broad, rounded, cleft.

Description. Rostrum reduced, inconspicuous. Antenna 1 about as long as antenna 2; accessory flagellum article 2 present. Antenna 2 peduncle articles 3–5 longer than flagellum; article 3 short, about as long as broad. Epistome rectangular, with a long ridge on each side; epistomal plate produced into a small elongate medial ridge covering the entire epistome. Maxilla 1 palp reaching above the apex of outer plate; outer plate distally subrectangular; ST first row with 6 setae (ST1–5, ST7); ST 6 absent; gap between ST 5 and ST 7 present; ST A–C present, part of second row; inner plate with pappose setae. Maxilla 2 ordinary; outer plate setae distally simple; inner plate setae row A covering the entire margin, clearly separated from row B; row A setae pappopectinate; row B setae proximally pappose, distally with cusps present; row C present; row D absent. Maxilliped palp 4-articulate; article 2 distally unproduced; dactylus distally simple, pointed; inner plate not exceeding base of palp article 1; 2 nodular setae; medial setae-row transverse with pectinate setae; distal setae-row present; inner setaerow not; outer plate with outer setae-row marginal, setae long robust; inner setae-row reduced with short and simple setae; row parallel but not appressed to outer setae-row; distal setae-group absent. Labium distally broad, oval. Coxae and bases on the pereopods covered with setae; setae very short. Coxae1–3 contiguous. Pereopod 1 coxa deeper than basis; propodus distally narrowing. Pereopod 2 general appearance like pereopod 1; ischium not elongate, distal posterior margin with plumose setae; propodus distally narrowing, palm absent. Pereopod 4 basis posterior margin with long setae, plumose setae on distal posterior margin; ischium with plumose setae on distal posterior margin. Pereopod 6 basis more than twice as broad as basis on pereopod 5, medially with a row of long plumose setae. Pereopod 7 basis anterior margin straight, distally rounded; medial row ofsetae present, setae short and robust. Oostegites on pereopod 2–5, gills on pereopods 2–7.

Uropods: Uropod 1 peduncle longer than rami; outer ramus longer than inner. Uropod 2 peduncle longer than rami; outer ramus longer than inner. Uropod 3 peduncle longer than half the length of rami; outer ramus longer than inner. Telson shorter than peduncle uropod 3; submarginal setae on apex of each lobe present.

Male. Pereopod 2 propodus larger in males than in females, urosome ordinary (similar to females).

Etymology. Named after Dr Traudl Krapp (Bonn), great friend and indefatigable amphipod worker.

Remarks. See remarks under Glorandaniotes sandroi .

AM

Australian Museum

MV

University of Montana Museum

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