Eurythenes magellanicus H. Milne Edwards, 1848

Amon, Diva J, Ziegler, Amanda F, Drazen, Jeffrey C, Grischenko, Andrei V, Leitner, Astrid B, Lindsay, Dhugal J, Voight, Janet R, Wicksten, Mary K, Young, Craig M & Smith, Craig R, 2017, Megafauna of the UKSRL exploration contract area and eastern Clarion-Clipperton Zone in the Pacific Ocean: Annelida, Arthropoda, Bryozoa, Chordata, Ctenophora, Mollusca, Biodiversity Data Journal 5, pp. 14598-14598 : 14598

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.5.e14598

persistent identifier

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scientific name

Eurythenes magellanicus H. Milne Edwards, 1848
status

 

Eurythenes magellanicus H. Milne Edwards, 1848 View in CoL View at ENA

Materials

Type status: Other material. Occurrence: catalogNumber: AB1-TR04-amph-5 ; recordNumber: AB1-TR04-amph-5; recordedBy: Jeffrey Drazen, Astrid Leitner; individualCount: 1; lifeStage: Adult; occurrenceStatus: present; preparations: tissue and DNA voucher stored in 80% non-denatured ethanol aqueous solution and remainder of animal preserved in 4% formaldehyde; Taxon: taxonConceptID: Eurythenesmagellanicus; scientificName: Eurythenesmagellanicus; kingdom: Animalia; phylum: Arthropoda; class: Malacostraca; order: Amphipoda; family: Eurytheneidae; genus: Eurythenes; taxonRank: species; scientificNameAuthorship: H. Milne Edwards, 1848; Location: waterBody: Pacific Ocean; stateProvince: Clarion-Clipperton Zone; locality: UK Seabed Resources Ltd exploration contract area (UK-1) ; verbatimLocality: UK-1 Stratum A; maximumDepthInMeters: 4170; locationRemarks: RV Melville Cruise MV1313; decimalLatitude: 13.7615; decimalLongitude: -116.4655; geodeticDatum: WGS84; coordinateUncertaintyInMeters: 50; Identification: identifiedBy: Inga Mohrbeck, Mary Wicksten, Jeffrey Drazen, Astrid Leitner, Diva J. Amon, Amanda Ziegler; dateIdentified: 2014; identificationRemarks: Identified by morphology and DNA of collected specimen; Event: samplingProtocol: Baited Trap; eventDate: 2013-10-17; eventTime: 7:13; habitat: Abyssal polymetallic-nodule field; fieldNumber: TR04; Record Level: language: en; institutionCode: UHM; datasetName: ABYSSLINE; basisOfRecord: PreservedSpecimen GoogleMaps

Notes

This and other amphipods can be distinguished from "true shrimp" (Order Decapoda ) by having NO carapace, sessile eyes (no stalks) and three pairs of terminal appendages (uropods). Species of Eurythenes are the largest deep-sea amphipods and often are attracted to bait. Notice that there are large coxal plates at the bases of the legs - these are absent in decapod shrimps.

Fig. 11