Catoessa boscii ( Bleeker, 1857 )

Ravichandran, S., Vigneshwaran, P. & Rameshkumar, G., 2019, A taxonomic review of the fish parasitic isopod family Cymothoidae Leach, 1818 (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothooidea) of India, Zootaxa 4622 (1), pp. 1-99 : 14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4622.1.1

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4537BB46-452F-4E0C-A444-4AA5E12A64E7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8397516

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E129637E-FF97-A44D-FF47-FDB3FE96FF2B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Catoessa boscii ( Bleeker, 1857 )
status

 

Catoessa boscii ( Bleeker, 1857) View in CoL View at ENA

( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 d–f)

Livoneca boscii Bleeker, 1857: 21 View in CoL , 29–30, pl. 1 ( fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 ).— Schiöedte & Meinert, 1884: 365–367, pl. 15 (Cym. XXXIII), figs 7, 8.— Nierstrasz, 1931: 143, 145.

Lironeca boscii View in CoL . — Miers, 1880: 466–467.— Nierstrasz, 1915: 100.— Trilles, 1979: 265–266.— Trilles, 1994: 174.

Catoessa boscii View in CoL .— Bruce, 1990: 251, 254.— Trilles, Ravichandran & Rameshkumar, 2012: 179–189, fig. 1–4 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 .— Rameshkumar & Ravichandran, 2013a: 119–120, figs 1, 2.— Rameshkumar, Ravichandran & Sivasubramanian, 2013c: 88–94.— Rameshkumar, Ramesh, Ravichandran & Trilles, 2014: 940–944, fig. 1b.— Rameshkumar, Ravichandran & Ramesh, 2014c: 124–128, fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 .— Aneesh, Helna & Sudha, 2016a: 1270–1277, fig. 1f.

Joryma brachysoma View in CoL .— Ravichandran, Rameshkumar & Balasubramanian, 2010a: 97–98, fig. 1.— Ravichandran, Sunitha & Rameshkumar, 2010b: 370–373, fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 .

Type and type locality. A single specimen ovig. female, total length 15 mm, held at the RMNH (No. I. 67), from the Batavia Sea (= Java, Indonesia) is believed to be the type specimen. As for the most species collected by Bleeker (1857) the type host and the site of attachment was not precisely identified (“Habite la peau de diverses especes depoissons”, “Living on the skin of different host species”) .

Material examined. 4 ovig. females (15–20 mm), Parangipettai , 28 December 2008, 8 February 2009 and 21 November 2009, from Carangoides malabaricus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) , coll. G. Rameshkumar ( MNHN-Is 6303 to Is 6306 ) , 1 ovig. female (17 mm), Parangipettai coast , 22 November 2016, ( ZSI / MBRC D1-530 ) , 3 non ovig. females (15–20 mm), ( CAS / MBRM C- 40– C- 42) from Carangoides malabaricus , coll. S. Ravichandran. All localities from the state of Tamil Nadu, southeast coast of India .

Remarks. Catoessa boscii was most recently redescribed by Trilles et al. (2012). This species can be recognized by elongate body shape (2.5–3 times as long as greatest width) and narrower pleon; the pleon is usually rotationally twisted a little so the shows an angle against the plane of the pereon. Cephalon not deeply immersed in pereonite 1, anterior margin truncate, reflexed ventrally into triangular lobe separating antennula; Posterior margin of pereonite 7 slightly indented.

Catoessa boscii View in CoL is readily distinguished from all other species of the genus. Catoessa ambassae Bruce, 1990 View in CoL and C. boscii View in CoL are essentially distinguished from the two other species of the genus by the presence of a truncate rostrum and carina on basis of the posterior pereopods while Catoessa scabricauda Schiöedte & Meinert, 1884 View in CoL and Catoessa gruneri Bowman & Tareen, 1983 View in CoL have an acute rostral point or a rounded rostral point, respectively and all pereopods without carina on the basis. Catoessa boscii View in CoL is characterized by the presence of uropods extending beyond of a subtriangular pleotelson while C. ambassae View in CoL has a broadly rounded pleotelson with uropods not reaching posterior margin of pleotelson.

Colour. Live females are pale tan or pale brown with visible chromatophores; all live males pale tan ( Trilles et al. 2012).

Size. Non ovig. females 15–21 mm; ovig. females 15–20 mm ( Trilles et al. 2012).

Distribution. Catoessa boscii has distributed from Indonesia to India. Previously recorded from Indonesia ( Bleeker 1857) and most recently reported from southeast coast of India ( Trilles et al. 2012).

Host. Current studies are from host families Carangidae : Rastrelliger kanagurta . Previously reported from a host of the Carangoides malabaricus ( Trilles et al. 2012) , an Indo–West Pacific species, occurring in the continental shelf, near rocks and coral reefs. A single specimen was reported by Trilles (1979) from Stolephorus indicus in Indonesia.

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Isopoda

Family

Cymothoidae

Genus

Catoessa

Loc

Catoessa boscii ( Bleeker, 1857 )

Ravichandran, S., Vigneshwaran, P. & Rameshkumar, G. 2019
2019
Loc

Lironeca boscii

Trilles, J. - P. 1994: 174
Nierstrasz, H. F. 1915: 100
1915
Loc

Livoneca boscii

Nierstrasz, H. F. 1931: 143
Bleeker, P. 1857: 21
1857
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF