Gnathia trimaculata Coetzee, Smit, Grutter & Davies, 2009

Ota, Yuzo, Erasmus, Anja, Grutter, Alexandra S. & Smit, Nico J., 2024, Two new species and new host and distribution records of Gnathia Leach, 1814 (Crustacea, Isopoda, Gnathiidae) from Western Australia and the Great Barrier Reef, Australia, ZooKeys 1193, pp. 125-144 : 125

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1193.116538

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:672951D5-E7D7-4D81-AB9C-419B811D5B97

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E56E7E63-E0F8-5272-9C65-E62E1AE5B7A1

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Gnathia trimaculata Coetzee, Smit, Grutter & Davies, 2009
status

 

Gnathia trimaculata Coetzee, Smit, Grutter & Davies, 2009 View in CoL

Fig. 7E View Figure 7

Gnathia trimaculata Coetzee, Smit, Grutter & Davies, 2009: 97, 98, 109-111, figs 1-11.- Ota and Hirose 2009a: 50, 51, figs 4, 5.

Type locality.

Off Lizard Island (14°40'54.68"S, 145°26'53.72"E), Australia.

Material examined.

Australia • 1♂ (6.4 mm TL, 5.2 BL); reared from a juvenile collected from a cowtail stingray Pastinachus sephen ( Forsskål, 1775) (TL and sex, unknown), Lizard Island , GBR (14°40'54.68"S, 145°26'53.72"E), 19 June 1998, Ian D. Whittington leg. (QM W29823) GoogleMaps . 2♂ (5.8 mm TL and 4.6 mm BL, 5.7 mm TL and 4.6 mm BL); reared from a juvenile, infested on P. sephen (TL and sex, unknown), Heron Island , GBR (23°26'32.9"S, 151°54'53.8"E), 9 July 1998, Ian D. Whittington leg. (QM W29824) GoogleMaps . 1♂ (4.2 mm TL, 3.6 mm BL, drawings); reared from a juvenile, infested on epaulette shark, Hemiscyllium ocellatum (Bonnaterre, 1788), Heron Island , GBR (23°26'32.9"S, 151°54'53.8"E), 7 November 1998, Ian D. Whittington leg. (QM W29825) GoogleMaps .

Remarks.

This species can be identified as Gnathia trimaculata Coetzee, Smit, Grutter, & Davies, 2009 by a frontal border with a mediofrontal process divided into two lobes which almost touch anteriorly and form a distinct key-hole shape, four or five pairs of long pappose setae present ventrally on both lobes, a mandible with seven or eight processes on the dentate blade, a cluster of setae between all processes, and an armed carina ( Coetzee et al. 2009).

Ota and Hirose (2009a) reported G. trimaculata from the Ryukyu Islands, demonstrating a greater number of setae on peduncle 4 of antenna than that of the GBR specimens. In the present material, we observed that the mediofrontal process of our specimens does not almost touch and has a smooth margin (Fig. 7E View Figure 7 ). Therefore, it appears to be two frontolateral processes instead of one mediofrontal process.

This shape of mediofrontal process looks like that of G. aff. maculosa . Gnathia aff. maculosa of GBR also has a bundle of several long setae on the ventral frontal border. Thus, these two species cannot be distinguished by the morphology of the frontal border alone. However, G. trimaculata can be distinguished from G. maculosa by pectinate scales covering the pleotelson, four pairs of long setae on the lateral margin of pleotelson, and a long pear-shaped pylopod with one areola.

This record of G. trimaculata establishes two new hosts for this widely distributed species. Ota et al. (2012) recorded G. trimaculata from several areas in the Ryukyu Islands and southern Pacific coast of Japan. They demonstrated the first and second stages of the juveniles ectoparasitised four teleost species, while the third stage ectoparasitised 25 elasmobranch species including two unidentified elasmobranch species (see Ota et al. 2012: table 3). Ota (2015: table 2) also showed G. trimaculata collected from 18 elasmobranch species including two unidentified elasmobranch species but all of them except for one were already reported by Ota et al. (2012). These host species are listed below; in GBR, our host records of Pastinachus sephen and Hemiscyllium ocellatum were not included the previous studies and these are new host records.

Distribution.

Off Lizard Island and Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. The Ryukyu Islands and southern Pacific coast of Japan.

Habitat of adults.

Unknown.

Hosts.

Four elasmobranch species from GBR: Carcharinus melanopterus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824), Carcharinus amblyrhynchos (Bleeker, 1856), Pastinachus sephen ( Forsskål, 1775), and epaulette shark Hemiscyllium ocellatum (Bonnaterre, 1788). Three teleost species from Japan: Enneapterygius etheostomus (Jordan & Snyder, 1902), Enneapterygius miyakensis Fricke, 1987, Springerichthys bapturus (Jordan & Snyder, 1902), 24 elasmobranch species and two unidentified species from Japan: Urolophus aurantiacus Müller & Henle, 1841, Gymnura japonica (Temminck & Schlegel, 1850), Rhynchobatus djiddensis ( Forsskål, 1775), Neotrygon orientalis Last, White & Séret, 2016 [ Neotrygon kuhlii Müller & Henle, 1841 in Ota et al. 2012 and Ota 2015], Taeniura meyeni Müller & Henle, 1841, Dasyatis izuensis Nishida & Nakaya, 1988, Hemitrygon akajei ( Müller & Henle, 1841) [ Dasyatis akajei ( Müller & Henle, 1841) in Ota et al. 2012 and Ota 2015], Himantura undulata (Bleeker, 1852), Himantura spp., Aetomylaeus vespertilio (Bleeker, 1852), Aetobatus ocellatus (Kuhl, 1823) [ Aetobatus narinari (Euphrasen, 1790) in Ota et al 2012 and Ota 2015], Aetobatus flagellum (Bloch & Schneider, 1801), Rhinoptera javanica Müller & Henle, 1841, Mobula mobular (Bonnaterre, 1788) [ Mobula japanica ( Müller & Henle, 1841) in Ota et al. 2012 and Ota 2015], Mobula thurstoni (Lloyd, 1908) [ Mobula diabolus (Shaw, 1804) in Ota et al. 2012 and Ota 2015], Mobula tarapacana (Philippi, 1892), Nebrius ferrugineus (Lesson, 1831), Rhincodon typus Smith, 1828, Stegostoma fasciatum (Hermann, 1783), Sphyrna lewini (Griffith & Smith, 1834), Triaenodon obesus ( Rüppell, 1837), Negaprion acutidens ( Rüppell, 1837), Galeocerdo cuvier ( Péron & Lesueur, 1822), Carcharhinus albimarginatus ( Rüppell, 1837), Carcharhinus limbatus ( Müller & Henle, 1839), and Carcharhinus spp.

Site of infection on host.

Gill chambers, interbranchial septa, gill filaments, and the floor of oral cavities. Rarely nostrils, body surface near the gill slits, or claspers of elasmobranchs. Fins and skin of teleosts.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Isopoda

Family

Gnathiidae

Genus

Gnathia

Loc

Gnathia trimaculata Coetzee, Smit, Grutter & Davies, 2009

Ota, Yuzo, Erasmus, Anja, Grutter, Alexandra S. & Smit, Nico J. 2024
2024
Loc

Gnathia trimaculata

Coetzee, Smit, Grutter & Davies 2009
2009