Podocerus cuspiclunis, Horton, 2008

Horton, Tammy, 2008, Amphipoda from marine caves of Hong Kong Island, Journal of Natural History 42 (9 - 12), pp. 825-854 : 847-849

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930701860124

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A51DE750-E02A-E15A-DE6A-FE245527FCD0

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Podocerus cuspiclunis
status

sp. nov.

Podocerus cuspiclunis View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figure 11 View Figure 11 )

Type material

Holotype male, 4.5 mm, Epifauna station 2 (25/10/02), NHM Reg. Nos. 2005.2749–2750.

Material examined

Paratypes. Epifauna station 1 (21/10/02), one female specimen, one juvenile, NHM Reg. Nos. 2005.2760–2761; Epifauna station 2 (25/10/02), four females, three males and two juvenile specimens, NHM Reg. Nos. 2005.2751–2759; Epifauna station 3 (25/10/ 02), one female specimen, NHM Reg. No. 2005.2762; Epifauna station 6 (21/10/02), three females, three juvenile specimens, NHM Reg. Nos. 2005.2763–2768; Epifauna station 8 (21/10/02), one male specimen, NHM Reg. No. 2005.2769; Epifauna station 10 (21/10/02), two juvenile specimens, NHM Reg. Nos. 2005.2770–2771; all from Conic Island Cave, Hong Kong .

Description

Male, holotype 4.5 mm. Lateral cephalic lobes truncated; lateral ocular bulges strongly developed. Pereon segments 3, 4, 5, and 6 with acute dorsal carinations increasing in size posteriorly; rounded dorsal carinations on pereon segment 7 and pleon segments 1 and 2. Antenna 1 slender, peduncular article ratios 1:1.6:1.3; accessory flagellum small, 1-articulate; primary flagellum longer than peduncle article 3, with five articles. Antenna 2 elongate; peduncle article 5 twice the length of article 4, flagellum less than half the length of article 5 with three articles. Mouthparts typical of the genus. Gnathopod 1; coxa extended forward, rounded anterodistally; propodus slender, setose, palm obtuse almost simple; dactyl long, reaching palm edge. Male gnathopod 2; coxa produced anterodistally to a small projection with a robust seta; basis distally expanded with a posterodistal robust seta; merus with acute distal tooth; propodus enlarged, subovoid, palm and posterior margin confluent, strongly setose (setae omitted from figure for clarity), with proximal projection, mediodistal subrectangular projection and a distal process; dactyl simple, extending to proximal palmar process. Pereopods 3–7 ordinary. Uropod 1 elongate, peduncle with five robust setae; outer ramus shorter than inner, with four robust dorsal setae, one long robust seta and one short robust seta terminally; inner ramus with nine robust dorsal setae, one long robust seta and one short robust setae terminally. Uropod 2; peduncle short; inner ramus longer and stouter than outer ramus, with five dorsomedial robust setae, two dorsolateral robust setae, two apical robust setae and one long terminal seta; outer ramus half the length of inner ramus with two dorsomedial robust setae and two terminal robust setae. Uropod 3 very small, lacking rami and setae. Telson subtriangular with two lateral robust setae and two long terminal robust setae.

Female, as male except gnathopod 2; coxa distally expanded and rounded; basis distally expanded with two posterodistal robust setae; merus without acute distal tooth as in male but with numerous distal setae; propodus subovoid, palm distinct straight and setose with three robust setae proximally; dactyl simple, extending to proximal palm edge.

Remarks

This species was collected at a number of sites, but was most numerous from the epifaunal samples 2, 10 and 6 on 25/10/02. The genus Podocerus is difficult taxonomically both because of the fragility of the specimens and tendency to lose appendages, and the variability in carination with growth ( Moore 1990). This species most closely resembles Californian specimens of Podocerus cristatus ( Thomson 1913) as figured by Barnard (1962). Despite wide intraspecific variability in the genus Podocerus , the differences warrant a new species status for the Hong Kong material. Podocerus cuspiclunis differs in having pereonal segments 3–7 with dorsal carination compared to segments 5–7 for P. cristatus , and in gnathopod 2 propodus being more robust with three distinct palmar processes compared to the two distal processes of P. cristatus .

Etymology

From the Latin: cuspis , (f) meaning pointed, and clunis, (f) meaning rump or buttocks, thus alluding to the carinated ‘‘rump’’ area of the amphipod.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Amphipoda

Family

Podoceridae

Genus

Podocerus

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