Stenobermuda brucei, Kensley & Schotte, 2002

Kensley, B & Schotte, M, 2002, New species and records of Asellota from the Indian Ocean (Crustacea: Peracarida: Isopoda), Journal of Natural History 36, pp. 1421-1461 : 1457-1458

publication ID

1464-5262

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FCF375-FF93-D37B-86CB-2BC0E4E0FE25

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Stenobermuda brucei
status

sp. nov.

Stenobermuda brucei View in CoL sp. nov.

(gure 22)

Type material. HOLOTYPE: ZMUC, 3.1 mm, sta CRU-1894, sand from reef, Bawe Island , Zanzibar, 25 m, 21 September 1995 . PARATYPES: ZMUC, one ovigerous

2.5 mm, one 2.2 mm, same data as holotype.

Diagnosis. Cephalon with antennal tooth low, subacute, anterolateral tooth acute, surpassing antennal tooth; rostrum narrowly triangular, reaching beyond anterolateral tooth. Eye weakly pigmented, consisting of four ommatidia. Pleotelson length subequal to basal width, with single lateral tooth. Pereopod 1 male, ischium, merus, carpus and propodus having stout elongate setae on mesial surface near anterior margins; carpus having cluster of ve stout fringed setae posterodistally; propodus subcircular, with three stout fringed setae on posterior margin, robust seta demarcating palm, latter having four slender fringed setae; dactylus having four fringed setae on cutting margin. Pereopod 2, carpus 3.5 times longer than wide, with two robust setae on posterior margin; propodus with two robust setae on posterior margin; dactylus biunguiculate, with small additional seta on posterior margin.

Remarks. Stenobermuda syzygus (Barnard, 1940) , recorded from the southwest Indian Ocean at Still Bay, South Africa, is the only Stenobermuda known from the Indian Ocean. This is a much larger species (6.5 mm) than the present species, and possesses a narrower propodus of pereopod 1 in the male. The two species recorded from Bermuda ( S. acutirostrata Schultz, 1979 , and S. ili V ei Kensley, 1994) both possess much narrower propodi of pereopod 1 in the male, than is seen in S. brucei .

Etymology. The species is named for Dr Niel Bruce of the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand, who collected this species along with several others described here.

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

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