Hyalella wakulla, Drumm & Knight-Gray, 2019

Drumm, David T. & Knight-Gray, Julianne, 2019, A new species of the Hyalella ‘ azteca’ complex (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyalellidae) from Florida, Zootaxa 4545 (1), pp. 93-104 : 95-102

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4545.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:55861166-FED9-4B38-B8DB-D269B4C82F09

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5942395

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B9ED36-6C5C-FFB6-FF13-29D5AA8120C4

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hyalella wakulla
status

sp. nov.

Hyalella wakulla View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs 2–7)

Material examined. Holotype: male (♂), 5.2 mm, ( USNM 1480585 View Materials ), Wakulla River , 30°9ʹ 49.14ʺN, 84°13ʹ 45.4794ʺW, salinity: 0.2 ppt GoogleMaps . Allotype: female (♀), 4.5 mm, ( USNM 1480586 View Materials ), same locality as holotype GoogleMaps .

Paratypes: 5 females, ( USNM 1480588 View Materials ) ; 5 males, ( USNM 1480587 View Materials ); all same locality as holotype GoogleMaps .

Additional material: 16 females, 19 males, 97 juveniles retained in the author’s ( DTD) collection at EcoAnalysts, Inc .

Diagnosis. Eyes present and pigmented. Pleonites 1 and 2 with dorsoposterior carina. Antenna 1 shorter than antenna 2 but greater than half its length; flagellum with 8–10 articles. Antenna 2, flagellum with 8–11 articles. Maxilla 1, inner plate with two terminal and one (or two?) subterminal pappose setae; palp abruptly narrowing at distal end to acute tip, without setules. Maxilla 2 inner plate with two strong pappose setae on inner margin. Gnathopod 1 propodus length less than twice maximum width, with four pappose setae on inner face. Gnathopod 2 (males), basis ventral margin with two setae; carpus posterior lobe longer than merus width; palm oblique, with angled notch. Pereopod 7, basis posterior lobe ventral margin with several stout spiniform setae. Uropods 1 and 2 without curved setae. Uropod 3, ramus and peduncle subequal in length. Telson slightly wider than long, with two simple terminal setae widely spaced.

Description of male. Size, 5.2 mm ( Fig. 2A). Rostrum absent. Eyes pigmented, black, round, located between insertion of antenna 1 and 2 ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Pleonites 1 and 2 with dorsoposterior carina ( Figs 2, 3B View FIGURE 3 ). Epimerial plates slightly acuminate ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ). Coxae 1–4 deeper than wide, slightly overlapping; coxa 5 with two subequal lobes; coxa 6 with posterior lobe larger than anterior lobe; coxa 7 with single posterior lobe.

Antenna 1 ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ) less than half body length, shorter than antenna 2, longer than peduncle of antenna 2; article 1 longer and wider than article 2, article 2 longer than article 3; flagellum with 8 articles.

Antenna 2 ( Fig. 3D View FIGURE 3 ) less than half body length; peduncle articles 4 and 5 subequal in length; flagellum with 9 articles. Upper lip ( Fig. 3E View FIGURE 3 ) rounded, distally setulate.

Mandibles: Left mandible ( Fig. 3F View FIGURE 3 ) incisor process with six teeth; lacinia mobilis with five teeth; setal row with three main pappose setae plus accessory seta. Right mandible ( Fig. 3G View FIGURE 3 ) incisor process with five teeth; setal row with two main pappose setae plus two accessory setae. Molar process large, cylindrical, and triturative, accessory seta present.

Lower lip ( Fig. 3H View FIGURE 3 ) outer lobes rounded, setulate; mandibular lobes distally tapering.

Maxilla 1 ( Fig. 3I View FIGURE 3 ) palp longer than wide, abruptly tapering distally, without setules, reaching to about half the distance between base of palp and tip of setae on outer plate; outer plate with nine stout and serrate setae, inner margin with several simple setae distally; inner plate slender, with two terminal and one subterminal pappose setae, lateral margins setulate.

Maxilla 2 ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ) inner plate slightly shorter than outer plate, with two strong pappose setae on inner margin.

Maxilliped ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ) inner plate with three terminal connate setae, medial and distal margins with pappose setae; outer plate with simple setae on distal, medial, and facial margins; palp with 4 articles, article 2 slightly longer than wide, with simple setae on medial margin; article 3 distally with simple setae; article 4 with distal nail and five subterminal simple setae on medial margin.

Gnathopod 1 ( Figs 4C, D View FIGURE 4 ) subchelate, smaller than gnathopod 2; carpus longer than wide, longer than and as wide as propodus, posterior lobe with ten setae and comb scales proximally; propodus length about 1.5 times maximum width, inner face with four pappose setae, comb scales on disto-posterior and disto-anterior margins, palm transverse, posterior distal corner with robust seta; dactylus with comb scales and one sensory seta.

Gnathopod 2 ( Fig. 4E View FIGURE 4 ) subchelate; posterior margin with two setae; merus with four distal simple setae and disto-posterior comb scales; carpus posterior lobe about 1.5 times as long as width of merus, with five distal simple setae and row of about eleven short pappose setae; propodus with comb scales disto-posteriorly, palm oblique, with distinct notch and row of strong setae of differing lengths; dactylus with one sensory seta.

Pereopods 3 and 4 ( Figs 4F View FIGURE 4 , 5A View FIGURE 5 ) similar in size and shape; merus longer than carpus, with disto-anterior lobes extending 1/3 or less length of carpus; dactylus with one sensory seta.

Pereopods 5 and 6 ( Figs 5B, C View FIGURE 5 ) of similar shape and setation, pereopod 6 longer than pereopod 5; basis posterior margin expanded and denticulate, anterior margin with four robust setae; dactylus with one sensory seta.

Pereopod 7 ( Fig. 5D View FIGURE 5 ) subequal to pereopod 6; basis posterior lobe greatly expanded and denticulate, distal margin with three robust spiniform setae.

Uropod 1 ( Fig. 5E View FIGURE 5 ) longer than uropod 2; peduncle longer than rami, with five spiniform setae; inner ramus with two dorsal and four distal/subdistal spiniform setae, without curved setae; outer ramus with three dorsal and four distal/subdistal spiniform setae.

Uropod 2 ( Fig. 5F View FIGURE 5 ) peduncle subequal to rami, with five spiniform setae; inner ramus with two dorsal and five distal/subdistal spiniform setae; outer ramus with two dorsal and five distal/subdistal setae.

Uropod 3 ( Fig. 5G View FIGURE 5 ) peduncle subequal to ramus, with three spiniform setae decreasing in length distally; ramus with three simple and one connate terminal setae.

Telson ( Fig. 5H View FIGURE 5 ) wider than long, with two long simple terminal setae widely spaced and pair of three short plumose setae.

Coxal gills sac-like, present on pereonites 2 to 6. Sternal gills tubular, present on pereonites 3 to 7.

Adult female: similar to male except for the following: size about 4.5 mm ( Fig. 2B); gnathopod 2 ( Figs 6C, D View FIGURE 6 ) similar to size and structure to gnathopod 1 ( Figs 6A, B View FIGURE 6 ) (which is similar to gnathopod 1 of males); propodus slender and longer than propodus of gnathopod 1, about two times longer than wide.

Intraspecific variation: The setation of uropod 3 varied in both males and females and sometimes even in the same individual. In one adult male, the right ramus had four terminal simple setae and no connate setae, and the left ramus had three terminal and one connate seta ( Fig. 7A View FIGURE 7 ). In another male the rami had two simple setae and two (one long and one short) connate setae ( Fig. 7B View FIGURE 7 ). In the same male the terminal setae of the telson ( Fig. 7C View FIGURE 7 ) was more robust than what is typical. In one of the females examined, the right ramus had three simple setae and one connate seta, and the left ramus had four simple setae and one connate seta ( Fig. 7D View FIGURE 7 ). The last article of the maxillipedal palp can have four or five subterminal simple setae on the medial margin. One pereopod 7 examined had only one robust spiniform seta on the distal margin of the basis posterior lobe. One male had three marginal spiniform setae on the outer ramus of uropod 2. All of the specimens examined were adults and around the same size.

Etymology. The species is named after the river in which it was found.

Remarks. Hyalella wakulla n. sp. keys out to H. azteca using Soucek et al. (2015) but can be distinguished by the shape (abruptly tapering distally) and lack of setules of the maxilla 1 palp, the inner plate of maxilla 1 with two terminal and one subterminal setae ( H. azteca has three terminal setae), and the telson having the terminal setae separated (not separated in H. azteca ). Hyalella azteca is also a large-bodied (6–8 mm) ecomorph ( Wellborn 1995), while H. wakulla is a small-bodied (4.5–5.5 mm) ecomorph. We believe the new species is not conspecific with the partially described Hyalella sp. C sensu LeCroy (2007) found in two western Florida bays. Regarding the fact that the setation of uropod 3 rami is variable in H. wakulla , the specimens we examined always had at least three terminal setae, while Hyalella sp. C only has two. Also, the last maxillipedal palp article of H. wakulla has at least four subterminal setae on the medial margin, while Hyalella sp. C only has three. Hyalella wakulla is a freshwater species, while Hyalella sp. C is found in medium to high salinity habitats.

DNA barcoding and phylogeographic research has shown that Hyalella azteca sensu lato is composed of numerous cryptic species ( Witt & Hebert 2000; Witt et al. 2006; Hrycyshyn 2015). Witt et al. (2006) discovered 33 provisional species within Hyalella azteca from the southern Great Basin of California and Nevada. Hrycyshyn (2015) discovered a large-bodied ‘ azteca ’ clade ( Hyalella species 8) occurring throughout freshwater habitats in Florida and parts of Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, and Kansas, and he discovered a small-bodied ‘ azteca ’ clade ( Hyalella species 5) occurring in various localities throughout the eastern half of North America including northern Florida, and another small-bodied ‘ azteca ’ clade ( Hyalella species 4) occurring in southeastern USA, including northern Florida. Hrycyshyn (2015) unfortunately did not sample from the Wakulla River, but H. wakulla , n. sp. falls in the small-bodied group, so it is possible that this is his “species 5,” which he sampled from the Apalachicola River and Mosquito Creek west of the Wakulla River. Preliminary examination of specimens from Mosquito Creek revealed no major differences from H. wakulla . One male specimen had four setae (two terminal and two subterminal) on the maxilla 1 inner plate, while another male and a female had three setae, as in H. wakulla . Examination of additional material (plus DNA sequence data from H. wakulla ) will be necessary in order to establish conspecificity. Hrycyshyn’s species 4 differs from H. wakulla . Four of the five specimens examined (Juniper Lake, Florida) had a carina only on pleonite 1, and the fifth specimen had a reduced carina on pleonite 2. The maxilla 1 inner plate had two terminal and no subterminal setae, and the palp was shorter than in H. wakulla . The pereopod 7 basis posterior lobe ventral margin was without stout spiniform setae. Unfortunately, only females were available for examination. While we agree that Hyalella is a taxonomically difficult genus of amphipod crustaceans, we believe that the notion of all ‘morphologically cryptic’ species are diagnosable only with molecular studies ( Witt et al. 2006) is a gross misconception. Subtle, as well as not so subtle, differences are usually found during detailed examinations ( King et al. 2012). Efforts should be made to try and formally describe this diversity, as the exploration of biodiversity starts with taxonomy. However, this is unfortunately rarely accomplished ( Pante et al. 2015), all due to the taxonomic impediment [eg., dwindling taxonomic expertise, lack of funding, low impact factor, etc. ( Coleman 2015)].

Recent morphological work has provided evidence of an exceptionally high diversity of Hyalella in South and Central America ( González 2003; González et al. 2006; Santos et al. 2008; Bueno et al. 2013; Cardoso et al. 2014; Marrón-Becerra et al. 2014; Rodriques et al. 2014; Colla & César 2015). A comparably high diversity in North America is only beginning to be understood ( Hrycyshyn 2015; Soucek et al. 2015). We anticipate that many more species new to science will be discovered in North America, as many of the known species are restricted to specific habitats.

Hyalella wakulla View in CoL was the most abundant crustacean in the locality where it was discovered, and was collected together with the amphipods Grandidierella bonnieroides Stephensen, 1948 View in CoL , Gammarus mucronatus Say, 1818 View in CoL , and Cerapus View in CoL sp.; the isopods Caecidotea View in CoL sp., Cyathura polita ( Stimpson, 1856) View in CoL , and Uromunna View in CoL sp.; the cumacean Almyracuma bacescui Petrescu & Heard, 2004 View in CoL ; the midge Cryptochironomus View in CoL sp.; the leach Gloiobdella elongata ( Castle, 1900) ; the caddisfly Oecetis View in CoL sp.; the bivalves Pisidium sp. and a species of Sphaeriidae ; and the polychaetes Ceratonereis View in CoL sp., Hobsonia florida ( Hartman, 1951), and Capitella capitata ( Fabricius, 1780) View in CoL complex.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Amphipoda

Family

Hyalellidae

Genus

Hyalella

Loc

Hyalella wakulla

Drumm, David T. & Knight-Gray, Julianne 2019
2019
Loc

Hyalella wakulla

Drumm & Knight-Gray 2019
2019
Loc

Almyracuma bacescui

Petrescu 2004
2004
Loc

Uromunna

Menzies 1962
1962
Loc

Grandidierella bonnieroides

Stephensen 1948
1948
Loc

Cryptochironomus

Kieffer 1918
1918
Loc

Gloiobdella elongata (

Castle 1900
1900
Loc

Caecidotea

Packard 1871
1871
Loc

Cyathura polita (

Stimpson 1856
1856
Loc

Gammarus mucronatus

Say 1818
1818
Loc

Capitella capitata (

Fabricius 1780
1780
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