The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)

Early reports on larval distributions are frustratingly obscure due to ambiguous identification of plankton samples. A particularly striking case is posed by the so-called ‘giant phyllosoma’ which attain 80 mm in total length and are among the largest larvae known in marine invertebrates. Based on t...

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Published in:Invertebrate Systematics
Main Authors: Ferran Palero, Guillermo Guerao, Michael Hall, Tin Yam Chan, Paul F. Clark
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: CSIRO Publishing 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1071/IS13037
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spelling ftbioone:10.1071/IS13037 2024-06-02T07:56:30+00:00 The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae) Ferran Palero Guillermo Guerao Michael Hall Tin Yam Chan Paul F. Clark Ferran Palero Guillermo Guerao Michael Hall Tin Yam Chan Paul F. Clark world 2014-06-30 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1071/IS13037 en eng CSIRO Publishing doi:10.1071/IS13037 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1071/IS13037 Text 2014 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1071/IS13037 2024-05-07T00:49:46Z Early reports on larval distributions are frustratingly obscure due to ambiguous identification of plankton samples. A particularly striking case is posed by the so-called ‘giant phyllosoma’ which attain 80 mm in total length and are among the largest larvae known in marine invertebrates. Based on the supposition that these giant larvae are produced by local species, Philip Robertson (1968) assigned them to Parribacus. In the present study, 12 phyllosoma larvae collected in the Coral Sea and corresponding to intermediate stages VI to IX are described in detail. The identity of these freshly caught specimens was confirmed as belonging to Parribacus antarcticus (Lund, 1793) by using DNA barcoding methods. This new collection further allowed us to complete the larval series for the genus. The intermediate stage VI, which was missing in previous accounts, is described here for the first time. Besides the Coral Sea larvae, another five phyllosoma specimens previously deposited in UK and German museum collections are also described. Given that no useful DNA could be obtained from the old collection specimens, these larvae were identified as Parribacus sp. based on morphology only. Furthermore, a complete morphometric analysis of Parribacus larvae was undertaken including information from literature dating back to 1830. The first detailed description of all dactyli from a complete phyllosoma of the genus Parribacus is presented, with further comparison with those from other genera of Scyllaridae. Text Antarc* antarcticus BioOne Online Journals Invertebrate Systematics 28 3 258
institution Open Polar
collection BioOne Online Journals
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language English
description Early reports on larval distributions are frustratingly obscure due to ambiguous identification of plankton samples. A particularly striking case is posed by the so-called ‘giant phyllosoma’ which attain 80 mm in total length and are among the largest larvae known in marine invertebrates. Based on the supposition that these giant larvae are produced by local species, Philip Robertson (1968) assigned them to Parribacus. In the present study, 12 phyllosoma larvae collected in the Coral Sea and corresponding to intermediate stages VI to IX are described in detail. The identity of these freshly caught specimens was confirmed as belonging to Parribacus antarcticus (Lund, 1793) by using DNA barcoding methods. This new collection further allowed us to complete the larval series for the genus. The intermediate stage VI, which was missing in previous accounts, is described here for the first time. Besides the Coral Sea larvae, another five phyllosoma specimens previously deposited in UK and German museum collections are also described. Given that no useful DNA could be obtained from the old collection specimens, these larvae were identified as Parribacus sp. based on morphology only. Furthermore, a complete morphometric analysis of Parribacus larvae was undertaken including information from literature dating back to 1830. The first detailed description of all dactyli from a complete phyllosoma of the genus Parribacus is presented, with further comparison with those from other genera of Scyllaridae.
author2 Ferran Palero
Guillermo Guerao
Michael Hall
Tin Yam Chan
Paul F. Clark
format Text
author Ferran Palero
Guillermo Guerao
Michael Hall
Tin Yam Chan
Paul F. Clark
spellingShingle Ferran Palero
Guillermo Guerao
Michael Hall
Tin Yam Chan
Paul F. Clark
The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)
author_facet Ferran Palero
Guillermo Guerao
Michael Hall
Tin Yam Chan
Paul F. Clark
author_sort Ferran Palero
title The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)
title_short The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)
title_full The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)
title_fullStr The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)
title_full_unstemmed The ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of Parribacus antarcticus (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)
title_sort ‘giant phyllosoma’ are larval stages of parribacus antarcticus (decapoda : scyllaridae)
publisher CSIRO Publishing
publishDate 2014
url https://doi.org/10.1071/IS13037
op_coverage world
genre Antarc*
antarcticus
genre_facet Antarc*
antarcticus
op_source https://doi.org/10.1071/IS13037
op_relation doi:10.1071/IS13037
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1071/IS13037
container_title Invertebrate Systematics
container_volume 28
container_issue 3
container_start_page 258
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