Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.

Colobomatus acanthuri sp. nov. (Figure 4 A–H) Material examined Holotype female (NSMT-Cr 21861), from head canal of Acanthurus olivaceus Bloch and Schneider (Perciformes: Acanthuridae), captured in the western North Pacific Ocean off Okinawa-jima Island and subsequently purchased at Yonashiro Fish C...

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Main Authors: Madinabeitia, Ione, Tang, Danny, Nagasawa, Kazuya
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2012
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4748838
https://zenodo.org/record/4748838
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4748838
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Poecilostomatoida
Philichthyidae
Colobomatus
Colobomatus acanthuri
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Poecilostomatoida
Philichthyidae
Colobomatus
Colobomatus acanthuri
Madinabeitia, Ione
Tang, Danny
Nagasawa, Kazuya
Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Poecilostomatoida
Philichthyidae
Colobomatus
Colobomatus acanthuri
description Colobomatus acanthuri sp. nov. (Figure 4 A–H) Material examined Holotype female (NSMT-Cr 21861), from head canal of Acanthurus olivaceus Bloch and Schneider (Perciformes: Acanthuridae), captured in the western North Pacific Ocean off Okinawa-jima Island and subsequently purchased at Yonashiro Fish Cooperative (26◦22′ N, 127◦58′ E) in Uruma, Okinawa-jima Island, 12 September 2009. Description Adult female. Body (Figure 4A) 1.64 mm long (excluding cephalic processes and caudal rami). Pre-oral area of cephalosome (Figure 4A) with one anterior pair of parallel processes; latter slightly constricted on anterolateral margin and bearing rows of tiny spinules and three small claw-like processes distally. Cephalosome swollen posterior to buccal capsule and then slightly constricted at posterior margin of tagma; sensillum present on anterolateral margins of swelling. First to fourth pedigerous somites fused to form short neck at first pedigerous somite and large, slightly swollen trunk at second to fourth pedigerous somites and bearing anterolateral pair of anteroventrally directed processes and smaller mid-lateral pair of posterodorsally directed processes; ornamentation of trunk processes similar to those of cephalosome except with several tubercles and one or more papillae bearing one sensillum along inner margin. Second and third pairs of legs occurring ventrally along same plane as anterolateral and midlateral processes, respectively. Fifth pedigerous somite elongate, about 1.5 times longer than wide. Genital somite (Figure 4A) bearing posteroventral pair of posterolaterally directed processes; latter ornamented as in those of thorax. Abdomen (Figure 4A) four-segmented, gradually tapering towards caudal rami. Caudal ramus (Figure 4A) fused to anal somite and bearing proximolateral seta and spinules at tip. Antennule (Figure 4B) laterally directed, arising near base of cephalic process and two-segmented with armature of 7 and 8. Antenna (Figure 4C) modified, forming longitudinally divided anterior margin of buccal capsule; latter (Figure 4C) tube-like, projecting ventrally from conical base. Labrum, mandibles and maxillules not seen. Maxilla (Figure 4C) robust, two-segmented; basal segment large, bearing one semicircular row of spinules and distolateral spinulated element; distal segment short, ornamented with spinules along distal margin. Maxillipeds absent. Labium (Figure 4C) divided, tapering into sharp tips. Posterior rim of buccal capsule undivided. Leg 1 (Figure 4D) biramous; protopod carrying long, lateral seta; exopod small, partially fused to protopod, indistinctly two-segmented and bearing outer spine on basal segment and four short apical spines on distal segment; endopod larger than exopod, indistinctly two-segmented and bearing three short spines on distal segment. Leg 2 (Figure 4E) biramous; protopod completely fused to somite and represented by long, lateral surface seta; exopod indistinctly two-segmented, with naked basal segment and two tiny distomedial spines on distal segment; endopod rudimentary, indistinctly two-segmented and unarmed. Leg 3 (Figure 4F) vestigial, reduced to long surface seta. Etymology The species epithet, acanthuri , refers to the generic name of the host. Remarks Colobomatus acanthuri sp. nov. resembles C. lamnae Hesse, 1873, C. bergyltae Hesse, 1876, C. edwardsi (Richiardi, 1876), C. agassizi (Richiardi, 1877), C. haeckeli , C. pagelli (Richiardi, 1877), C. minimus (Richiardi, 1877), C. canthari Delamare Deboutteville and Nunes-Ruivo, 1952, C. embiotocae , C. exilis , C. fusiformis Izawa, 1974, C. collettei , C. gymnoscopeli Grabda and Linkowski, 1978, C. mugilis Raibaut, Caillet and Ben Hassine, 1978, C. caribbei Cressey and Schotte, 1983, C. quadrifarius , C. creeveyae West, 1992, C. cresseyi , C. cribbi West, 1992, C. gietzelae West, 1992, C. hispidus West, 1992, C. lesteri West, 1992, C. mackayi West, 1992, C. nanus West, 1992, C. asiaticus Hayward, 1996 and C. arabicus Hayward, 1996 in the presence of one pair of unbranched processes along the anterior margin of the cephalosome. However, C. acanthuri sp. nov. can be separated from those species by having a short neck between the head and the first pair of thoracic processes and rows of tiny apical spinules and three apical claw-like processes on the cephalic, thoracic and genital processes. Our finding represents the first report of a species of Colobomatus parasitic in the family Acanthuridae. : Published as part of Madinabeitia, Ione, Tang, Danny & Nagasawa, Kazuya, 2013, Four new species of Colobomatus (Copepoda: Philichthyidae) parasitic in the lateral line system of marine finfishes captured off the Ryukyu Islands, Japan, with redescriptions of Colobomatus collettei Cressey, 1977 and Colobomatus pupa Izawa, 1974, pp. 563-580 in Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) (J. Nat. Hist.) 47 (5 - 12) on pages 572-574, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2012.737483, http://zenodo.org/record/4632021 : {"references": ["Izawa K. 1974. On three new species of Colobomatus (Cyclopoida: Philichthyidae) parasitic on Japanese fishes. Publ Seto Mar Biol Lab. 21: 335 - 343.", "Grabda J, Linkowski T. 1978. Colobomatus gymnoscopeli sp. n. (Copepoda: Philichthyidae), a parasite of lateral line sensory canals of Gymnoscopelus aphya Gunther, 1873 (Myctophidae) from the Antarctic waters. Acta Ichthyol Piscat. 8: 91 - 110.", "West GA. 1992. Eleven new Colobomatus species (Copepoda: Philichthyidae) from marine fishes. Syst Parasitol. 23: 81 - 133.", "Hayward CJ. 1996. Copepods of the genus Colobomatus (Poecilostomatoida: Philichthyidae) from fishes of the family Sillaginidae (Teleostei: Perciformes). J Nat Hist. 30: 1779 - 1798."]}
format Text
author Madinabeitia, Ione
Tang, Danny
Nagasawa, Kazuya
author_facet Madinabeitia, Ione
Tang, Danny
Nagasawa, Kazuya
author_sort Madinabeitia, Ione
title Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.
title_short Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.
title_full Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.
title_sort colobomatus acanthuri madinabeitia & tang & nagasawa 2013, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2012
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4748838
https://zenodo.org/record/4748838
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
ENVELOPE(-64.250,-64.250,-65.550,-65.550)
ENVELOPE(167.350,167.350,-78.117,-78.117)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Pacific
Seta
Nunes
Hayward
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Pacific
Seta
Nunes
Hayward
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Copepods
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Copepods
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4748838
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4748838 2023-05-15T13:57:37+02:00 Colobomatus acanthuri Madinabeitia & Tang & Nagasawa 2013, sp. nov. Madinabeitia, Ione Tang, Danny Nagasawa, Kazuya 2012 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4748838 https://zenodo.org/record/4748838 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/4632021 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7D03FFA9FF863A135458FFBB480EFF92 http://zoobank.org/BEB140D5-8936-4B47-B8B9-738BFABF37E1 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2012.737483 http://zenodo.org/record/4632021 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7D03FFA9FF863A135458FFBB480EFF92 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4632029 http://zoobank.org/BEB140D5-8936-4B47-B8B9-738BFABF37E1 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4748837 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Maxillopoda Poecilostomatoida Philichthyidae Colobomatus Colobomatus acanthuri article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2012 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4748838 https://doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2012.737483 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4632029 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4748837 2022-03-10T13:26:27Z Colobomatus acanthuri sp. nov. (Figure 4 A–H) Material examined Holotype female (NSMT-Cr 21861), from head canal of Acanthurus olivaceus Bloch and Schneider (Perciformes: Acanthuridae), captured in the western North Pacific Ocean off Okinawa-jima Island and subsequently purchased at Yonashiro Fish Cooperative (26◦22′ N, 127◦58′ E) in Uruma, Okinawa-jima Island, 12 September 2009. Description Adult female. Body (Figure 4A) 1.64 mm long (excluding cephalic processes and caudal rami). Pre-oral area of cephalosome (Figure 4A) with one anterior pair of parallel processes; latter slightly constricted on anterolateral margin and bearing rows of tiny spinules and three small claw-like processes distally. Cephalosome swollen posterior to buccal capsule and then slightly constricted at posterior margin of tagma; sensillum present on anterolateral margins of swelling. First to fourth pedigerous somites fused to form short neck at first pedigerous somite and large, slightly swollen trunk at second to fourth pedigerous somites and bearing anterolateral pair of anteroventrally directed processes and smaller mid-lateral pair of posterodorsally directed processes; ornamentation of trunk processes similar to those of cephalosome except with several tubercles and one or more papillae bearing one sensillum along inner margin. Second and third pairs of legs occurring ventrally along same plane as anterolateral and midlateral processes, respectively. Fifth pedigerous somite elongate, about 1.5 times longer than wide. Genital somite (Figure 4A) bearing posteroventral pair of posterolaterally directed processes; latter ornamented as in those of thorax. Abdomen (Figure 4A) four-segmented, gradually tapering towards caudal rami. Caudal ramus (Figure 4A) fused to anal somite and bearing proximolateral seta and spinules at tip. Antennule (Figure 4B) laterally directed, arising near base of cephalic process and two-segmented with armature of 7 and 8. Antenna (Figure 4C) modified, forming longitudinally divided anterior margin of buccal capsule; latter (Figure 4C) tube-like, projecting ventrally from conical base. Labrum, mandibles and maxillules not seen. Maxilla (Figure 4C) robust, two-segmented; basal segment large, bearing one semicircular row of spinules and distolateral spinulated element; distal segment short, ornamented with spinules along distal margin. Maxillipeds absent. Labium (Figure 4C) divided, tapering into sharp tips. Posterior rim of buccal capsule undivided. Leg 1 (Figure 4D) biramous; protopod carrying long, lateral seta; exopod small, partially fused to protopod, indistinctly two-segmented and bearing outer spine on basal segment and four short apical spines on distal segment; endopod larger than exopod, indistinctly two-segmented and bearing three short spines on distal segment. Leg 2 (Figure 4E) biramous; protopod completely fused to somite and represented by long, lateral surface seta; exopod indistinctly two-segmented, with naked basal segment and two tiny distomedial spines on distal segment; endopod rudimentary, indistinctly two-segmented and unarmed. Leg 3 (Figure 4F) vestigial, reduced to long surface seta. Etymology The species epithet, acanthuri , refers to the generic name of the host. Remarks Colobomatus acanthuri sp. nov. resembles C. lamnae Hesse, 1873, C. bergyltae Hesse, 1876, C. edwardsi (Richiardi, 1876), C. agassizi (Richiardi, 1877), C. haeckeli , C. pagelli (Richiardi, 1877), C. minimus (Richiardi, 1877), C. canthari Delamare Deboutteville and Nunes-Ruivo, 1952, C. embiotocae , C. exilis , C. fusiformis Izawa, 1974, C. collettei , C. gymnoscopeli Grabda and Linkowski, 1978, C. mugilis Raibaut, Caillet and Ben Hassine, 1978, C. caribbei Cressey and Schotte, 1983, C. quadrifarius , C. creeveyae West, 1992, C. cresseyi , C. cribbi West, 1992, C. gietzelae West, 1992, C. hispidus West, 1992, C. lesteri West, 1992, C. mackayi West, 1992, C. nanus West, 1992, C. asiaticus Hayward, 1996 and C. arabicus Hayward, 1996 in the presence of one pair of unbranched processes along the anterior margin of the cephalosome. However, C. acanthuri sp. nov. can be separated from those species by having a short neck between the head and the first pair of thoracic processes and rows of tiny apical spinules and three apical claw-like processes on the cephalic, thoracic and genital processes. Our finding represents the first report of a species of Colobomatus parasitic in the family Acanthuridae. : Published as part of Madinabeitia, Ione, Tang, Danny & Nagasawa, Kazuya, 2013, Four new species of Colobomatus (Copepoda: Philichthyidae) parasitic in the lateral line system of marine finfishes captured off the Ryukyu Islands, Japan, with redescriptions of Colobomatus collettei Cressey, 1977 and Colobomatus pupa Izawa, 1974, pp. 563-580 in Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) (J. Nat. Hist.) 47 (5 - 12) on pages 572-574, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2012.737483, http://zenodo.org/record/4632021 : {"references": ["Izawa K. 1974. On three new species of Colobomatus (Cyclopoida: Philichthyidae) parasitic on Japanese fishes. Publ Seto Mar Biol Lab. 21: 335 - 343.", "Grabda J, Linkowski T. 1978. Colobomatus gymnoscopeli sp. n. (Copepoda: Philichthyidae), a parasite of lateral line sensory canals of Gymnoscopelus aphya Gunther, 1873 (Myctophidae) from the Antarctic waters. Acta Ichthyol Piscat. 8: 91 - 110.", "West GA. 1992. Eleven new Colobomatus species (Copepoda: Philichthyidae) from marine fishes. Syst Parasitol. 23: 81 - 133.", "Hayward CJ. 1996. Copepods of the genus Colobomatus (Poecilostomatoida: Philichthyidae) from fishes of the family Sillaginidae (Teleostei: Perciformes). J Nat Hist. 30: 1779 - 1798."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Copepods DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic The Antarctic Pacific Seta ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645) Nunes ENVELOPE(-64.250,-64.250,-65.550,-65.550) Hayward ENVELOPE(167.350,167.350,-78.117,-78.117)