Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960

Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov (Figs 35 & 36) Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov, 1960a: 214–217, figs 9–11. Vinogradov 1964: 125–126. Vinogradov et al . 1982: 107–109, figs 42, 43. Type material. The holotype is in the ZMMU (Mb–1060) as detailed above. Material examined. North Atlantic : Fe...

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Main Author: Zeidler, Wolfgang
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328164
https://zenodo.org/record/5328164
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5328164
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
Malacostraca
Amphipoda
Microphasmidae
Microphasmoides
Microphasmoides vitjazi
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Amphipoda
Microphasmidae
Microphasmoides
Microphasmoides vitjazi
Zeidler, Wolfgang
Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Amphipoda
Microphasmidae
Microphasmoides
Microphasmoides vitjazi
description Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov (Figs 35 & 36) Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov, 1960a: 214–217, figs 9–11. Vinogradov 1964: 125–126. Vinogradov et al . 1982: 107–109, figs 42, 43. Type material. The holotype is in the ZMMU (Mb–1060) as detailed above. Material examined. North Atlantic : Female (ZMUC); Caribbean Sea [17°54’N 64°54’W]; Dana Stn. 1186 III, 3000 mw, 30 Nov. 1921. South Pacific : Two males, two females (ZMUC CRU-9935); west of Galapagos Is. [00°18’S 99°07’W]; Dana Stn. 3558 II, 3000 mw, 18 Sept. 1928. Female (ZMUC); N. of Tahiti [14°01’S 147°51.5’W]; Dana Stn. 3570 II, 3000 mw. 7 Oct. 1928. Female (ZMUC); N. of New Zealand [25°47’S 172°24’E]; Dana Stn. 3621 III, 3000 mw, 8 Dec. 1928. Diagnosis. Body length of females up to 8.0 mm, of males up to 6.0 mm or slightly more. Antennae 1; peduncular articles and callynophore relatively broader and longer in males; terminal article elongate, slightly longer than preceding article in males, slightly shorter in females. Antennae 2 slightly shorter than A1 for females, about 0.8x A1 for males; antennal gland grossly inflated, slightly deeper than long, about as long as following articles combined. Gnathopod 1; basis slightly shorter than remaining articles combined; dactylus slightly narrowed, length about half propodus. Gnathopod 2: length about 1.4x G1; basis marginally longer than remaining articles combined (excluding dactylus); dactylus length about 0.4x propodus. Pereopods 3 & 4 similar in structure but P4 is slightly longer; both longer and stronger than any other pereopoda. Pereopod 4; basis length about twice merus; carpus length twice merus; propodus length 1.4x carpus; dactylus length about one third propodus. Pereopod 5 strongly subchelate with propodus and dactylus rotated at right angles to body; length about 0.6x P4; basis length 1.7x merus; carpus length about 0.8x merus; propodus length about 1.5x carpus, relatively broad forming subchela with dactylus, anterodistal margin with several pairs of short, strong setae; dactylus curved, slightly longer than width of propodus. Pereopod 6 slightly longer than P5; basis length about twice merus; carpus marginally longer than merus; propodus length almost twice carpus; dactylus length 0.4x propodus. Pereopod 7; length 0.8x P6; basis length 2.5x merus; carpus length 1.4x merus; propodus length about 1.7x carpus; dactylus length slightly less than half propodus. Peduncle and rami of uropoda relatively narrow, lanceolate; margins of rami denticulate. Telson triangular, rounded, length about half peduncle of U3. Colour of unfixed specimens is cherry-red (Vinogradov 1960a). Remarks. This is a distinctive but relatively rare species with only three previous records of specimens collected. It is similar to Microphasma agassizi differing mainly in the structure of pereopods 3–5. The current material examined comprises two males and five females. This is the first record of males Distribution. Vinogradov et al . (1982) record this species from the tropical regions of the Pacific and Indian Oceans near the Philippines (Vinogradov 1964), New Hebrides (Vinogradov 1960a) and Japanese deep-water trenches (presumably a new record). It is here recorded from the North Atlantic (Caribbean Sea) for the first time together with additional records from the South Pacific. According to Vinogradov et al . (1982) it has been found in catches of 500–2000 m and in catches from depths of 1700 and more to the surface. The Dana specimens were all caught with 3000 mw. : Published as part of Zeidler, Wolfgang, 2009, A review of the hyperiidean amphipod superfamily Lanceoloidea Bowman & Gruner, 1973 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyperiidea), pp. 1-117 in Zootaxa 2000 on pages 93-96 : {"references": ["Vinogradov, M. E. (1960 a) Hyperiidea Physosomata of the Tropical Pacific Ocean. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii Akademiya Nauk SSSR 41, 198 - 247. [In Russian].", "Vinogradov, M. E. (1964) Hyperiidea Physosomata from the northern part of the Indian Ocean. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii Akademiya Nauk SSSR 65, 107 - 151. [In Russian].", "Vinogradov, M. E., Volkov, A. F. & Semenova, T. N. (1982) Amfipody-Giperiidy (Amphipoda: Hyperiidea) Mirovogo Okeanea. Akademiya Nauk SSSR, Opredeliteli po Faune SSSR No. 132. Leningrad, 492 pp. [In Russian]. English translation, 1996, Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Washington D. C., D. Siegel-Causey, Scientific Editor."]}
format Text
author Zeidler, Wolfgang
author_facet Zeidler, Wolfgang
author_sort Zeidler, Wolfgang
title Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960
title_short Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960
title_full Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960
title_fullStr Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960
title_full_unstemmed Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960
title_sort microphasmoides vitjazi vinogradov 1960
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2009
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328164
https://zenodo.org/record/5328164
geographic Galapagos
Pacific
Indian
New Zealand
geographic_facet Galapagos
Pacific
Indian
New Zealand
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFF1EC5AFFD1DD283450FFE3FFB2FF90
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFF1EC5AFFD1DD283450FFE3FFB2FF90
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328165
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
op_rights Open Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328164
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328165
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5328164 2023-05-15T17:36:32+02:00 Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov 1960 Zeidler, Wolfgang 2009 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328164 https://zenodo.org/record/5328164 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFF1EC5AFFD1DD283450FFE3FFB2FF90 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFF1EC5AFFD1DD283450FFE3FFB2FF90 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328165 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Amphipoda Microphasmidae Microphasmoides Microphasmoides vitjazi Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2009 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328164 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5328165 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov (Figs 35 & 36) Microphasmoides vitjazi Vinogradov, 1960a: 214–217, figs 9–11. Vinogradov 1964: 125–126. Vinogradov et al . 1982: 107–109, figs 42, 43. Type material. The holotype is in the ZMMU (Mb–1060) as detailed above. Material examined. North Atlantic : Female (ZMUC); Caribbean Sea [17°54’N 64°54’W]; Dana Stn. 1186 III, 3000 mw, 30 Nov. 1921. South Pacific : Two males, two females (ZMUC CRU-9935); west of Galapagos Is. [00°18’S 99°07’W]; Dana Stn. 3558 II, 3000 mw, 18 Sept. 1928. Female (ZMUC); N. of Tahiti [14°01’S 147°51.5’W]; Dana Stn. 3570 II, 3000 mw. 7 Oct. 1928. Female (ZMUC); N. of New Zealand [25°47’S 172°24’E]; Dana Stn. 3621 III, 3000 mw, 8 Dec. 1928. Diagnosis. Body length of females up to 8.0 mm, of males up to 6.0 mm or slightly more. Antennae 1; peduncular articles and callynophore relatively broader and longer in males; terminal article elongate, slightly longer than preceding article in males, slightly shorter in females. Antennae 2 slightly shorter than A1 for females, about 0.8x A1 for males; antennal gland grossly inflated, slightly deeper than long, about as long as following articles combined. Gnathopod 1; basis slightly shorter than remaining articles combined; dactylus slightly narrowed, length about half propodus. Gnathopod 2: length about 1.4x G1; basis marginally longer than remaining articles combined (excluding dactylus); dactylus length about 0.4x propodus. Pereopods 3 & 4 similar in structure but P4 is slightly longer; both longer and stronger than any other pereopoda. Pereopod 4; basis length about twice merus; carpus length twice merus; propodus length 1.4x carpus; dactylus length about one third propodus. Pereopod 5 strongly subchelate with propodus and dactylus rotated at right angles to body; length about 0.6x P4; basis length 1.7x merus; carpus length about 0.8x merus; propodus length about 1.5x carpus, relatively broad forming subchela with dactylus, anterodistal margin with several pairs of short, strong setae; dactylus curved, slightly longer than width of propodus. Pereopod 6 slightly longer than P5; basis length about twice merus; carpus marginally longer than merus; propodus length almost twice carpus; dactylus length 0.4x propodus. Pereopod 7; length 0.8x P6; basis length 2.5x merus; carpus length 1.4x merus; propodus length about 1.7x carpus; dactylus length slightly less than half propodus. Peduncle and rami of uropoda relatively narrow, lanceolate; margins of rami denticulate. Telson triangular, rounded, length about half peduncle of U3. Colour of unfixed specimens is cherry-red (Vinogradov 1960a). Remarks. This is a distinctive but relatively rare species with only three previous records of specimens collected. It is similar to Microphasma agassizi differing mainly in the structure of pereopods 3–5. The current material examined comprises two males and five females. This is the first record of males Distribution. Vinogradov et al . (1982) record this species from the tropical regions of the Pacific and Indian Oceans near the Philippines (Vinogradov 1964), New Hebrides (Vinogradov 1960a) and Japanese deep-water trenches (presumably a new record). It is here recorded from the North Atlantic (Caribbean Sea) for the first time together with additional records from the South Pacific. According to Vinogradov et al . (1982) it has been found in catches of 500–2000 m and in catches from depths of 1700 and more to the surface. The Dana specimens were all caught with 3000 mw. : Published as part of Zeidler, Wolfgang, 2009, A review of the hyperiidean amphipod superfamily Lanceoloidea Bowman & Gruner, 1973 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyperiidea), pp. 1-117 in Zootaxa 2000 on pages 93-96 : {"references": ["Vinogradov, M. E. (1960 a) Hyperiidea Physosomata of the Tropical Pacific Ocean. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii Akademiya Nauk SSSR 41, 198 - 247. [In Russian].", "Vinogradov, M. E. (1964) Hyperiidea Physosomata from the northern part of the Indian Ocean. Trudy Instituta Okeanologii Akademiya Nauk SSSR 65, 107 - 151. [In Russian].", "Vinogradov, M. E., Volkov, A. F. & Semenova, T. N. (1982) Amfipody-Giperiidy (Amphipoda: Hyperiidea) Mirovogo Okeanea. Akademiya Nauk SSSR, Opredeliteli po Faune SSSR No. 132. Leningrad, 492 pp. [In Russian]. English translation, 1996, Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Washington D. C., D. Siegel-Causey, Scientific Editor."]} Text North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Galapagos Pacific Indian New Zealand