Harpinia laevis Sars 1891

Harpinia laevis (figures 7–9) Harpinia laevis Sars, 1895: 161, pl. 56; Stebbing, 1906: 145; Stephensen, 1942: 156; Lincoln, 1979: 378, figures 175g, 179a–e. Material examined Norway: Risør (ZMO F13235). Ireland: North West Mayo (NMI 22 1998): Station Z 1FA (54°20∞ 52.5N, 11°03∞ 28.44W), 355 m, fine...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: King, Rachael A., Myers, Alan A., McGrath, David
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2004
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5461149
https://zenodo.org/record/5461149
Description
Summary:Harpinia laevis (figures 7–9) Harpinia laevis Sars, 1895: 161, pl. 56; Stebbing, 1906: 145; Stephensen, 1942: 156; Lincoln, 1979: 378, figures 175g, 179a–e. Material examined Norway: Risør (ZMO F13235). Ireland: North West Mayo (NMI 22 1998): Station Z 1FA (54°20∞ 52.5N, 11°03∞ 28.44W), 355 m, fine sand; Station Z 12FC (54°20∞ 19.93N, 11°03∞ 40.68W), 347 m, fine silty sand; Station Z 8FA (54°19∞ 47.86N, 11°03∞ 25.20W), 343 m, fine sand ( W ); Station Z 2FB (54°20∞ 36.35N, 11°03∞ 27.65W), 351 m, fine sand. Type locality Coast of Norway. Description Female. Size: up to 4 mm. Described and illustrated by Sars (1895) and later by Lincoln (1979) from Norwegian specimens. Male (sexually dimorphic characters). Size: up to 3 mm. Head without spine on dorsolateral margins. Antenna 1 with tuft of long, fine setae on peduncular article 3 and flagellar article 1, article 1 of flagellum elongate, flagellum with five articles, accessory flagellum with four articles. Antenna 2 with small tuft of fine short setae on peduncular article 4. Coxa 1–3 without spines, flagellum with six articles. Gnathopods 1 and 2 with an elongate, narrow propodus, gnathopod 1 with robust seta defining palm. Pereopod 7 basis with six to seven indistinct spines, each with small associated marginal seta. Urosomites narrow, urosomal segment 2 with dorsal elevation anterior to insertion of telson. Epimeron 3 posterodistal corner with excavated notch and small spine. Uropod 3 rami elongate, outer ramus article 2 longer than half length of article 1, without apical seta, inner ramus almost as long as article 1 of outer ramus, without apical seta. Distribution North-East Atlantic: Norway to north-west Ireland. Discussion This is not a commonly collected species. Females are similar to H. crenulata and H. truncata with the rounded epimeron 3 and lack of spines on coxae 1–3. Harpinia laevis females are distinguished by the relatively smooth, rounded basis of pereopod 7 which lack long marginal setae. The males can be readily identified from those of H. pectinata and H. antennaria by the broadly rounded epimeron 3 (a small notch/spine is present but can be difficult to see). Harpinia laevis males are separated from those of H. crenulata by the shape of the basis of pereopod 7 and the inner ramus of uropod 3, which is almost as long as article 1 of outer ramus and has a long apical seta. The male of H. truncata is undescribed and while it may be similar to H. laevis , the characteristics of the H. truncata female are insufficient to hypothesize the form of the male for comparison. : Published as part of King, Rachael A., Myers, Alan A. & McGrath, David, 2004, A review of shallow-water Irish and British Harpinia Boeck (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Phoxocephalidae) species including the first detailed descriptions of the males of Harpinia laevis Sars and Harpinia pectinata Sars, pp. 1263-1286 in Journal of Natural History 38 (10) on pages 1273-1277, DOI: 10.1080/0022293031000079598