Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968

Bradycalanus enormis Björnberg, 1968 (Figs 24–29) Bradycalanus pseudotypicus enormis Björnberg, 1968, pp 85–89, figs 64–77. Type locality. 40.766o S 76.800o W. Material examined. ANTXXIV/1, Stn 6, MOC10, 0–5038 m, 1♀ (16.5 mm), Co360.1.1. Eltanin Stn 175, IKMT, 2893 m, 1♂ (13.0 m...

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Main Authors: Bradford-Grieve, Janet M., Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio, Boxshall, Geoffrey A.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029166
https://zenodo.org/record/6029166
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6029166
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
Calanoida
Megacalanidae
Bradycalanus
Bradycalanus enormis
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Calanoida
Megacalanidae
Bradycalanus
Bradycalanus enormis
Bradford-Grieve, Janet M.
Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio
Boxshall, Geoffrey A.
Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Calanoida
Megacalanidae
Bradycalanus
Bradycalanus enormis
description Bradycalanus enormis Björnberg, 1968 (Figs 24–29) Bradycalanus pseudotypicus enormis Björnberg, 1968, pp 85–89, figs 64–77. Type locality. 40.766o S 76.800o W. Material examined. ANTXXIV/1, Stn 6, MOC10, 0–5038 m, 1&female; (16.5 mm), Co360.1.1. Eltanin Stn 175, IKMT, 2893 m, 1&male; (13.0 mm), Holotype USNM 122577. MV73-1, Stn 53, IKMT, 0–2000 m, 7&female; (15.8–17.1 mm). Records from Natural History Museum, London: Discovery Stns, RMT8: 8508#78, 2500–3100 m, 1&female; (15.8 mm), BMNH 2015.2936; 8509#20, 3000–3500 m, 1&female; (15.3 mm), BMNH 1993.1462. Additional records from Smithsonian Institution, USNM numbers: 122577, 302082, 299634, 269510. Genetic material. Co360.1.1. GenBank numbers in Table 6. Morphological description. As for genus with following specific level features. Female (Fig. 24–28). Total length 16.36 mm, (mean 15.5 mm, range 14.1–17.1 mm, n = 8). Anterior margin of head in dorsal view rounded, without projection (Figs 24 A, B). Pedigerous somite 5 in lateral view extended into triangular lappets terminating in short point or triangular spine (Fig. 24 A). Genital double-somite in dorsal view widest at anterior one third. Antennule (Figs 24 F, 25) extending about 7 segments beyond caudal rami; lengths of antennule segments (µm) as follows. Measurements taken along posterior border of each segment but two (posterior (shortest) and anterior) measurements taken of ancestral segment I. I (370, 1101); II–IV (1101); V (407); VI (443); VII (512); VIII (500); IX (505); X–XI (948); XII (751); XIII (782); XIV (979); XV (1115); XVI (1160); XVII (1223); XVIII (1220); XIX (1268); XX (1273); XXI (1376); XXII (1069); XXIII (1000); XXIV (1005); XXV (866); XXVI (421); XXVII (-); XXVIII (-). Antenna (Fig. 26 A) exopod segments I–III each with short but well-developed seta, segment IV with welldeveloped seta extending as far as distal border of segment VIII. Maxillule (Fig. 26 E–G) coxal endite with 5 setae, one of them short; endopod segment 2 with one long and 1 vestigial seta, segment 3 with posterior surface seta short. Leg 1 (Fig. 24 G) exopod segment 3, about 2.7 times as long as maximum width; distal border of endopod segment 1 extends as far as distal border of exopod segment 1; exopod outer spines: on segment 1 extends less than half way along segment 2; on segment 2 extends half distance to first spine on segment 3; segment 3 proximal spine extends almost to base of distal spine. Male (Figs 31 –34: Br. typicus ). Total length 13.0 mm. Anterior head rounded in dorsal view. Pedigerous somite 5 in lateral view slightly pointed. Antennule could not be checked as the holotype slide of Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) does not have the antennules. Antenna exopod segments I–IV each with less well-developed setae than in female; maxillule endopod segment 1 with 2 setae, segment 2 with 1 seta. Leg 1 could not be checked because the holotype slide of Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) does not have leg 1. Leg 5 (Fig. 28 E, F) left exopod segment 2 specialised seta tapering, with small proximal tapering projection on outer margin; specialised seta in form of long setulose lash extending short of distal border of endopod segment 3; inner border of left exopod segment 3 setulose with inner articulated spine inserted just proximal to second outer (terminal) spine; inner border of right exopod segment 3 naked and without notches, inner articulated spine inserted distal of first outer border spine. Remarks. The description of Björnberg (1968) differs from the present description in some details but examination of the variety Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) revealed that the mouthparts and leg 1 are identical to the specimens examined here; the holotype slide of Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) does not have the antennules, nor leg 1 so these could not be checked. Based on the genetic distance data for ITS1 and ITS2 markers (see Tables 16, 17), this variety has been raised to specific rank. Distribution. Bradycalanus enormis is an abyssopelagic species taken from 2000 m to <5000 m. It is has been found in the southeastern Pacific and Atlantic Oceans (Fig. 29, Table 1). Species comparisons. Females of Br. enormis are distinguished morphologically from their closest relative, Br. typicus , only by their large size. Bradycalanus enormis appear to be greater than 15 mm long but we cannot be certain of the identity of specimens between 13–15 mm total length. The majority of female Br. typicus are 11–12 mm long with fewer specimens 12–13 mm and longer. Females of Br. enormis and Br. typicus have the same mouthpart setation (Table 8). Males similarly vary in length ( Br. enormis : 13.0 mm, Br. typicus : 11.0– 11.3 mm). Males are possibly distinguished by the more distal insertion of the inner spine on the right leg 5 exopod segment 3 relative to the outer spine and the lack of a notch in the inner border ( Br. typicus has inner spine inserted opposite the outer spine and the inner border is notched). Females of Br. enormis can be distinguished from Br. gigas by its triangular to pointed posterior corners of pedigerous somite 5 (rounded in Br. gigas ), by its long antennule extending about 7 segments beyond the caudal rami (3 segments in Br. gigas ) and leg 1 outer border spines of exopod segments 1 and 2 which are short and not extending as far as the base of following spine (long in Br. gigas , extending to the base of the following spine). : Published as part of Bradford-Grieve, Janet M., Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio & Boxshall, Geoffrey A., 2017, Revision of Family Megacalanidae (Copepoda: Calanoida), pp. 1-183 in Zootaxa 4229 (1) on pages 53-59, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.293480 : {"references": ["Bjornberg, T. K. S. (1968) Four new species of Megacalanidae (Crustacea: Copepoda). Antarctic Research Series, 11, 73 - 90."]}
format Text
author Bradford-Grieve, Janet M.
Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio
Boxshall, Geoffrey A.
author_facet Bradford-Grieve, Janet M.
Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio
Boxshall, Geoffrey A.
author_sort Bradford-Grieve, Janet M.
title Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968
title_short Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968
title_full Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968
title_fullStr Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968
title_full_unstemmed Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968
title_sort bradycalanus enormis bjornberg 1968
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029166
https://zenodo.org/record/6029166
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.233,-55.233,-61.250,-61.250)
ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
ENVELOPE(-55.765,-55.765,49.533,49.533)
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
Blanco
Seta
Short Point
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
Blanco
Seta
Short Point
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029166
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6029166 2023-05-15T14:04:27+02:00 Bradycalanus enormis Bjornberg 1968 Bradford-Grieve, Janet M. Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio Boxshall, Geoffrey A. 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029166 https://zenodo.org/record/6029166 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC54111BB7AFFBB0129672DFFD4026A http://table.plazi.org/id/DF2AD8F7BB7CFFBD01506504F8E5003D http://zoobank.org/BCDF8F6F-B8B4-4A9D-A8B8-7EDCEF1100BE https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293480 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC54111BB7AFFBB0129672DFFD4026A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.310997 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.310999 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311002 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311004 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311007 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293509 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311012 http://table.plazi.org/id/DF2AD8F7BB7CFFBD01506504F8E5003D http://zoobank.org/BCDF8F6F-B8B4-4A9D-A8B8-7EDCEF1100BE https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029165 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 Calanoida Megacalanidae Bradycalanus Bradycalanus enormis article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029166 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293480 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.310997 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.310999 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311002 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311004 https://doi.or 2022-04-01T09:41:59Z Bradycalanus enormis Björnberg, 1968 (Figs 24–29) Bradycalanus pseudotypicus enormis Björnberg, 1968, pp 85–89, figs 64–77. Type locality. 40.766o S 76.800o W. Material examined. ANTXXIV/1, Stn 6, MOC10, 0–5038 m, 1&female; (16.5 mm), Co360.1.1. Eltanin Stn 175, IKMT, 2893 m, 1&male; (13.0 mm), Holotype USNM 122577. MV73-1, Stn 53, IKMT, 0–2000 m, 7&female; (15.8–17.1 mm). Records from Natural History Museum, London: Discovery Stns, RMT8: 8508#78, 2500–3100 m, 1&female; (15.8 mm), BMNH 2015.2936; 8509#20, 3000–3500 m, 1&female; (15.3 mm), BMNH 1993.1462. Additional records from Smithsonian Institution, USNM numbers: 122577, 302082, 299634, 269510. Genetic material. Co360.1.1. GenBank numbers in Table 6. Morphological description. As for genus with following specific level features. Female (Fig. 24–28). Total length 16.36 mm, (mean 15.5 mm, range 14.1–17.1 mm, n = 8). Anterior margin of head in dorsal view rounded, without projection (Figs 24 A, B). Pedigerous somite 5 in lateral view extended into triangular lappets terminating in short point or triangular spine (Fig. 24 A). Genital double-somite in dorsal view widest at anterior one third. Antennule (Figs 24 F, 25) extending about 7 segments beyond caudal rami; lengths of antennule segments (µm) as follows. Measurements taken along posterior border of each segment but two (posterior (shortest) and anterior) measurements taken of ancestral segment I. I (370, 1101); II–IV (1101); V (407); VI (443); VII (512); VIII (500); IX (505); X–XI (948); XII (751); XIII (782); XIV (979); XV (1115); XVI (1160); XVII (1223); XVIII (1220); XIX (1268); XX (1273); XXI (1376); XXII (1069); XXIII (1000); XXIV (1005); XXV (866); XXVI (421); XXVII (-); XXVIII (-). Antenna (Fig. 26 A) exopod segments I–III each with short but well-developed seta, segment IV with welldeveloped seta extending as far as distal border of segment VIII. Maxillule (Fig. 26 E–G) coxal endite with 5 setae, one of them short; endopod segment 2 with one long and 1 vestigial seta, segment 3 with posterior surface seta short. Leg 1 (Fig. 24 G) exopod segment 3, about 2.7 times as long as maximum width; distal border of endopod segment 1 extends as far as distal border of exopod segment 1; exopod outer spines: on segment 1 extends less than half way along segment 2; on segment 2 extends half distance to first spine on segment 3; segment 3 proximal spine extends almost to base of distal spine. Male (Figs 31 –34: Br. typicus ). Total length 13.0 mm. Anterior head rounded in dorsal view. Pedigerous somite 5 in lateral view slightly pointed. Antennule could not be checked as the holotype slide of Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) does not have the antennules. Antenna exopod segments I–IV each with less well-developed setae than in female; maxillule endopod segment 1 with 2 setae, segment 2 with 1 seta. Leg 1 could not be checked because the holotype slide of Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) does not have leg 1. Leg 5 (Fig. 28 E, F) left exopod segment 2 specialised seta tapering, with small proximal tapering projection on outer margin; specialised seta in form of long setulose lash extending short of distal border of endopod segment 3; inner border of left exopod segment 3 setulose with inner articulated spine inserted just proximal to second outer (terminal) spine; inner border of right exopod segment 3 naked and without notches, inner articulated spine inserted distal of first outer border spine. Remarks. The description of Björnberg (1968) differs from the present description in some details but examination of the variety Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) revealed that the mouthparts and leg 1 are identical to the specimens examined here; the holotype slide of Br. pseudotypicus enormis (USNM 122577) does not have the antennules, nor leg 1 so these could not be checked. Based on the genetic distance data for ITS1 and ITS2 markers (see Tables 16, 17), this variety has been raised to specific rank. Distribution. Bradycalanus enormis is an abyssopelagic species taken from 2000 m to <5000 m. It is has been found in the southeastern Pacific and Atlantic Oceans (Fig. 29, Table 1). Species comparisons. Females of Br. enormis are distinguished morphologically from their closest relative, Br. typicus , only by their large size. Bradycalanus enormis appear to be greater than 15 mm long but we cannot be certain of the identity of specimens between 13–15 mm total length. The majority of female Br. typicus are 11–12 mm long with fewer specimens 12–13 mm and longer. Females of Br. enormis and Br. typicus have the same mouthpart setation (Table 8). Males similarly vary in length ( Br. enormis : 13.0 mm, Br. typicus : 11.0– 11.3 mm). Males are possibly distinguished by the more distal insertion of the inner spine on the right leg 5 exopod segment 3 relative to the outer spine and the lack of a notch in the inner border ( Br. typicus has inner spine inserted opposite the outer spine and the inner border is notched). Females of Br. enormis can be distinguished from Br. gigas by its triangular to pointed posterior corners of pedigerous somite 5 (rounded in Br. gigas ), by its long antennule extending about 7 segments beyond the caudal rami (3 segments in Br. gigas ) and leg 1 outer border spines of exopod segments 1 and 2 which are short and not extending as far as the base of following spine (long in Br. gigas , extending to the base of the following spine). : Published as part of Bradford-Grieve, Janet M., Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio & Boxshall, Geoffrey A., 2017, Revision of Family Megacalanidae (Copepoda: Calanoida), pp. 1-183 in Zootaxa 4229 (1) on pages 53-59, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.293480 : {"references": ["Bjornberg, T. K. S. (1968) Four new species of Megacalanidae (Crustacea: Copepoda). Antarctic Research Series, 11, 73 - 90."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Pacific Blanco ENVELOPE(-55.233,-55.233,-61.250,-61.250) Seta ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645) Short Point ENVELOPE(-55.765,-55.765,49.533,49.533)