Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968

Bathycalanus unicornis Björnberg, 1968 (Figs 46, 81–86) Bathycalanus unicornis Björnberg, 1968, pp 73–75, figs 1–14. Type locality. 40.767o S, 76. 800o W. Material examined. MV 73-I, Stn 53, IKMT, 0–2000 m, 2♀ (9.8, 10.2 mm), 2♂ (8.3, 8.8 mm). ANTXXIV/1, Stn 8, MOC10, 2990– 3992...

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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.6029191
https://zenodo.org/record/6029191
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6029191
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
Bathycalanus
Bathycalanus unicornis
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Calanoida
Megacalanidae
Bathycalanus
Bathycalanus unicornis
Bradford-Grieve, Janet M.
Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio
Boxshall, Geoffrey A.
Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Calanoida
Megacalanidae
Bathycalanus
Bathycalanus unicornis
description Bathycalanus unicornis Björnberg, 1968 (Figs 46, 81–86) Bathycalanus unicornis Björnberg, 1968, pp 73–75, figs 1–14. Type locality. 40.767o S, 76. 800o W. Material examined. MV 73-I, Stn 53, IKMT, 0–2000 m, 2&female; (9.8, 10.2 mm), 2&male; (8.3, 8.8 mm). ANTXXIV/1, Stn 8, MOC10, 2990– 3992 m, 2&female; (9.3, 9.6 mm). Eltanin, Stn 175, IKMT, 2893 m, 1&female; Holotype USNM 122566. Records from Natural History Museum, London: Discovery Stns, RMT8: 8508#78, 2500–3100 m, 3&female; (9.3, 9.3, 9.4 mm) BMNH 1993.859-861; 8509#20, 3000–3500 m, 1&female; (9.35 mm), BMNH 1993.858; 8509#27, 3500–4000 m, 2&female; (10.0 mm, 1 damaged) BMNH 1993.862-863. Morphological description. Following description based on specimen from MV73-1, Stn 53. As for genus with following specific level features. Female (Fig. 81 A–C). Total length 10.5 mm (mean = 9.6 mm, range = 9.3–10.2 mm, n = 9). Anterior margin of head in dorsal view produced into single spine-like process, curved ventrally with ventral barb near tip. In lateral view, posterolateral corners of pedigerous somite 5 symmetrical, short and rounded, not extending posterior to widest part of genital double-somite. Genital double-somite symmetrical in dorsal view, widest at about anterior one eighth, 1.2 times longer than wide, seminal receptacles not observed. Antennule (Fig. 82) extending beyond caudal rami by about 5–6 segments. 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 (308, 623); II–IV (365); V (217); VI (256); VII (315); VIII (305); IX (303); X–XI (537); XII (345); XIII (367); XIV (429); XV (552); XVI (675); XVII (737); XVIII (892); XIX (926); XX (1032); XXI (1059); XXII (778); XXIII (727); XXIV (872); XXV (842); XXVI (389); XXVII (741); XXVIII (38). Anterior and posterior borders of ancestral segments XVI–XXI smooth. Antenna (Fig. 83 A) exopod segment IV with short seta extending to distal border of segment VIII and bearing short setules. Maxillule (Fig. 83 D) praecoxal arthrite with 14 setae including 3 on posterior surface and 2 setae on anterior surface, one of them small; coxal endite without setae, basal endites 1 and 2 with 2 and 4 setae respectively; endopod segments with 2/3, 2, 5+1 smaller anterior surface seta. Maxilliped (Fig. 81 E) syncoxal endite 4 longest, toothed seta extending beyond distal border of endopod segment 2. Leg 1 (Fig. 81 D) exopod with articulation between exopod segments 2 and 3 well developed; distolateral corner of endopod segment 1 bilobed. Male (Fig. 85 A–C). Total length 8.8, 8.3 mm. Anterior margin of head in dorsal view produced into single spine-like process curved ventrally, with ventral barb near tip. In lateral view, posterior corners of pedigerous somite 5 rounded, extending almost to posterior border of urosomite I. Antennule (Figs 85 D, 86) extends beyond caudal rami by about 5–6 segments on left. Left antennule similar to that of female. Right ancestral segment XVIII widened by anterior border ridge—2ms, 1a; XIX with proximal ridge—1ms, 1 fused element with free tip, 1a; XX—with 1 long fused element with free tip, 1ms, 1a; XXI–XXIII—2 fused elements with free tips (proximal element largely overlapping distal element), 1a, 1 vestigial s?, 1ms. Leg 5 (Fig. 85 E–G) extending just beyond third free urosomite, asymmetrically developed; left leg slightly longer than right leg, outer borders of exopod segments without surface thickenings. Right exopod segment 2, inner border seta in form of short thickened proximal part and apparently articulated tapering distal part. Inner border of right exopod segment 3 naked apart from proximal setules. Left exopod segment 2 inner border specialised seta in form of spherical proximal part with outer naked rounded lobe and inner pair of long lashes clothed in very long setules. Inner border of left exopod segment 3 irregular in shape, bordered by setules from proximal to near inner spine. Remarks. This is the second time Ba. unicornis has been recorded since its original discovery off Valdivia, Chile (Björnberg 1968). Here, we have corrected some observations, highlighted additional characters distinguishing the female of this species from other Bathycalanus and added a description of the male. Morphological variation. There appears to be some variation in the setation of the maxillule as there may be 2 or 3 setae on endopod segment 1 in the same individual, although it is not possible to be sure if this observed variation is due to damage. Distribution. The present records extend the distribution into the Atlantic Ocean over the abyssal plain off Namibia and northwards into the eastern Pacific to off the coast of Mexico (Fig. 46, Table 1) (Björnberg 1968). Bathycalanus unicornis is an upper abyssopelagic species taken from depths <2000 to> 3000 m. Species comparisons. Bathycalanus unicornis is unique amongst Bathycalanus in several respects (Table 10): 1) the anterior head has 1 large barbed spine-like process projecting anteriorly and curving ventrally; 2) the genital double-somite, in dorsal view, is 1.2 times longer than wide and the widest part is at the anterior one eighth; 3) the posterolateral borders of pedigerous somite 5 are very short and rounded in lateral view; 4) the maxillule has 3 posterior surface setae on the praecoxal arthrite; 5) the male leg 5 is unique among currently known Bathycalanus in having a setal remnant on the inner border of the right exopod segment 2; and 6) in having 2 moderately long setulose lashes on the inner specialised seta of left exopod segment 2. : 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 123-127, 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 Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968
title_short Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968
title_full Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968
title_fullStr Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968
title_full_unstemmed Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968
title_sort bathycalanus unicornis bjornberg 1968
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029191
https://zenodo.org/record/6029191
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.233,-55.233,-61.250,-61.250)
ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
Blanco
Seta
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
Blanco
Seta
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6029191 2023-05-15T14:04:27+02:00 Bathycalanus unicornis Bjornberg 1968 Bradford-Grieve, Janet M. Blanco-Bercial, Leocadio Boxshall, Geoffrey A. 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029191 https://zenodo.org/record/6029191 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC54111BB7AFFBB0129672DFFD4026A http://table.plazi.org/id/DF2AD8F7BB7CFFBD01506504F8E5003D http://table.plazi.org/id/DF2AD8F7BB20FFE1015E6520FBBA0056 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.293525 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311097 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293561 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311102 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311103 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311108 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293565 http://table.plazi.org/id/DF2AD8F7BB7CFFBD01506504F8E5003D http://table.plazi.org/id/DF2AD8F7BB20FFE1015E6520FBBA0056 http://zoobank.org/BCDF8F6F-B8B4-4A9D-A8B8-7EDCEF1100BE https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029192 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 Bathycalanus Bathycalanus unicornis article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6029191 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293480 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293525 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311097 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293561 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.311102 https://doi.or 2022-04-01T09:41:59Z Bathycalanus unicornis Björnberg, 1968 (Figs 46, 81–86) Bathycalanus unicornis Björnberg, 1968, pp 73–75, figs 1–14. Type locality. 40.767o S, 76. 800o W. Material examined. MV 73-I, Stn 53, IKMT, 0–2000 m, 2&female; (9.8, 10.2 mm), 2&male; (8.3, 8.8 mm). ANTXXIV/1, Stn 8, MOC10, 2990– 3992 m, 2&female; (9.3, 9.6 mm). Eltanin, Stn 175, IKMT, 2893 m, 1&female; Holotype USNM 122566. Records from Natural History Museum, London: Discovery Stns, RMT8: 8508#78, 2500–3100 m, 3&female; (9.3, 9.3, 9.4 mm) BMNH 1993.859-861; 8509#20, 3000–3500 m, 1&female; (9.35 mm), BMNH 1993.858; 8509#27, 3500–4000 m, 2&female; (10.0 mm, 1 damaged) BMNH 1993.862-863. Morphological description. Following description based on specimen from MV73-1, Stn 53. As for genus with following specific level features. Female (Fig. 81 A–C). Total length 10.5 mm (mean = 9.6 mm, range = 9.3–10.2 mm, n = 9). Anterior margin of head in dorsal view produced into single spine-like process, curved ventrally with ventral barb near tip. In lateral view, posterolateral corners of pedigerous somite 5 symmetrical, short and rounded, not extending posterior to widest part of genital double-somite. Genital double-somite symmetrical in dorsal view, widest at about anterior one eighth, 1.2 times longer than wide, seminal receptacles not observed. Antennule (Fig. 82) extending beyond caudal rami by about 5–6 segments. 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 (308, 623); II–IV (365); V (217); VI (256); VII (315); VIII (305); IX (303); X–XI (537); XII (345); XIII (367); XIV (429); XV (552); XVI (675); XVII (737); XVIII (892); XIX (926); XX (1032); XXI (1059); XXII (778); XXIII (727); XXIV (872); XXV (842); XXVI (389); XXVII (741); XXVIII (38). Anterior and posterior borders of ancestral segments XVI–XXI smooth. Antenna (Fig. 83 A) exopod segment IV with short seta extending to distal border of segment VIII and bearing short setules. Maxillule (Fig. 83 D) praecoxal arthrite with 14 setae including 3 on posterior surface and 2 setae on anterior surface, one of them small; coxal endite without setae, basal endites 1 and 2 with 2 and 4 setae respectively; endopod segments with 2/3, 2, 5+1 smaller anterior surface seta. Maxilliped (Fig. 81 E) syncoxal endite 4 longest, toothed seta extending beyond distal border of endopod segment 2. Leg 1 (Fig. 81 D) exopod with articulation between exopod segments 2 and 3 well developed; distolateral corner of endopod segment 1 bilobed. Male (Fig. 85 A–C). Total length 8.8, 8.3 mm. Anterior margin of head in dorsal view produced into single spine-like process curved ventrally, with ventral barb near tip. In lateral view, posterior corners of pedigerous somite 5 rounded, extending almost to posterior border of urosomite I. Antennule (Figs 85 D, 86) extends beyond caudal rami by about 5–6 segments on left. Left antennule similar to that of female. Right ancestral segment XVIII widened by anterior border ridge—2ms, 1a; XIX with proximal ridge—1ms, 1 fused element with free tip, 1a; XX—with 1 long fused element with free tip, 1ms, 1a; XXI–XXIII—2 fused elements with free tips (proximal element largely overlapping distal element), 1a, 1 vestigial s?, 1ms. Leg 5 (Fig. 85 E–G) extending just beyond third free urosomite, asymmetrically developed; left leg slightly longer than right leg, outer borders of exopod segments without surface thickenings. Right exopod segment 2, inner border seta in form of short thickened proximal part and apparently articulated tapering distal part. Inner border of right exopod segment 3 naked apart from proximal setules. Left exopod segment 2 inner border specialised seta in form of spherical proximal part with outer naked rounded lobe and inner pair of long lashes clothed in very long setules. Inner border of left exopod segment 3 irregular in shape, bordered by setules from proximal to near inner spine. Remarks. This is the second time Ba. unicornis has been recorded since its original discovery off Valdivia, Chile (Björnberg 1968). Here, we have corrected some observations, highlighted additional characters distinguishing the female of this species from other Bathycalanus and added a description of the male. Morphological variation. There appears to be some variation in the setation of the maxillule as there may be 2 or 3 setae on endopod segment 1 in the same individual, although it is not possible to be sure if this observed variation is due to damage. Distribution. The present records extend the distribution into the Atlantic Ocean over the abyssal plain off Namibia and northwards into the eastern Pacific to off the coast of Mexico (Fig. 46, Table 1) (Björnberg 1968). Bathycalanus unicornis is an upper abyssopelagic species taken from depths <2000 to> 3000 m. Species comparisons. Bathycalanus unicornis is unique amongst Bathycalanus in several respects (Table 10): 1) the anterior head has 1 large barbed spine-like process projecting anteriorly and curving ventrally; 2) the genital double-somite, in dorsal view, is 1.2 times longer than wide and the widest part is at the anterior one eighth; 3) the posterolateral borders of pedigerous somite 5 are very short and rounded in lateral view; 4) the maxillule has 3 posterior surface setae on the praecoxal arthrite; 5) the male leg 5 is unique among currently known Bathycalanus in having a setal remnant on the inner border of the right exopod segment 2; and 6) in having 2 moderately long setulose lashes on the inner specialised seta of left exopod segment 2. : 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 123-127, 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)