Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955

Eubrachiella sublobulata (Barnard, 1955) (Figs 8–13) Syn. Parabrachiella sublobulata (Piasecki et al . 2010) Neobrachiella sublobulata (Ho & Takeuch 1996) Material examined. 8 females (1 dissected) and two detached males (S.A.M A 7611) from the gill filaments of the smooth horse fish Congiopodus...

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Main Authors: Lebepe, Modjadji C., Dippenaar, Susan M.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6066996
https://zenodo.org/record/6066996
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6066996
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
Siphonostomatoida
Lernaeopodidae
Eubrachiella
Eubrachiella sublobulata
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Siphonostomatoida
Lernaeopodidae
Eubrachiella
Eubrachiella sublobulata
Lebepe, Modjadji C.
Dippenaar, Susan M.
Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Maxillopoda
Siphonostomatoida
Lernaeopodidae
Eubrachiella
Eubrachiella sublobulata
description Eubrachiella sublobulata (Barnard, 1955) (Figs 8–13) Syn. Parabrachiella sublobulata (Piasecki et al . 2010) Neobrachiella sublobulata (Ho & Takeuch 1996) Material examined. 8 females (1 dissected) and two detached males (S.A.M A 7611) from the gill filaments of the smooth horse fish Congiopodus torvus (Gronow) off Table Bay deposited in the Iziko South African Museum. Description of adult female. Body length, excluding egg sacs about 2.1 mm (Fig. 3 A) and 2.5 mm (Fig. 3 B). Cephalothorax (1.0 mm and 1.1 mm, respectively), cylindrical, about as long as trunk (0.8 mm and 0.9 mm, respectively); anterior part slightly expanded to form head, inclined almost at right angle to long axis of posterior part, dorsally covered by well developed, dorsal shield (Figs 3 A, B). Trunk cylindrical, about as wide as long with conical protuberances anterolaterally and anterodorsally, posteriorly with numerous, unequally sized protuberances (vestiges of posterior processes (see Ho & Takeuch 1996)). Genital process not observed. Egg sacs (Figs 3 A, B) about 0.8mm and 1.6mm respectively, with multiseriate egg arrangements. Antennule (Fig. 3 C) 3 -segmented; segments 1 and 2 unarmed; distal segment short, armed with five unequal elements; digitiform seta 4 elongate, tubercles 1 and 2 short, slender seta 6 elongate, seta 5 and tubercle 3 not observed (see Kabata 1979). Antenna (Fig. 3 D) biramous, bulbous exopod with numerous, short denticles and 2 prominent spines distomedially; endopod 2 -segmented, segment 1 short, unarmed; distal segment with prominent hook 1, slender seta 2 and denticulated process 4; conical processes 3 and 5 not observed (see Kabata 1979). Mandible (Fig. 3 E) with dental formula P 1, S 1, P 1, S 1, P 1, S 1, B 4. Maxillule (Fig. 3 F) bilobed; palp (outer lobe) small, tipped with 2 short setae; endite (inner lobe) larger, terminally armed with 2 papillae tipped with setae and 1 shorter seta near base of papillae. Maxillae (Fig. 3 A) (0.4 µm) about half length of cephalothorax, united only at bulla; latter (Figs 3 G, H) with short manubrium and circular anchor. Maxilliped (Fig. 3 I) with broad corpus, myxal area with two denticulated swellings and 1 short seta in the middle; subchela elongate, armed with 1 short seta proximally, distomedially with sparsely denticulated margin; barb slender, about half length of claw; latter tapering, slightly curved with rounded tip, with short auxiliary tooth near base. Description of adult male. Body (Figs 4 A, B) (1.4mm) divided into anterior cephalothorax (0.6mm) and posterior genito-abdominal complex (0.6 mm). Latter, obtusely flexed with long axis of cephalothorax, with distinctive furrow separating it from cephalothorax. Cephalothorax covered with dorsal carapace. Caudal rami short, tipped with 2 apical setae. Antennule (Fig. 4 C) 3 -segmented; segment 1 with elongate whip reaching base of distal segment; segment 2 unarmed; distal segment armed with 3 setae of varying lengths and 2 short tubercles. Antenna (Fig. 4 D) biramous; 2 -segmented endopod larger than exopod; latter armed with 2 prominent spines; endopod segment 1 with patch of short denticles, segment 2 with well-developed dorsal hook 1, slender seta 2 elongate and process 4 armed with short spines (tubercle 3 and process 5 not observed) (see Kabata 1979). Mandible not observed. Maxillule (Fig. 4 E) similar to that of female. Maxilla (Fig. 4 F) with bulbous corpus, myxal area raised to receive tip of claw; subchela short, with bent claw not clearly delimited from subchela. Maxilliped (Fig. 4 G) with strong corpus, myxal area armed with conical outgrowth edged with rows of short denticles; subchela short, with curved claw bearing auxiliary tooth near base. Remarks. Eubrachiella sublobulata was originally described from specimens collected from the gill filaments of C. torvus off Table Bay. However, due to incomplete information about the structure and armature of the appendages it was tentatively transferred to the genus Neobrachiella (Ho & Takeuch 1996). Piasecki et al. (2010) transferred all Neobrachiella species to Parabrachiella and thus N. sublobulata became Parabrachiella sublobulata . A thorough re-examination of the original material revealed that even though the majority of morphological characteristics of the appendages of both males and females are almost identical to species of the genus Parabrachiella , they differed from Parabrachiella species by the presence of numerous, unequal protuberances (vestiges of posterior processes) present posteriorly on the female trunk instead of well-developed posterior processes as in Parabrachiella . Additionally, the transverse constriction separating the male posterior genito-abdominal complex from the cephalothorax and the anteriorly flexed posterior extremity that points forward is also different from those in Parabrachiella species. Thus, this species should remain a member of the genus Eubrachiella . Currently there are two valid species, namely E. gaini and E. antarctica both reported from teleosts of Antarctic waters (Ho & Takeuch 1996). Eubrachiella sublobulata can be distinguished from these species by the cylindrical trunk of the adult female which is about as wide as long, with short distinct protuberances anterolaterally and anterodorsally as well as a posterior margin edged with numerous, unequal protuberances (vestiges of posterior processes). The female E. antarctica has a quadrangular trunk which is about as wide as long with the posterior margin bearing a short genital process with no traces of posterior processes and E. gaini female has a wider than long trunk bearing a broad, dorsal tubercle on the posterior margin and 2 similar tubercles on the posterolateral margin (Ho & Takeuch 1996). Kabata (1967) suggested that the short protuberances present anterolaterally and anterodorsally on the trunk in Eubrachiella species could indicate variation within the genus. Thus, although the protuberances are absent in E. antarctica , there are few short, non-prominent protuberances along the lateral and dorsal margins of the trunk of E. gaini compared to the numerous, well-developed protuberances anterodorsally and anterolaterally on the trunk of E. sublobulata (Figs. 3 A, B). Eubrachiella sublobulata thus represents a different geographical location and host record for Eubrachiella species which were previously only reported from Chaenocephalus aceratus (Lönnberg), Champsocephalus gunnari Lönnberg, Chionodraco hamatus (Lönnberg), Gobionotothen gibberrifrons (Lönnberg), Prionodraco evansii Regan, Pseudochaenichthys georgianus Norman, Dissotichus mawsoni Norman, Chionodraco hamatus (Lönnberg), Trematomus hansoni Boulenger, Trematomus scotti (Boulenger), Trematomus bernacchii Boulenger and Channichthys rhinoceratus Richardson, in Antarctic waters (Ho & Takeuch 1996). : Published as part of Lebepe, Modjadji C. & Dippenaar, Susan M., 2016, Barnard's Brachiella sp., Parabrachiella supplicans (Barnard, 1955) and Eubrachiella sublobulata (Barnard, 1955) (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida: Lernaeopodidae) deposited in the Iziko South African Museum, pp. 51-60 in Zootaxa 4061 (1) on pages 56-58, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4061.1.5, http://zenodo.org/record/270370
format Text
author Lebepe, Modjadji C.
Dippenaar, Susan M.
author_facet Lebepe, Modjadji C.
Dippenaar, Susan M.
author_sort Lebepe, Modjadji C.
title Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955
title_short Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955
title_full Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955
title_fullStr Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955
title_full_unstemmed Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955
title_sort eubrachiella sublobulata barnard 1955
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6066996
https://zenodo.org/record/6066996
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
ENVELOPE(69.216,69.216,-49.533,-49.533)
ENVELOPE(157.156,157.156,62.126,62.126)
geographic Antarctic
Seta
Table Bay
Kabata
geographic_facet Antarctic
Seta
Table Bay
Kabata
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
E. Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
E. Antarctica
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6066996
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6066996 2023-05-15T13:35:56+02:00 Eubrachiella sublobulata Barnard 1955 Lebepe, Modjadji C. Dippenaar, Susan M. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6066996 https://zenodo.org/record/6066996 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/270370 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFCCE27CFFFFFF891125D20EE01D5927 http://zoobank.org/8B48A8C2-9E90-46CA-9A79-3B2392026CB5 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4061.1.5 http://zenodo.org/record/270370 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFCCE27CFFFFFF891125D20EE01D5927 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.270373 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.270374 http://zoobank.org/8B48A8C2-9E90-46CA-9A79-3B2392026CB5 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6066997 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 Siphonostomatoida Lernaeopodidae Eubrachiella Eubrachiella sublobulata article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6066996 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4061.1.5 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.270373 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.270374 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6066997 2022-04-01T10:11:52Z Eubrachiella sublobulata (Barnard, 1955) (Figs 8–13) Syn. Parabrachiella sublobulata (Piasecki et al . 2010) Neobrachiella sublobulata (Ho & Takeuch 1996) Material examined. 8 females (1 dissected) and two detached males (S.A.M A 7611) from the gill filaments of the smooth horse fish Congiopodus torvus (Gronow) off Table Bay deposited in the Iziko South African Museum. Description of adult female. Body length, excluding egg sacs about 2.1 mm (Fig. 3 A) and 2.5 mm (Fig. 3 B). Cephalothorax (1.0 mm and 1.1 mm, respectively), cylindrical, about as long as trunk (0.8 mm and 0.9 mm, respectively); anterior part slightly expanded to form head, inclined almost at right angle to long axis of posterior part, dorsally covered by well developed, dorsal shield (Figs 3 A, B). Trunk cylindrical, about as wide as long with conical protuberances anterolaterally and anterodorsally, posteriorly with numerous, unequally sized protuberances (vestiges of posterior processes (see Ho & Takeuch 1996)). Genital process not observed. Egg sacs (Figs 3 A, B) about 0.8mm and 1.6mm respectively, with multiseriate egg arrangements. Antennule (Fig. 3 C) 3 -segmented; segments 1 and 2 unarmed; distal segment short, armed with five unequal elements; digitiform seta 4 elongate, tubercles 1 and 2 short, slender seta 6 elongate, seta 5 and tubercle 3 not observed (see Kabata 1979). Antenna (Fig. 3 D) biramous, bulbous exopod with numerous, short denticles and 2 prominent spines distomedially; endopod 2 -segmented, segment 1 short, unarmed; distal segment with prominent hook 1, slender seta 2 and denticulated process 4; conical processes 3 and 5 not observed (see Kabata 1979). Mandible (Fig. 3 E) with dental formula P 1, S 1, P 1, S 1, P 1, S 1, B 4. Maxillule (Fig. 3 F) bilobed; palp (outer lobe) small, tipped with 2 short setae; endite (inner lobe) larger, terminally armed with 2 papillae tipped with setae and 1 shorter seta near base of papillae. Maxillae (Fig. 3 A) (0.4 µm) about half length of cephalothorax, united only at bulla; latter (Figs 3 G, H) with short manubrium and circular anchor. Maxilliped (Fig. 3 I) with broad corpus, myxal area with two denticulated swellings and 1 short seta in the middle; subchela elongate, armed with 1 short seta proximally, distomedially with sparsely denticulated margin; barb slender, about half length of claw; latter tapering, slightly curved with rounded tip, with short auxiliary tooth near base. Description of adult male. Body (Figs 4 A, B) (1.4mm) divided into anterior cephalothorax (0.6mm) and posterior genito-abdominal complex (0.6 mm). Latter, obtusely flexed with long axis of cephalothorax, with distinctive furrow separating it from cephalothorax. Cephalothorax covered with dorsal carapace. Caudal rami short, tipped with 2 apical setae. Antennule (Fig. 4 C) 3 -segmented; segment 1 with elongate whip reaching base of distal segment; segment 2 unarmed; distal segment armed with 3 setae of varying lengths and 2 short tubercles. Antenna (Fig. 4 D) biramous; 2 -segmented endopod larger than exopod; latter armed with 2 prominent spines; endopod segment 1 with patch of short denticles, segment 2 with well-developed dorsal hook 1, slender seta 2 elongate and process 4 armed with short spines (tubercle 3 and process 5 not observed) (see Kabata 1979). Mandible not observed. Maxillule (Fig. 4 E) similar to that of female. Maxilla (Fig. 4 F) with bulbous corpus, myxal area raised to receive tip of claw; subchela short, with bent claw not clearly delimited from subchela. Maxilliped (Fig. 4 G) with strong corpus, myxal area armed with conical outgrowth edged with rows of short denticles; subchela short, with curved claw bearing auxiliary tooth near base. Remarks. Eubrachiella sublobulata was originally described from specimens collected from the gill filaments of C. torvus off Table Bay. However, due to incomplete information about the structure and armature of the appendages it was tentatively transferred to the genus Neobrachiella (Ho & Takeuch 1996). Piasecki et al. (2010) transferred all Neobrachiella species to Parabrachiella and thus N. sublobulata became Parabrachiella sublobulata . A thorough re-examination of the original material revealed that even though the majority of morphological characteristics of the appendages of both males and females are almost identical to species of the genus Parabrachiella , they differed from Parabrachiella species by the presence of numerous, unequal protuberances (vestiges of posterior processes) present posteriorly on the female trunk instead of well-developed posterior processes as in Parabrachiella . Additionally, the transverse constriction separating the male posterior genito-abdominal complex from the cephalothorax and the anteriorly flexed posterior extremity that points forward is also different from those in Parabrachiella species. Thus, this species should remain a member of the genus Eubrachiella . Currently there are two valid species, namely E. gaini and E. antarctica both reported from teleosts of Antarctic waters (Ho & Takeuch 1996). Eubrachiella sublobulata can be distinguished from these species by the cylindrical trunk of the adult female which is about as wide as long, with short distinct protuberances anterolaterally and anterodorsally as well as a posterior margin edged with numerous, unequal protuberances (vestiges of posterior processes). The female E. antarctica has a quadrangular trunk which is about as wide as long with the posterior margin bearing a short genital process with no traces of posterior processes and E. gaini female has a wider than long trunk bearing a broad, dorsal tubercle on the posterior margin and 2 similar tubercles on the posterolateral margin (Ho & Takeuch 1996). Kabata (1967) suggested that the short protuberances present anterolaterally and anterodorsally on the trunk in Eubrachiella species could indicate variation within the genus. Thus, although the protuberances are absent in E. antarctica , there are few short, non-prominent protuberances along the lateral and dorsal margins of the trunk of E. gaini compared to the numerous, well-developed protuberances anterodorsally and anterolaterally on the trunk of E. sublobulata (Figs. 3 A, B). Eubrachiella sublobulata thus represents a different geographical location and host record for Eubrachiella species which were previously only reported from Chaenocephalus aceratus (Lönnberg), Champsocephalus gunnari Lönnberg, Chionodraco hamatus (Lönnberg), Gobionotothen gibberrifrons (Lönnberg), Prionodraco evansii Regan, Pseudochaenichthys georgianus Norman, Dissotichus mawsoni Norman, Chionodraco hamatus (Lönnberg), Trematomus hansoni Boulenger, Trematomus scotti (Boulenger), Trematomus bernacchii Boulenger and Channichthys rhinoceratus Richardson, in Antarctic waters (Ho & Takeuch 1996). : Published as part of Lebepe, Modjadji C. & Dippenaar, Susan M., 2016, Barnard's Brachiella sp., Parabrachiella supplicans (Barnard, 1955) and Eubrachiella sublobulata (Barnard, 1955) (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida: Lernaeopodidae) deposited in the Iziko South African Museum, pp. 51-60 in Zootaxa 4061 (1) on pages 56-58, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4061.1.5, http://zenodo.org/record/270370 Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica E. Antarctica DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Seta ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645) Table Bay ENVELOPE(69.216,69.216,-49.533,-49.533) Kabata ENVELOPE(157.156,157.156,62.126,62.126)