Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864
Hyperoche martinezii (Müller, 1864) (Figs. 4–5) Hyperia Martinezii Müller, 1864: 51 –52, text figs. 44–49. Hyperoche Martinezi — Bovallius 1887 a: 19. Hyperoche Martinezii — Bovallius 1889: 86 (key), 107–111, text fig.; pl. 7, figs. 27–31. Hyperoche martinezi — Steuer 1911: 674 –675 (key). Brusca 19...
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Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Amphipoda Hyperiidae Hyperoche Hyperoche martinezii |
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Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Amphipoda Hyperiidae Hyperoche Hyperoche martinezii Zeidler, Wolfgang Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864 |
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Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Amphipoda Hyperiidae Hyperoche Hyperoche martinezii |
description |
Hyperoche martinezii (Müller, 1864) (Figs. 4–5) Hyperia Martinezii Müller, 1864: 51 –52, text figs. 44–49. Hyperoche Martinezi — Bovallius 1887 a: 19. Hyperoche Martinezii — Bovallius 1889: 86 (key), 107–111, text fig.; pl. 7, figs. 27–31. Hyperoche martinezi — Steuer 1911: 674 –675 (key). Brusca 1981: 10 (list), 41, fig. 7 h. Vinogradov et al. 1982: 282 (key), 286–287, fig. 145. Lin & Chen 1988: 324. Lin & Chen 1994: 115, 118 (table). Lin et al. 1995: 122 (list). Shih & Chen 1995: 84 (key), 86–87, fig. 51. Lin et al. 1996: 229 (table). Vinogradov 1999: 1146 (table). 1186 (incl. key), fig. 4.107. Lowry 2000: 325 (list). Brusca & Hendrickx 2005: 150 (list). Browne et al. 2007: 819 (table), fig. 4 (phylogenetic tree). Garcia-Madrigal 2007: 147, 191 (list). Gasca et al. 2010: 932. Gasca et al. 2012: 126 (table). Hurt et al. 2013: 31 (table), figs. 1–2 (phylogenetic trees). Hyperoche martinezii — Barnard 1930: 415 (key). Pereira 1962: 270 –272, figs. 1–10. Dick 1970: 36 (key), 57, fig. 6. Laval 1980: 18 & 23 (lists), 36–37. Lavaniegos & Ohman 1999: 494 (table). Escobar-Briones et al. 2002: 367 (list). Gasca 2009 a: 88 (table). ? Hyperoche mediterranea [mis-identification; all juveniles, most likely of H. martinezii ]— Steuer 1911: 674 –677 (incl. key); pl. 1, figs. 1–5. Stephensen 1924: 79, fig. 33. Pirlot 1939: 37; pl. 2, figs. 5–6. Harbison et al . 1977: 467, 482 (table). Harbison et al. 1978: 239, 251 (table). Type material. Type material of Hyperia martinezii is most likely lost but the MNHN, Paris, has a male specimen (Am 1429) donated to the museum by Müller, which may represent type material. This may have been the specimen described and illustrated by Bovallius (1889). The type locality is the south-west Atlantic, off Brazil at “Dest erro”. Diagnosis. Females: Sexually mature at about 4–5 mm. Antennae 1 relatively short, about half as long as head, about twice as long as A 2. Head length equal to first two pereonites combined. Pereon globular, length about 1.6 x pleon. Gnathopod 1; basis slightly shorter than remaining articles combined, merus spoon-shaped, projecting under carpus, almost to base of propodus, with fringe of setae on distal margin; carpal process extends just past distal margin of propodus, anterior margin denticulate; posterior and distal margin of propodus also denticulate; dactylus slightly curved, length about 0.4 x propodus. Gnathopod 2 slightly longer and more slender than G 1 but similar in structure except that the merus is not produced under the carpus and lacks the spoon-shaped process. Pereopoda all of similar length. Pereopod 3; basis length almost 4 x merus; carpus with postero-distal corner produced in slight tooth with denticulate margins, length 1.4 x merus and 0.7 x propodus; posterior margin of propodus denticulate; dactylus length about 0.3 x propodus. Pereopod 4 similar in structure to P 3 except the basis is relatively shorter, the carpus is relatively longer and the postero-distal corner of the merus is not as produced. Pereopods 5–7 are similar in size and structure. Pereopod 5; basis length almost twice merus; carpus length about 1.3 x merus, about 0.8 x propodus; dactylus length half propodus. Pereopods 6 & 7; like P 5 but basis relatively longer, and P 7 with coxa fused with pereonite. Epimeral plates with postero-distal corner rounded. Uropod 1; peduncle reaching just past middle of peduncle of U 2 and just past base of peduncle of U 3; inner ramus slightly longer than outer, slightly longer than peduncle. Uropod 2; inner ramus slightly shorter than peduncle, slightly longer than outer ramus. Uropod 3; inner and outer ramus of similar length and width, about 0.7 x peduncle. Telson triangular, marginally longer than wide, slightly longer than half of peduncle of U 3. Males : Sexually mature at about 5–6 mm. Antennae almost as long as entire animal. Pereon and pleon slender, of similar length. Appendages generally more slender than in females, especially the gnathopoda, otherwise very similar in structure and relative lengths of articles, except for the following minor variations. Gnathopoda with merus not projected as far under the carpus. Pereopods 3 & 4 with postero-distal corner of the carpus less prominent. Epimeral plates relatively much longer and deeper. Uropod 1; peduncle extends to 0.7 x peduncle of U 2, to about half peduncle of U 3; inner ramus slightly shorter than peduncle; inner margins of both rami with characteristic proximal excavation. Uropod 3; rami relatively broader and shorter, length about 0.6 x peduncle. Material examined. Mediterranean Sea: Specimens recorded by Stephensen (1924) as H. medusarum 4 juveniles (ZMUC), east of Mallorca [39 ° 27 ’N 05° 26 ’E], Thor stn. 116, 26 June 1910; male, off western Algeria [36 ° 13 ’N 01° 28 ’W], Thor stn. 223, surface, 5 September 1910; male, east of Gibraltar [36 ° 33 ’N 04° 25 ’W], Thor stn. 227, 99 m, 6 September 1910. S.W. Atlantic: Two juvenile males (SAMA C 7932), just north of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil [21 ° 11.2 ’S 40 ° 30 ’W], R/V Almirante Saldanha stn. 6447, surface, 22 August 1984. S.E. Atlantic: Male (ZMUC) [23 ° 26 ’S 03° 56 ’E], Dana stn. 3980 IV, 100 mw, 17 February 1930. South China Sea: Three females & female (ZMUC), north of Borneo [06° 55 ’N 114 °02’E], Dana stns. 3688 II & IV, 3500 & 1000 mw, 8 April 1929. Female & female (ZMUC), adjacent Luzon [11 ° 43 ’N 121 ° 43 ’E], Dana stns. 3734 II & IV, 600 & 100 mw, 27 June 1929. East China Sea: Female & female, male (ZMUC), north of Taiwan [25 ° 11 ’N 122 ° 35 ’E], Dana stn. 3722 IV & V, 100 & 50 mw, 29 May 1929. N.E. Pacific: Six males (ZMUC), Gulf of California, near Isla Angel de le Guarda [29 ° 20 ’N 133 ° 15 ’W], H. Lemche, surface, 9 April 1959. Juvenile female (USNM 1196346), off California [36 ° 22 ’N 122 °06’W], R/V Point Sur , 100–200 m, W.E. Browne. S.W. Pacific: Between New Caledonia and New Zealand (4 lots; ZMUC); male [24 ° 46.5 ’S 170 ° 18.5 ’E], Dana stn. 3610 II, 600 mw, 7 December 1928; male & female, male [25 ° 54 ’S 172 ° 36.9 ’E], Dana stns. 3621 II & 3622 III, 200 & 100 mw, 8 December 1928; male [34 ° 24 ’S 178 ° 42.5 ’E], Dana stn. 3630 II, 2000 mw, 17 December 1928. Female (SAMA C 4585), Tasman Sea, off Newcastle, New South Wales [32 ° 47 ’S 152 ° 40 ’E], CSIRO R/V Warreen , stn. 3 / 40, 200 –0 m, 11 January 1940. North Indian: Female (ZMUC), south of Sri Lanka [04° 26 ’N 85 ° 21 ’E], Dana stn. 3906 IV, 300 mw, 20 November 1929. Female (ZMUC), south of India [05° 28 ’N 80 °08’E], Dana stn. 3910 II, 600 mw, 23 November 1929. Female (ZMUC), near Sri Lanka [06° 36 ’N 79 °06’E], Dana stn. 3913 III, 300 mw, 1 December 1929. Male & two males (ZMUC), south-west of India [03° 14 ’N 75 ° 21 ’E], Dana stns. 3915 II & III, 200 & 300 mw, 3 December 1929. South Indian: Male (SAMA C 7933), Ningaloo Reef, north of Exmouth, Western Australia, S. Wilson, 9 July 1998. Male (ZMUC), near Bali [09°09’S 114 ° 47 ’E], Dana stn. 3804 III, 300 mw, 30 August 1929. Female (ZMUC CRU- 20288), tropical western part [00°07’S 63 ° 56 ’E], Dana stn. 3919 V, 50 mw, 8 December 1929. Male (ZMUC), north-east of Durban [28 ° 18 ’S 33 ° 49 ’E], Dana stn. 3965 II, 200 mw, 17 January 1930. Remarks. This is a relatively small species reaching sexual maturity at about 4–6 mm. Females often have the pereon more inflated than in other species, so that the head is relatively smaller. Sometimes this character is exaggerated in more mature specimens. In having rounded epimeral plates it resembles H. picta , H. mediterranea and H. macrocephalus sp. nov. Hyperoche picta is readily distinguished by the hooded dactyls of the gnathopoda and H. macrocephalus sp. nov. has a relatively large head, distinctive gnathopoda and other minor charcters that distinguish it from its congeners, as detailed under that species. Thus, H. martinezii is most similar to H. mediterranea , but in that species the merus of gnathopod 2 is produced slightly under the carpus; the distal articles of the gnathopoda and pereopoda are often very hirsute and the peduncle of uropod 1 is relatively longer, almost reaching the limit of the peduncle of uropod 2. Regarding the records of H. mediterranea by Steuer (1911), Stephensen (1924) and Pirlot (1939), all of juveniles, the limited figures provided by these authors seem to represent juveniles of H. martinezii rather than H. mediterranea. In particular the relatively broad merus with the distinctive postero-distal corner of pereopod 3, and the second gnathopoda with the merus not produced under the carpus, are specific characters of H. martinezii. I have also examined the Thor material (Stephensen 1924) and, although poorly preserved, the specimens are more readily identified with H martinezii than H. mediterranea. Similarly, the records of Harbison et al . (1977, 1978), from the Caribbean Sea region, are considered a misidentification because they were based on Steuer (1911) and Stephensen (1924). This species has been recorded as an associate of the following ctenophores; Beroe gilva (Müller 1864, Lavaniegos & Ohman 1999), B. forskalii (Steuer 1911), B. cucumis (Harbison et al . 1977, 1978), Leucothea multicornis & Ocyropsis maculata (Harbison et al . 1978), and B. forskalii & Bolina hydatina (Laval 1980, Lavaniegos & Ohman 1999). Distribution. This is a relatively uncommon species, with few records from the world’s oceans, mainly from near-surface waters in tropical regions. In the Atlantic it has only been found off Brazil and off South Africa. It seems to be more common in the Pacific with records from the China Sea region and from southern California to Mexico. The Dana also collected specimens from the south-western Pacific, between New Caledonia and New Zealand, as detailed above, representing a range extension for this species. The only previous record from the Indian Ocean is off South Africa (Dick 1970). The Dana also collected specimens from this region and also from near Bali and India, the latter being new records for the North Indian Ocean. There are questionable records from the Mediterranean Sea by Laval (1980) and the records of the probable misidentifications of Steuer (1911) and Stephensen (1924), noted here, and its occurrence there requires confirmation. It has not been recorded from the North Atlantic, except for the suspect records of Pirlot (1939), from near Newfoundland and the Bay of Biscay, and Harbison et al . (1977, 1978), from the Caribbean Sea, which is surprising considering the many historical expeditions conducted in the region. At least the latter is easily explained as a minor range extension from the type locality. : Published as part of Zeidler, Wolfgang, 2015, A review of the hyperiidean amphipod genus Hyperoche Bovallius, 1887 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyperiidea: Hyperiidae), with the description of a new genus to accommodate H. shihi Gasca, 2005, pp. 151-192 in Zootaxa 3905 (2) on pages 161-165, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3905.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/233364 : {"references": ["Muller, F. (1864) Fur Darwin. Wilhelm Engelmann, Leipzig, 91 pp., 65 figs.", "Bovallius, C. (1887 a) Systematical list of the Amphipoda Hyperiidea. Bihang till Kungliga Vetenskaps-Akademiens Handlingar, 11 (16), 1 - 50.", "Bovallius, C. (1889) Contributions to a monograph of the Amphipoda Hyperiidea; Part 1: 2. The families Cyllopodidae, Paraphronimidae, Thaumatopsidae, Mimonectidae, Hyperiidae, Phronimidae and Anchylomeridae. Kongliga Svenska Vetenskaps-Akademiens Handlingar, 22 (7), 1 - 434, plates 1 - 18.", "Steuer, A. (1911) Adriatische Planktonamphipoden. Sitzungsberichte der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Klasse, 120 (6), 671 - 688, plates 1 - 3. [Wien]", "Brusca, G. J. (1981) Annotated keys to the Hyperiidea (Crustacea: Amphipoda) of North American coastal waters. Technical Reports of the Allan Hancock Foundation, 5, 1 - 76.", "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]", "Lin, J. & Chen, R. (1988) Distribution of planktonic Amphipoda in the western Taiwan Strait. Journal of Oceanography in Taiwan Strait, 7 (4), 324 - 330. [in Chinese]", "Lin, J. & Chen, R. (1994) Distribution of pelagic amphipods in the central part of the South Sea area. Acta Oceanologica Sinica, 16 (4), 113 - 119. [in Chinese]", "Lin, J., Chen, M. & Chen, R. (1995) The distribution pattern of planktonic Amphipoda in the southern Yellow Sea and East China Sea. Acta Oceanologica Sinica, 17 (5), 117 - 123. [in Chinese]", "Shih, C. - T. & Chen, Q. - C. (1995) Zooplankton of China Seas (2) - The Hyperiidea (Crustacea: Amphipoda). China Ocean Press, Beijing, 295 pp.", "Lin, J., Chen, M. & Chen, R. (1996) The species diversity of planktonic Amphipoda in China Seas. Chinese Biodiversity, 4 (4), 228 - 234. [in Chinese]", "Barkhatov, V. A., Vinogradov, M. E. & Vinogradov, G. M. (1999) Boundaries of the areals of hyperiid amphipods in the epipelagic part of the Southern Subtropical Frontal Zone of the Pacific Ocean. Oceanology, 39 (6), 806 - 812. [translated from the Russian, Okeanologiya, 39 (6), 1999, pp. 887 - 894]", "Lowry, J. K. (2000) Taxonomic status of amphipod crustaceans in the South China Sea with a checklist of known species. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, No. 8 (Supplement), 309 - 342.", "Brusca, R. C. & Hendrickx, M. E. (2005) Crustacea 4. Peracarida: Lophogastrida, Mysida, Amphipoda, Tanaidacea & Cumacea. In: Hendrickx, M. E., Brusca, R. C. & Findley, L. T. (Eds.), Listado y Distribucion de la Macrofauna del Golfo de California, Mexico. Parte 1. Invertebrados. A Distributional Checklist of the Macrofauna of the Gulf of California, Mexico. Part 1. Invertebrates. Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, Tucson, Arizona, pp. 139 - 154.", "Browne, W. E., Haddock, S. H. D. & Martindale, M. Q. (2007) Phylogenetic analysis of lineage relationships among hyperiid amphipods as revealed by examination of the mitochondrial gene, cytochrome oxidase 1 (CO 1). Integrative and Comparative Biology, 47 (6), 815 - 830. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1093 / icb / icm 093", "Garcia-Madrigal, M. S. (2007) Annotated checklist of the amphipods (Peracarida: Amphipoda) from the tropical eastern Pacific. In: Hendrickx, M. E. (Ed.), Contributions to the study of East Pacific Crustaceans, 4 (2), pp. 63 - 195. [Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnologia, UNAM, 195 pp.]", "Gasca, R., Suarez-Morales, E. & Franco-Gordo, L. (2010) New records of hyperiids (Amphipoda, Hyperiidea) from surface waters of the Central Mexican Pacific. Crustaceana, 83 (8), 927 - 940. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1163 / 001121610 X 504298", "Gasca, R., Franco-Gordo, C., Godinez-Dominguez, E. & Suarez-Morales, E. (2012) Hyperiid amphipod community in the Eastern Tropical Pacific before, during, and after El Nino 1997 - 1998. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 455, 123 - 139. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.3354 / meps 09571", "Hurt, C., Haddock, S. H. D. & Browne, W. E. (2013) Molecular phylogenetic evidence for the reorganization of the Hyperiid amphipods, a diverse group of pelagic crustaceans. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 67, 28 - 37. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1016 / j. ympev. 2012.12.021", "Barnard, K. H. (1930) Crustacea. Part X 1: Amphipoda. British Antarctic (Terra Nova) Expedition 1910, Zoology, 8 (4), 307 - 454.", "Pereira, I. M. D. (1962) Redescricao de \" Hyperoche martinezii \" (F. Muller, 1864), um raro Anfipododo litoral Brasileiro (Crustacea, Amphipoda). Revista Brasileira de Biologia, 22 (3), 269 - 272.", "Dick, R. I. (1970) Hyperiidea (Crustacea: Amphipoda) Keys to South African genera and species, and a distribution list. Annals of the South African Museum, 57 (3), 25 - 86.", "Laval, P. (1980) Hyperiid amphipods as crustacean parasitoids associated with gelatinous plankton. Oceanography and Marine Biology, Annual Review, 18, 11 - 56.", "Lavaniegos, B. E. & Ohman, M. D. (1999) Hyperiid amphipods as indicators of climate change in the California Current. Crustaceans and the biodiversity crisis. In: Schram, F. R. & Van Vaupel Klein, J. C. (Eds.), Proceedings of the Fourth International Crustacean Congress, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, July 20 - 24. Vol. 1. Brill, Leiden, pp. 489 - 509.", "Escobar-Briones, E., Winfield, I., Ortiz, M., Gasca, R. & Suarez, E. (2002) Chapter 17. Amphipoda. In: Llorente-Bousquets, J. & Morrone, J. J. (Eds.), Biodiversidad, taxonomia y biogeografia de artropodos de Mexico: Hacia una sintesis de su conocimiento. Vol. III. Comision Nacional para el conocimiento y Uso de la Biodiversidad / Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. Bayer, Mexico, pp. 341 - 371.", "Gasca, R. (2009 a) Hyperiid amphipods (Crustacea: Peracarida) in Mexican waters of the Pacific Ocean. Pacific Science, 63 (1), 83 - 95. [2009] http: // dx. doi. org / 10.2984 / 1534 - 6188 (2009) 63 [83: HACPIM] 2.0. CO; 2", "Stephensen, K. (1924) Hyperiidea-Amphipoda (Part 2: Paraphronimidae, Hyperiidae, Dairellidae, Phronimidae, Anchylomeridae). Report on the Danish Oceanographical Expeditions 1908 - 10 to the Mediterranean and Adjacent Seas, 2 (Biology-D 4), 71 - 149.", "Pirlot, J. M. (1939) Sur des Amphipodes Hyperides provenant des croisieres du Prince Albert 1 er de Monaco. Resultats des Campagnes Scientifiques accomplies sur son Yacht par Albert 1 er Prince Souverain de Monaco, Fascicule 102, 1 - 64.", "Harbison, G. R., Biggs, D. C. & Madin, L. P. (1977) The associations of Amphipoda Hyperiidea with gelatinous zooplankton-II. Associations with Cnidaria, Ctenophora and Radiolaria. Deep-Sea Research, 24, 465 - 488. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1016 / 0146 - 6291 (77) 90484 - 2", "Harbison, G. R., Madin, L. P. & Swanberg, N. R. (1978) On the natural history and distribution of oceanic ctenophores. Deep-Sea Research, 25, 233 - 256. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1016 / 0146 - 6291 (78) 90590 - 8"]} |
format |
Text |
author |
Zeidler, Wolfgang |
author_facet |
Zeidler, Wolfgang |
author_sort |
Zeidler, Wolfgang |
title |
Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864 |
title_short |
Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864 |
title_full |
Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864 |
title_fullStr |
Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864 |
title_sort |
hyperoche martinezii muller 1864 |
publisher |
Zenodo |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6114487 https://zenodo.org/record/6114487 |
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ENVELOPE(-64.150,-64.150,-84.550,-84.550) ENVELOPE(-59.717,-59.717,-62.450,-62.450) ENVELOPE(-55.833,-55.833,-63.000,-63.000) ENVELOPE(-20.233,-20.233,64.067,64.067) ENVELOPE(-145.700,-145.700,-86.450,-86.450) ENVELOPE(-45.150,-45.150,-60.683,-60.683) ENVELOPE(-57.233,-57.233,-63.900,-63.900) ENVELOPE(-58.367,-58.367,-63.700,-63.700) |
geographic |
Antarctic Pacific Indian New Zealand Lowry Ortiz Morales Bali Suarez Escobar Dominguez Llorente |
geographic_facet |
Antarctic Pacific Indian New Zealand Lowry Ortiz Morales Bali Suarez Escobar Dominguez Llorente |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctic Newfoundland North Atlantic |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctic Newfoundland North Atlantic |
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Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
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ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6114487 2023-05-15T14:02:06+02:00 Hyperoche martinezii Muller 1864 Zeidler, Wolfgang 2015 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6114487 https://zenodo.org/record/6114487 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/233364 http://publication.plazi.org/id/5278F078FFD3FF88FFA8FF05635AFF8A http://zoobank.org/A47AE95B-99CA-42F0-979F-1CAAD1C3B191 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3905.2.1 http://zenodo.org/record/233364 http://publication.plazi.org/id/5278F078FFD3FF88FFA8FF05635AFF8A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.233368 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.233369 http://zoobank.org/A47AE95B-99CA-42F0-979F-1CAAD1C3B191 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6114488 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 Malacostraca Amphipoda Hyperiidae Hyperoche Hyperoche martinezii article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6114487 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3905.2.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.233368 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.233369 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6114488 2022-04-01T10:48:32Z Hyperoche martinezii (Müller, 1864) (Figs. 4–5) Hyperia Martinezii Müller, 1864: 51 –52, text figs. 44–49. Hyperoche Martinezi — Bovallius 1887 a: 19. Hyperoche Martinezii — Bovallius 1889: 86 (key), 107–111, text fig.; pl. 7, figs. 27–31. Hyperoche martinezi — Steuer 1911: 674 –675 (key). Brusca 1981: 10 (list), 41, fig. 7 h. Vinogradov et al. 1982: 282 (key), 286–287, fig. 145. Lin & Chen 1988: 324. Lin & Chen 1994: 115, 118 (table). Lin et al. 1995: 122 (list). Shih & Chen 1995: 84 (key), 86–87, fig. 51. Lin et al. 1996: 229 (table). Vinogradov 1999: 1146 (table). 1186 (incl. key), fig. 4.107. Lowry 2000: 325 (list). Brusca & Hendrickx 2005: 150 (list). Browne et al. 2007: 819 (table), fig. 4 (phylogenetic tree). Garcia-Madrigal 2007: 147, 191 (list). Gasca et al. 2010: 932. Gasca et al. 2012: 126 (table). Hurt et al. 2013: 31 (table), figs. 1–2 (phylogenetic trees). Hyperoche martinezii — Barnard 1930: 415 (key). Pereira 1962: 270 –272, figs. 1–10. Dick 1970: 36 (key), 57, fig. 6. Laval 1980: 18 & 23 (lists), 36–37. Lavaniegos & Ohman 1999: 494 (table). Escobar-Briones et al. 2002: 367 (list). Gasca 2009 a: 88 (table). ? Hyperoche mediterranea [mis-identification; all juveniles, most likely of H. martinezii ]— Steuer 1911: 674 –677 (incl. key); pl. 1, figs. 1–5. Stephensen 1924: 79, fig. 33. Pirlot 1939: 37; pl. 2, figs. 5–6. Harbison et al . 1977: 467, 482 (table). Harbison et al. 1978: 239, 251 (table). Type material. Type material of Hyperia martinezii is most likely lost but the MNHN, Paris, has a male specimen (Am 1429) donated to the museum by Müller, which may represent type material. This may have been the specimen described and illustrated by Bovallius (1889). The type locality is the south-west Atlantic, off Brazil at “Dest erro”. Diagnosis. Females: Sexually mature at about 4–5 mm. Antennae 1 relatively short, about half as long as head, about twice as long as A 2. Head length equal to first two pereonites combined. Pereon globular, length about 1.6 x pleon. Gnathopod 1; basis slightly shorter than remaining articles combined, merus spoon-shaped, projecting under carpus, almost to base of propodus, with fringe of setae on distal margin; carpal process extends just past distal margin of propodus, anterior margin denticulate; posterior and distal margin of propodus also denticulate; dactylus slightly curved, length about 0.4 x propodus. Gnathopod 2 slightly longer and more slender than G 1 but similar in structure except that the merus is not produced under the carpus and lacks the spoon-shaped process. Pereopoda all of similar length. Pereopod 3; basis length almost 4 x merus; carpus with postero-distal corner produced in slight tooth with denticulate margins, length 1.4 x merus and 0.7 x propodus; posterior margin of propodus denticulate; dactylus length about 0.3 x propodus. Pereopod 4 similar in structure to P 3 except the basis is relatively shorter, the carpus is relatively longer and the postero-distal corner of the merus is not as produced. Pereopods 5–7 are similar in size and structure. Pereopod 5; basis length almost twice merus; carpus length about 1.3 x merus, about 0.8 x propodus; dactylus length half propodus. Pereopods 6 & 7; like P 5 but basis relatively longer, and P 7 with coxa fused with pereonite. Epimeral plates with postero-distal corner rounded. Uropod 1; peduncle reaching just past middle of peduncle of U 2 and just past base of peduncle of U 3; inner ramus slightly longer than outer, slightly longer than peduncle. Uropod 2; inner ramus slightly shorter than peduncle, slightly longer than outer ramus. Uropod 3; inner and outer ramus of similar length and width, about 0.7 x peduncle. Telson triangular, marginally longer than wide, slightly longer than half of peduncle of U 3. Males : Sexually mature at about 5–6 mm. Antennae almost as long as entire animal. Pereon and pleon slender, of similar length. Appendages generally more slender than in females, especially the gnathopoda, otherwise very similar in structure and relative lengths of articles, except for the following minor variations. Gnathopoda with merus not projected as far under the carpus. Pereopods 3 & 4 with postero-distal corner of the carpus less prominent. Epimeral plates relatively much longer and deeper. Uropod 1; peduncle extends to 0.7 x peduncle of U 2, to about half peduncle of U 3; inner ramus slightly shorter than peduncle; inner margins of both rami with characteristic proximal excavation. Uropod 3; rami relatively broader and shorter, length about 0.6 x peduncle. Material examined. Mediterranean Sea: Specimens recorded by Stephensen (1924) as H. medusarum 4 juveniles (ZMUC), east of Mallorca [39 ° 27 ’N 05° 26 ’E], Thor stn. 116, 26 June 1910; male, off western Algeria [36 ° 13 ’N 01° 28 ’W], Thor stn. 223, surface, 5 September 1910; male, east of Gibraltar [36 ° 33 ’N 04° 25 ’W], Thor stn. 227, 99 m, 6 September 1910. S.W. Atlantic: Two juvenile males (SAMA C 7932), just north of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil [21 ° 11.2 ’S 40 ° 30 ’W], R/V Almirante Saldanha stn. 6447, surface, 22 August 1984. S.E. Atlantic: Male (ZMUC) [23 ° 26 ’S 03° 56 ’E], Dana stn. 3980 IV, 100 mw, 17 February 1930. South China Sea: Three females & female (ZMUC), north of Borneo [06° 55 ’N 114 °02’E], Dana stns. 3688 II & IV, 3500 & 1000 mw, 8 April 1929. Female & female (ZMUC), adjacent Luzon [11 ° 43 ’N 121 ° 43 ’E], Dana stns. 3734 II & IV, 600 & 100 mw, 27 June 1929. East China Sea: Female & female, male (ZMUC), north of Taiwan [25 ° 11 ’N 122 ° 35 ’E], Dana stn. 3722 IV & V, 100 & 50 mw, 29 May 1929. N.E. Pacific: Six males (ZMUC), Gulf of California, near Isla Angel de le Guarda [29 ° 20 ’N 133 ° 15 ’W], H. Lemche, surface, 9 April 1959. Juvenile female (USNM 1196346), off California [36 ° 22 ’N 122 °06’W], R/V Point Sur , 100–200 m, W.E. Browne. S.W. Pacific: Between New Caledonia and New Zealand (4 lots; ZMUC); male [24 ° 46.5 ’S 170 ° 18.5 ’E], Dana stn. 3610 II, 600 mw, 7 December 1928; male & female, male [25 ° 54 ’S 172 ° 36.9 ’E], Dana stns. 3621 II & 3622 III, 200 & 100 mw, 8 December 1928; male [34 ° 24 ’S 178 ° 42.5 ’E], Dana stn. 3630 II, 2000 mw, 17 December 1928. Female (SAMA C 4585), Tasman Sea, off Newcastle, New South Wales [32 ° 47 ’S 152 ° 40 ’E], CSIRO R/V Warreen , stn. 3 / 40, 200 –0 m, 11 January 1940. North Indian: Female (ZMUC), south of Sri Lanka [04° 26 ’N 85 ° 21 ’E], Dana stn. 3906 IV, 300 mw, 20 November 1929. Female (ZMUC), south of India [05° 28 ’N 80 °08’E], Dana stn. 3910 II, 600 mw, 23 November 1929. Female (ZMUC), near Sri Lanka [06° 36 ’N 79 °06’E], Dana stn. 3913 III, 300 mw, 1 December 1929. Male & two males (ZMUC), south-west of India [03° 14 ’N 75 ° 21 ’E], Dana stns. 3915 II & III, 200 & 300 mw, 3 December 1929. South Indian: Male (SAMA C 7933), Ningaloo Reef, north of Exmouth, Western Australia, S. Wilson, 9 July 1998. Male (ZMUC), near Bali [09°09’S 114 ° 47 ’E], Dana stn. 3804 III, 300 mw, 30 August 1929. Female (ZMUC CRU- 20288), tropical western part [00°07’S 63 ° 56 ’E], Dana stn. 3919 V, 50 mw, 8 December 1929. Male (ZMUC), north-east of Durban [28 ° 18 ’S 33 ° 49 ’E], Dana stn. 3965 II, 200 mw, 17 January 1930. Remarks. This is a relatively small species reaching sexual maturity at about 4–6 mm. Females often have the pereon more inflated than in other species, so that the head is relatively smaller. Sometimes this character is exaggerated in more mature specimens. In having rounded epimeral plates it resembles H. picta , H. mediterranea and H. macrocephalus sp. nov. Hyperoche picta is readily distinguished by the hooded dactyls of the gnathopoda and H. macrocephalus sp. nov. has a relatively large head, distinctive gnathopoda and other minor charcters that distinguish it from its congeners, as detailed under that species. Thus, H. martinezii is most similar to H. mediterranea , but in that species the merus of gnathopod 2 is produced slightly under the carpus; the distal articles of the gnathopoda and pereopoda are often very hirsute and the peduncle of uropod 1 is relatively longer, almost reaching the limit of the peduncle of uropod 2. Regarding the records of H. mediterranea by Steuer (1911), Stephensen (1924) and Pirlot (1939), all of juveniles, the limited figures provided by these authors seem to represent juveniles of H. martinezii rather than H. mediterranea. In particular the relatively broad merus with the distinctive postero-distal corner of pereopod 3, and the second gnathopoda with the merus not produced under the carpus, are specific characters of H. martinezii. I have also examined the Thor material (Stephensen 1924) and, although poorly preserved, the specimens are more readily identified with H martinezii than H. mediterranea. Similarly, the records of Harbison et al . (1977, 1978), from the Caribbean Sea region, are considered a misidentification because they were based on Steuer (1911) and Stephensen (1924). This species has been recorded as an associate of the following ctenophores; Beroe gilva (Müller 1864, Lavaniegos & Ohman 1999), B. forskalii (Steuer 1911), B. cucumis (Harbison et al . 1977, 1978), Leucothea multicornis & Ocyropsis maculata (Harbison et al . 1978), and B. forskalii & Bolina hydatina (Laval 1980, Lavaniegos & Ohman 1999). Distribution. This is a relatively uncommon species, with few records from the world’s oceans, mainly from near-surface waters in tropical regions. In the Atlantic it has only been found off Brazil and off South Africa. It seems to be more common in the Pacific with records from the China Sea region and from southern California to Mexico. The Dana also collected specimens from the south-western Pacific, between New Caledonia and New Zealand, as detailed above, representing a range extension for this species. The only previous record from the Indian Ocean is off South Africa (Dick 1970). The Dana also collected specimens from this region and also from near Bali and India, the latter being new records for the North Indian Ocean. There are questionable records from the Mediterranean Sea by Laval (1980) and the records of the probable misidentifications of Steuer (1911) and Stephensen (1924), noted here, and its occurrence there requires confirmation. It has not been recorded from the North Atlantic, except for the suspect records of Pirlot (1939), from near Newfoundland and the Bay of Biscay, and Harbison et al . (1977, 1978), from the Caribbean Sea, which is surprising considering the many historical expeditions conducted in the region. At least the latter is easily explained as a minor range extension from the type locality. : Published as part of Zeidler, Wolfgang, 2015, A review of the hyperiidean amphipod genus Hyperoche Bovallius, 1887 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Hyperiidea: Hyperiidae), with the description of a new genus to accommodate H. shihi Gasca, 2005, pp. 151-192 in Zootaxa 3905 (2) on pages 161-165, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3905.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/233364 : {"references": ["Muller, F. (1864) Fur Darwin. Wilhelm Engelmann, Leipzig, 91 pp., 65 figs.", "Bovallius, C. (1887 a) Systematical list of the Amphipoda Hyperiidea. Bihang till Kungliga Vetenskaps-Akademiens Handlingar, 11 (16), 1 - 50.", "Bovallius, C. 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Deep-Sea Research, 25, 233 - 256. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1016 / 0146 - 6291 (78) 90590 - 8"]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Newfoundland North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Pacific Indian New Zealand Lowry ENVELOPE(-64.150,-64.150,-84.550,-84.550) Ortiz ENVELOPE(-59.717,-59.717,-62.450,-62.450) Morales ENVELOPE(-55.833,-55.833,-63.000,-63.000) Bali ENVELOPE(-20.233,-20.233,64.067,64.067) Suarez ENVELOPE(-145.700,-145.700,-86.450,-86.450) Escobar ENVELOPE(-45.150,-45.150,-60.683,-60.683) Dominguez ENVELOPE(-57.233,-57.233,-63.900,-63.900) Llorente ENVELOPE(-58.367,-58.367,-63.700,-63.700) |