Corellamysis eltanina

Corellamysis eltanina San Vicente sp. nov. (Figs. 1–7) Material examined. Holotype: One brooding female 9.3 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102501). “Eltanin” survey USA. 54 ° 31 ’S – 159 °00’ E, 110 m depth. 18 /06/ 1968. Dissected, one vial. Paratypes: One mature male 5.6 mm TL (catalogue number:...

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Main Authors: Vicente, Carlos San, Monniot, Françoise
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2014
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6126095
https://zenodo.org/record/6126095
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6126095
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
Malacostraca
Mysida
Mysidae
Corellamysis
Corellamysis eltanina
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Mysida
Mysidae
Corellamysis
Corellamysis eltanina
Vicente, Carlos San
Monniot, Françoise
Corellamysis eltanina
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Mysida
Mysidae
Corellamysis
Corellamysis eltanina
description Corellamysis eltanina San Vicente sp. nov. (Figs. 1–7) Material examined. Holotype: One brooding female 9.3 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102501). “Eltanin” survey USA. 54 ° 31 ’S – 159 °00’ E, 110 m depth. 18 /06/ 1968. Dissected, one vial. Paratypes: One mature male 5.6 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102502); dissected, one vial; from the same locality as holotype. One immature female 5.8 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102503); not dissected; one vial; from the same locality as holotype. One juvenile 3.4 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102504); not dissected; one vial; from the same locality as holotype. One juvenile 3.4 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102505); not dissected; one vial; from the same locality as holotype. The material comes from the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris. Individuals were found inside the branchial sacs of three specimens (among 56 examined) of Corella brewinae Monniot 2013 (Ascidiacea, Phlebobranchia, Corellidae) collected in the same trawl. The holotype and one juvenile paratype were removed from one C. brewinae specimen, the immature female paratype and one juvenile paratype from another ascidian specimen and the mature male paratype from a third ascidia. Etymology. This species is named after the U.S. Navy Ship “Eltanin”, operated by the National Science Foundation from 1957 to 1972; specimens were collected in the 1968 cruise and sent to the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle for identification and study. Description. The description below refers to both sexes, unless otherwise stated. General body form moderately robust (Figs. 1 A–B, 2 A–B). Carapace with anterior margin evenly rounded, not forming definite rostral projection; posterior margin dorsally emarginated, leaving last thoracic somite partially uncovered; posterolateral lobe covering anterior abdominal somite. Abdomen robust, as wide as middle portion of carapace, not tapering posteriorly; all abdominal somites subequal in length. Eyes without definite eyestalks (Figs. 2 C–D), flattened and subquadrangular with rounded corners, visual elements imperfectly developed and without trace of pigment in preserved individuals, laterally not extending beyond carapace limits. Antennular peduncle (Figs. 2 A, E) extending slightly beyond antennal scale. First article longer than wide; second article shortest, half as long as broad; third article as long as broad; in male, small sub-spherical and hirsute appendix masculina present on ventral side of third article. Antennal sympod (Figs. 2 F–G) with outer distal dorsal angle rounded and ventral distal middle finger-like protuberance. Peduncle not extending beyond scale; first article short, as long as broad, inner margin rounded; second article twice as long as broad, inner distal margin armed with one simple seta; third article half shorter than second one, distal inner margin armed with one or two simple setae. Antennal scale two-three times longer than maximum width, not extending beyond antennular peduncle; margins convex, setose on its inner margin and on the distal one-third of its outer margin, proximal two-thirds of outer margin entire; without apical suture. Labrum (Fig. 3 F) more or less symmetrical, as long as wide; without frontal spiniform process; posterior margin with short irregularly distributed thin simple setae. Mandibles (Figs. 3 A–E) well developed. Three-segmented palp, first article shortest; second article slightly longer than wide, with simple setae on both margins; third article about twice as long as broad, armed on distal third of inner margin with 6 or 7 ventral serrated setae and 2 or 3 distal simple setae; one distal large conspicuous seta. Mandibles with well developed incisor and reduced molar process; left mandible plus row of 2 simple spines and 3 serrated spines; counterpart on right mandible comprising 8 entire spines; right lacinia mobilis well developed (Figs. 3 D–E). Maxillule (Fig. 3 G) apex of outer lobe armed with 7 strong cuspidate setae and single row of 4 simple setae on ventral surface; inner lobe with 12 simple setae. Maxilla (Fig. 3 H) apparently without exopod; distal article of endopod oval, longer than wide, margins armed with about 23 pappose setae on inner and outer distal two-thirds; inner margin of coxal endite armed with 2 rows of pappose setae; inner margin of bilobulate basal endites also armed with pappose setae. Thoracopods grouped in three different shape groups. First and second thoracic appendages formed as maxillipeds, third to sixth endopods with carpopropodus 2 -segmented, and seventh and eighth with endopods specialized as gnathopods. First thoracopod (Figs. 4 A–B) short, with unarmed epipodite. Endopod with merus longer than carpopropodus; dactylus sub-spherical densely setose, bearing a series of simple setae on both margins. Exopod longer than endopod, with 7 -segmented flagellum. Second thoracopod (Figs. 4 C–D) slightly longer than first one, with small endite on the basis. Endopod with preischium and ischium subequal in length; merus subequal to carpopropodus; dactylus sub-spherical, densely setose with a series of simple setae on both margins. Exopod longer than endopod, with 8 -segmented flagellum. Third to sixth thoracopods (Figs. 4 E–H, 5 A–B) with endopod longer than exopod; ischium and merus subequal in length; carpopropodus 2 -segmented, shorter than merus; inconspicuous segmentation between the carpopropodus and dactylus; strong distal nail present. Exopod with 9 -segmented flagellum. Sixth thoracic appendages of female with rudimentary oostegites, armed with 3 simple setae on its distal margin, 1 on outer margin and 2 on inner margin (Fig. 5 A) Seventh and eighth thoracopod endopods quite different from the rest, with undivided carpopropodus and inconspicuous segmentation between carpopropodus and dactylus; merus armed along its inner margin with strong cuspidate setae forming powerful subchela (Figs. 5 C–F, 6 A). Eighth thoracopod with enlarged endopod, much longer and larger than anterior ones; endopod longer than exopod; merus large, armed along its inner margin with 9 (male) or 25 (female) cuspidate setae; undivided carpopropodus; dactylus with strong distal nail present. Exopod with rudimentary basal plate and 8 -segmented flagellum. Oostegites of seventh thoracopods developed, smaller than those of eighth thoracopods (Figs. 5 C, E). Penes roughly cylindrical, reaching two-thirds of ischium length. Each penis with simple seta located at proximal onefourth of its length on outer margin; distal margin obscurely 6 -lobate (Figs. 6 A–B). Pleopods uniramous, reduced to unsegmented lobes in both sexes (Figs. 6 C–L), increasing in length from first to fifth pairs; fifth pleopod extending to posterior half of last abdominal somite (Fig. 2 B). Uropodal endopod (Figs. 7 B, G) slender, extending slightly beyond apex of telson, inner margin armed with 15–20 short cuspidate setae extending from near statocyst to near apex. Female uropodal exopod slightly longer and broader than endopod (subequal in male and immature specimens), setose all round (Figs. 7 A–D, G). Telson entire, linguiform, about two times as long as broad at base; distal half of lateral margins armed with 11 (juvenile) – 17 (brooding female) cuspidate setae, increasing in size towards apex (Figs. 7 A, C–D, E–F). Colour (in long-time preserved specimens): almost transparent tegument with brown pigmentation distributed on the abdomen and some appendages. Distribution and habitat. The known distributional area of the new Corellamysis species is at the moment limited to the Macquarie Island region (Southern Ocean), at 110 m depth. All individuals were collected in the branchial sacs of three ascidian individuals of Corella brewinae . : Published as part of Vicente, Carlos San & Monniot, Françoise, 2014, The ascidian-associated mysid Corellamysis eltanina gen. nov., sp. nov. (Mysida, Mysidae, Heteromysinae): a new symbiotic relationship from the Southern Ocean, pp. 323-346 in Zootaxa 3780 (2) on pages 325-333, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3780.2.6, http://zenodo.org/record/224366
format Text
author Vicente, Carlos San
Monniot, Françoise
author_facet Vicente, Carlos San
Monniot, Françoise
author_sort Vicente, Carlos San
title Corellamysis eltanina
title_short Corellamysis eltanina
title_full Corellamysis eltanina
title_fullStr Corellamysis eltanina
title_full_unstemmed Corellamysis eltanina
title_sort corellamysis eltanina
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2014
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6126095
https://zenodo.org/record/6126095
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
ENVELOPE(70.250,70.250,-49.350,-49.350)
geographic Southern Ocean
Seta
Françoise
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Seta
Françoise
genre Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6126095 2023-05-15T17:10:00+02:00 Corellamysis eltanina Vicente, Carlos San Monniot, Françoise 2014 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6126095 https://zenodo.org/record/6126095 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/224366 http://publication.plazi.org/id/0824460E8170B1341D17FF8DFFD39527 http://zoobank.org/BFC5B41E-8154-4C24-8AE0-EB1C4AD1A380 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3780.2.6 http://zenodo.org/record/224366 http://publication.plazi.org/id/0824460E8170B1341D17FF8DFFD39527 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224367 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224368 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224369 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224370 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224371 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224372 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224373 http://zoobank.org/BFC5B41E-8154-4C24-8AE0-EB1C4AD1A380 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6126094 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 Mysida Mysidae Corellamysis Corellamysis eltanina article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2014 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6126095 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3780.2.6 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224367 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224368 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224369 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.224370 https://do 2022-04-01T10:55:10Z Corellamysis eltanina San Vicente sp. nov. (Figs. 1–7) Material examined. Holotype: One brooding female 9.3 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102501). “Eltanin” survey USA. 54 ° 31 ’S – 159 °00’ E, 110 m depth. 18 /06/ 1968. Dissected, one vial. Paratypes: One mature male 5.6 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102502); dissected, one vial; from the same locality as holotype. One immature female 5.8 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102503); not dissected; one vial; from the same locality as holotype. One juvenile 3.4 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102504); not dissected; one vial; from the same locality as holotype. One juvenile 3.4 mm TL (catalogue number: ICMM 13102505); not dissected; one vial; from the same locality as holotype. The material comes from the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris. Individuals were found inside the branchial sacs of three specimens (among 56 examined) of Corella brewinae Monniot 2013 (Ascidiacea, Phlebobranchia, Corellidae) collected in the same trawl. The holotype and one juvenile paratype were removed from one C. brewinae specimen, the immature female paratype and one juvenile paratype from another ascidian specimen and the mature male paratype from a third ascidia. Etymology. This species is named after the U.S. Navy Ship “Eltanin”, operated by the National Science Foundation from 1957 to 1972; specimens were collected in the 1968 cruise and sent to the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle for identification and study. Description. The description below refers to both sexes, unless otherwise stated. General body form moderately robust (Figs. 1 A–B, 2 A–B). Carapace with anterior margin evenly rounded, not forming definite rostral projection; posterior margin dorsally emarginated, leaving last thoracic somite partially uncovered; posterolateral lobe covering anterior abdominal somite. Abdomen robust, as wide as middle portion of carapace, not tapering posteriorly; all abdominal somites subequal in length. Eyes without definite eyestalks (Figs. 2 C–D), flattened and subquadrangular with rounded corners, visual elements imperfectly developed and without trace of pigment in preserved individuals, laterally not extending beyond carapace limits. Antennular peduncle (Figs. 2 A, E) extending slightly beyond antennal scale. First article longer than wide; second article shortest, half as long as broad; third article as long as broad; in male, small sub-spherical and hirsute appendix masculina present on ventral side of third article. Antennal sympod (Figs. 2 F–G) with outer distal dorsal angle rounded and ventral distal middle finger-like protuberance. Peduncle not extending beyond scale; first article short, as long as broad, inner margin rounded; second article twice as long as broad, inner distal margin armed with one simple seta; third article half shorter than second one, distal inner margin armed with one or two simple setae. Antennal scale two-three times longer than maximum width, not extending beyond antennular peduncle; margins convex, setose on its inner margin and on the distal one-third of its outer margin, proximal two-thirds of outer margin entire; without apical suture. Labrum (Fig. 3 F) more or less symmetrical, as long as wide; without frontal spiniform process; posterior margin with short irregularly distributed thin simple setae. Mandibles (Figs. 3 A–E) well developed. Three-segmented palp, first article shortest; second article slightly longer than wide, with simple setae on both margins; third article about twice as long as broad, armed on distal third of inner margin with 6 or 7 ventral serrated setae and 2 or 3 distal simple setae; one distal large conspicuous seta. Mandibles with well developed incisor and reduced molar process; left mandible plus row of 2 simple spines and 3 serrated spines; counterpart on right mandible comprising 8 entire spines; right lacinia mobilis well developed (Figs. 3 D–E). Maxillule (Fig. 3 G) apex of outer lobe armed with 7 strong cuspidate setae and single row of 4 simple setae on ventral surface; inner lobe with 12 simple setae. Maxilla (Fig. 3 H) apparently without exopod; distal article of endopod oval, longer than wide, margins armed with about 23 pappose setae on inner and outer distal two-thirds; inner margin of coxal endite armed with 2 rows of pappose setae; inner margin of bilobulate basal endites also armed with pappose setae. Thoracopods grouped in three different shape groups. First and second thoracic appendages formed as maxillipeds, third to sixth endopods with carpopropodus 2 -segmented, and seventh and eighth with endopods specialized as gnathopods. First thoracopod (Figs. 4 A–B) short, with unarmed epipodite. Endopod with merus longer than carpopropodus; dactylus sub-spherical densely setose, bearing a series of simple setae on both margins. Exopod longer than endopod, with 7 -segmented flagellum. Second thoracopod (Figs. 4 C–D) slightly longer than first one, with small endite on the basis. Endopod with preischium and ischium subequal in length; merus subequal to carpopropodus; dactylus sub-spherical, densely setose with a series of simple setae on both margins. Exopod longer than endopod, with 8 -segmented flagellum. Third to sixth thoracopods (Figs. 4 E–H, 5 A–B) with endopod longer than exopod; ischium and merus subequal in length; carpopropodus 2 -segmented, shorter than merus; inconspicuous segmentation between the carpopropodus and dactylus; strong distal nail present. Exopod with 9 -segmented flagellum. Sixth thoracic appendages of female with rudimentary oostegites, armed with 3 simple setae on its distal margin, 1 on outer margin and 2 on inner margin (Fig. 5 A) Seventh and eighth thoracopod endopods quite different from the rest, with undivided carpopropodus and inconspicuous segmentation between carpopropodus and dactylus; merus armed along its inner margin with strong cuspidate setae forming powerful subchela (Figs. 5 C–F, 6 A). Eighth thoracopod with enlarged endopod, much longer and larger than anterior ones; endopod longer than exopod; merus large, armed along its inner margin with 9 (male) or 25 (female) cuspidate setae; undivided carpopropodus; dactylus with strong distal nail present. Exopod with rudimentary basal plate and 8 -segmented flagellum. Oostegites of seventh thoracopods developed, smaller than those of eighth thoracopods (Figs. 5 C, E). Penes roughly cylindrical, reaching two-thirds of ischium length. Each penis with simple seta located at proximal onefourth of its length on outer margin; distal margin obscurely 6 -lobate (Figs. 6 A–B). Pleopods uniramous, reduced to unsegmented lobes in both sexes (Figs. 6 C–L), increasing in length from first to fifth pairs; fifth pleopod extending to posterior half of last abdominal somite (Fig. 2 B). Uropodal endopod (Figs. 7 B, G) slender, extending slightly beyond apex of telson, inner margin armed with 15–20 short cuspidate setae extending from near statocyst to near apex. Female uropodal exopod slightly longer and broader than endopod (subequal in male and immature specimens), setose all round (Figs. 7 A–D, G). Telson entire, linguiform, about two times as long as broad at base; distal half of lateral margins armed with 11 (juvenile) – 17 (brooding female) cuspidate setae, increasing in size towards apex (Figs. 7 A, C–D, E–F). Colour (in long-time preserved specimens): almost transparent tegument with brown pigmentation distributed on the abdomen and some appendages. Distribution and habitat. The known distributional area of the new Corellamysis species is at the moment limited to the Macquarie Island region (Southern Ocean), at 110 m depth. All individuals were collected in the branchial sacs of three ascidian individuals of Corella brewinae . : Published as part of Vicente, Carlos San & Monniot, Françoise, 2014, The ascidian-associated mysid Corellamysis eltanina gen. nov., sp. nov. (Mysida, Mysidae, Heteromysinae): a new symbiotic relationship from the Southern Ocean, pp. 323-346 in Zootaxa 3780 (2) on pages 325-333, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3780.2.6, http://zenodo.org/record/224366 Text Macquarie Island Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Southern Ocean Seta ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645) Françoise ENVELOPE(70.250,70.250,-49.350,-49.350)