Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov.

Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer sp. nov. (Figs 1–4) Material examined. Holotype, Ƥ (MNHN-IU- 2010-2806), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, GCL 1, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.996 ʹN 05° 17.346 ʹE, 736 m, 25 /05/ 2006. Paratypes: 152 specimens (15 adult females, 15 subadult females, 29 juveniles, 63 manca-1, 26 manc...

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Main Authors: Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena, Bamber, Roger N.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2011
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6186193
https://zenodo.org/record/6186193
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6186193
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
Tanaidacea
Pseudotanaidae
Pseudotanais
Pseudotanais falcifer
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Tanaidacea
Pseudotanaidae
Pseudotanais
Pseudotanais falcifer
Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena
Bamber, Roger N.
Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Tanaidacea
Pseudotanaidae
Pseudotanais
Pseudotanais falcifer
description Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer sp. nov. (Figs 1–4) Material examined. Holotype, Ƥ (MNHN-IU- 2010-2806), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, GCL 1, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.996 ʹN 05° 17.346 ʹE, 736 m, 25 /05/ 2006. Paratypes: 152 specimens (15 adult females, 15 subadult females, 29 juveniles, 63 manca-1, 26 manca-2, 4 males) (in ethanol, MNHN-IU- 2010-2807), 41 adult ƤƤ, 123 subadult ƤƤ (1 dissected), 4033 (1 dissected), 297 juveniles, 437 manca 1, 261 manca 2 (MNHN-MNHN-IU- 2010-2808), 1 subadult Ƥ (dissected ion three slides) (MNHN-IU- 2010-2809), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, GCL 1, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.996 ʹN 05° 17.346 ʹE, 736 m, 25 /05/ 2006; 1 Ƥ with oostegites (MNHN-IU- 2010-2810), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, ASPI 4, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.991 ʹN 005° 17.346 ʹE, 733 m, 25 /05/ 2006; 15 ƤƤ (2 brooding, 7 with oostegites), 3 mancae (MNHN-IU- 2010-2811), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, ASPI 5, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.998 ʹN 005° 17.347 ʹE, 736 m, 25 /05/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN-IU- 2010-2812), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, ASPI 8, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.980 ʹN 05° 17.351 ʹE, 733 m, 26 /05/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN-IU- 2010-2813), Vicking, PL 275 - 5, ASPI 6, Storegga NE, 64 ° 45.271 ʹN 04° 58.870 ʹE, 746 m, 01/06/ 2006; 1 Ƥ with oostegites (MNHN-IU- 2010-2814), Vicking, PL 275 - 5, GTB 3, Storegga NE, 64 ° 45.273 ʹN 04° 58.871 ʹE, 745 m, 31 /05/ 2006; 1 Ƥ with oostegites, 1 juvenile (MNHN-IU- 2010-2815), Vicking, PL 275 - 5, GTB 2, Storegga NE, 64 ° 45.276 ʹN 05°04.149ʹE, 722 m, 01/06/ 2006; 2 ƤƤ with oostegites, 1 juvenile (MNHN-IU- 2010-2816), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 6, HMMV, 72 °00.187ʹN 14 ° 43.901 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 12 ƤƤ (5 with oostegites), 11 juveniles, 1 manca (MNHN-IU- 2010-2817), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 7, HMMV, 72 °00.183ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 2 ƤƤ, 23, 7 juveniles (MNHN-IU- 2010-2818), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 8, HMMV, 72 °00.184ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 4 juveniles (MNHN-IU- 2010-2820), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, PBT 3, HMMV, 72 °00.166ʹN 14 ° 43.922 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 1 subadult Ƥ (MNHN-IU- 2010-2821), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, ASPI 3, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.335ʹN 14 ° 42.732 ʹE, 1264 m, 06/06/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN- IU- 2010-2822), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, ASPI 4, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.336ʹN 14 ° 42.723 ʹE, 1263 m, 06/06/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN-IU- 2010-2823), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, ASPI 8, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.336ʹN 14 ° 42.746 ʹE, 1263 m, 06/06/ 2006; 2 ƤƤ, 13 (MNHN-IU- 2010-2824), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, CL 7, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.335ʹN 14 ° 42.758 ʹE, 1261 m, 06/06/ 2006; 1 Ƥ, 13 (MNHN-IU- 2010-2825), 1 Ƥ (MNHN-IU- 2010-2826), 4 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2827), Vicking, MTB- 5, HMMV, 72 °00.177ʹN 14 ° 43.958 ʹE, 1272 m, 07/06/ 2006; 998 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2828), ARK 22 - 1, PL 170 - 7, CL 21, HMMV, 72 °00.34ʹN 14 ° 43.22 ʹE, 1259 m, 03/07/ 2007; 277 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2829), ARK 22 - 1, PL 170 - 7, CL 12, HMMV, 72 °00.34ʹN 14 ° 43.22 ʹE, 1259 m, 03/ 07/ 2007; 501 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2830), ARK 22 - 1, PL 170 - 7, CL 22, HMMV, 72 °00.34ʹN 14 ° 43.22 ʹE, 1259 m, 03/07/ 2007; 1 3 (1 slide, MNHN-IU- 2010-2831) Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 7, HMMV, 72 °00.183ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 1 3 (MNHN-IU- 2010-2832), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, CL 7, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.335ʹN 14 ° 42.758 ʹE, 1261 m, 06/06/ 2006; 5 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2833), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 7, HMMV, 72 °00.183ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006. Description of female. Holotype length 2.4 mm, body (Fig. 1 A) five times as long as wide. Cephalothorax subtriangular, 1.1 times as wide as long, 1.3 times as long as first three pereonites, naked; eyes absent. Pereonites, mostly with convex lateral margins; pereonite 1 shortest, 0.15 times as long as cephalothorax; pereonite 2 1.5 times as long as pereonite 1, pereonite 3 about 1.6 times as long as pereonite 2, pereonite 4 longest, twice as long as pereonite 3; pereonite 5 with straight sides, 0.85 times as long as pereonite 4; pereonite 6 three times as long as pereonite 1 (all pereonites respectively 7.3, 5, 3, 1.4, 1.6 and 2.4 times as wide as long). Pleon of five free subequal pleonites bearing pleopods plus pleotelson; pleonites 5.7 times as wide as long. Pleotelson semicircular, short, 3 times as long as pleonite 5, 1.6 times as wide as long. Antennule (Fig. 2 A) proximal article 4.5 times as long as wide, 1.5 times as long as distal two articles together, with outer medial and distal tufts of penicillate and simple setae, longest distal seta longer than second article; second article 0.3 times as long as first, with outer distal simple seta almost as long as article and single smaller inner simple and penicillate distal setae; third article just longer than second, with six simple distal setae and one aesthetasc; tips of some terminal antennular setae bifurcate (Fig. 2 Aʹ). Antenna (Fig. 2 B) of six articles, proximal article compact, naked; second article with fine dorsodistal spine; third article 1.2 times as long as second with fine dorsodistal spine; fourth article curved, nearly three times as long as third, and five times as long as wide, with three simple and three penicillate distal setae; fifth article twice as long as third with distal seta; sixth article minute with four distal setae. Labrum (Fig. 2 C) rounded, hood-shaped, naked. Left mandible (Fig. 2 D) with smooth cutting edge on pars incisiva, large, triangular, crenulate lacinia mobilis , pars molaris a very slender spike with simple point, curved proximally at right angles; right mandible (Fig. 2 E) pars incisiva distally serrated and with bifid tip. Labium (Fig. 2 H) bilobed, squared, naked. Maxillule (Fig. 2 F) endite with nine slender distal spines and one subdistal seta; palp (Fig. 2 F’) with two unequal distal setae. Maxilla (Fig. 2 G) subtriangular, naked. Maxilliped (Fig. 2 I) endites flared, distal third unfused, each with slight distal tubercles and small subdistal seta; palp first article naked, second article with slender outer distal spine, distally with one simple and one finely-denticulate inner setae; third article with three distally-finely-denticulate and one simple inner setae; fourth article with five distal finely-denticulate setae and one subdistal outer simple seta; basis with single short seta. Epignath not recovered. Cheliped (Fig. 3 A) sclerite attachment well-developed, basis 1.6 times as long as wide, with dorsodistal outer seta; merus subtriangular, with single mid-ventral seta; carpus 1.6 times as long as wide, with one shorter and one longer mid-ventral setae, and dorsodistal and dorso-sub-proximal single setae; chela not forcipate, propodus palm as long as fixed finger, with ventral seta distal to fixed finger origin, small seta in axis of chela, comb-row of six spines; fixed finger slender, cutting edge with three distal setae; dactylus with fine dorsoproximal seta and two spinules distally on cutting edge. Pereopod 1 (Fig. 3 B) slender; coxa simple with one seta; basis 5.8 times as long as wide; ischium with single small ventral seta; merus short, about half as long as carpus, naked; carpus with single inner distal and dorsodistal setae; propodus 1.8 times as long as carpus with ventroproximal seta and slight pointed dorsodistal apophysis; dactylus just over half as long as slender unguis, both together 1.1 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 2 (Fig. 3 C) somewhat more compact, basis 5.4 times as long as wide with single dorsal penicillate seta; ischium with single small seta; merus and carpus subequal in length, merus with paired ventrodistal setae, carpus with single dorsodistal seta and large, blade-like, distally-denticulate ventrodistal spine; propodus 1.5 times as long as carpus, with distal spine longer than dactylus but not reaching half length of unguis, dactylus plus longer unguis 0.8 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 3 (Fig. 3 D) similar to pereopod 2, merus stouter, propodus 1.25 times as long as carpus. Pereopod 4 (Fig. 3 E) basis 4.1 times as long as wide with single ventral penicillate seta; ischium with two setae; merus one-third as long as carpus, with two fine ventrodistal simple spines, carpus with two dorsodistal setae, inner–distal seta and blade-like, distally-denticulate ventrodistal spine (as that on pereopod 5, Fig. F’); propodus 1.1 times as long as carpus with one long dorsodistal seta 0.8 times as long as propodus and twice as long as dactylus plus unguis, paired ventrodistal setae, and dorsal penicillate seta; dactylus and unguis not fused into claw, dactylus with inner distal denticulation and outer distal spine-like apophysis (Fig. 3 E’), unguis 0.25 times as long as dactylus, both together 0.4 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 5 (Fig. 3 F, F’) similar to pereopod 4. Pereopod 6 (Fig. 3 G) as pereopod 4, but propodus with two simple distal setae, dactylus with distal crown of spinules (Fig. 3 G’). Pleopods (Fig. 3 H) all alike, with naked basis, exopod larger than endopod, with six distal plumose setae; exopod with four distal plumose setae. Uropod (Fig. 3 I) basis naked, endopod of two partially fused segments, proximal segment with one simple and one penicillate distal setae, distal segment with five simple and two penicillate setae; exopod of one segment, half as long as endopod, single outer subdistal seta and paired distal unequal setae. Distinctions of juvenile female : body (Fig. 1 B) smaller and more compact than adult, 1.3 mm long, 3.8 times as long as wide. Cephalothorax tapering slightly less than that of adult female, 0.8 times as long as wide. Pereonites 4 and 5 subequal in length, twice as wide as long, pereonite 6 as long as pereonite 3. Description of male : (Fig. 1 C) similar to (but smaller than) female, 0.8 mm long, 4.9 times as long as wide. Cephalothorax with indentations anterior to branchial chambers, eyes absent. Pereonites 4 and 5 subequal in length, pleon ovoid rather than parallel-sided. Antennule (Fig. 4 A) peduncle more compact than that of female; first article 2.3 times as long as wide with three fine and one longer outer-distal setae; second article 0.6 times as long as first and with single inner-distal seta, outer-distal corner with long simple seta and three penicillate setae; third article 0.74 times as long as second, with single inner-distal seta; flagellum of four segments, first segment very short, much wider than long, with five or six ventral aesthetascs, second segment much longer than wide but shorter than third peduncle article with four ventrodistal aesthetascs, third segment with four aesthetascs, fourth article with three distal aesthetascs and four setae. Antenna similar to that of female. Mouthparts highly reduced: maxillule (Fig. 4 D) without endite, palp with two distal setae; maxilliped (Fig. 4 C) bases and endites naked, palp with simple setae much longer and more slender than in female, articles 1 to 3 with as many setae as in female, article 4 with four distal setae; epignath slender, twisted, naked. Cheliped (Fig. 4 B) somewhat more robust than that of female, propodus much larger than carpus with distal comb–row of 16 spines. Other appendages not noticeably different from those of female. Etymology. From the Latin, falcifer, “scythe-carrying”, referring to the recurved pars molaris on the mandible (noun in apposition). Remarks. The Pseudotanaidae of the North-East Atlantic and Mediterranean were reviewed comprehensively by Bird and Holdich (1989 a), since when the only new species described from this region was Pseudotanais (P.) stiletto Bamber, 2009 ( vide Bamber et al. 2009), from muddy substrata at 25–62 m depth off the Mediterranean coast of Israel. With a blade-like distal spine on the carpus of pereopods 2 to 6, a non-forcipate chela, and a ventrodistal spine on the propodus of pereopods 2 and 3, which is much shorter than the dactylus and unguis combined, the present species is of the nominate subgenus, but not a member of the “ P. forcipatus -group” nor of the “ P. affinis -group” of Bird and Holdich (1989 a). From their identification key, it keys out as, and indeed it is closest to, P. colonus Bird and Holdich 1989 b, a species known only from recolonization experiments in the northern Bay of Biscay at 2150 m. Pseudotanais falcifer sp. nov. is distinguished from P. colonus by its much lower differentiation in habitus between the sexes (males of P. colonus having all pereonites subequal in length), by having more-attenuate articles in the antennule (proximal article in P. colonus being 3.3 times as long as wide compared with 4.5 times in P. falcifer ), slender (as opposed to stout, robust) spines on the second and third peduncle articles of the antenna, a downcurved (as opposed to straight) pars molaris on the mandibles, subdistal setae on the maxilliped endites (naked in P. c o l o n u s ), and two setae on the ischium of the posterior pereonites (only one seta in P. colonus ), inter alia . P. falcifer is immediately distinguished from P. stiletto as the latter has a straight pars molaris on the mandible, and a two-segmented uropod exopod. Pseudotanais falcifer differs from the other species of Pseudotanais recorded from the Norwegian-Arctic region, viz. P. m a c ro c h e l e s Sars, 1882, P. lilljeborgi Sars, 1882 and P. corollatus Bird & Holdich, 1989, by onesegmented uropod exopod (these other three having two segments) and shorter uropod endopod distal article, a less elongate distal antennule article, a shorter merus on pereopod 1 (half as long as the carpus, compared with 0.7 to 0.8 times as long in the other three), the downcurved pars molaris on the mandibles, and additionally from P. m a c ro c h e l e s in having the chela fingers not longer than the palm. Pseudotanais falcifer was taken over a depth range of 722 to 1263 m, at the HMMV, Storegga and Nyegga sites, including sympatrically with P. affinis . : Published as part of Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena & Bamber, Roger N., 2011, Tanaidomorph Tanaidacea (Crustacea: Peracarida) from Mud-Volcano and Seep Sites on the Norwegian Margin, pp. 1-35 in Zootaxa 3061 on pages 3-9, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.278931 : {"references": ["Bird, G. J. & Holdich, D. M. (1989 a) Tanaidacea (Crustacea) of the north-east Atlantic: the subfamily Pseudotanainae (Pseudotanaidae) and the family Nototanaidae. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 97, 233 - 298.", "Bamber R. N., Bird G. J., Blazewicz-Paszkowycz, M. & Galil B. (2009) Tanaidaceans (Crustacea: Malacostraca: Peracarida) from soft-sediment habitats off Israel, Eastern Mediterranean. Zootaxa, 2109, 1 - 44.", "Bird, G. J. & Holdich, D. M. (1989 b) Recolonisation of artificial sediments in the deep Bay of Biscay by tanaidaceans (Crustacea: Peracarida), with a description of a new species of Pseudotanais. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 69, 307 - 317."]}
format Text
author Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena
Bamber, Roger N.
author_facet Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena
Bamber, Roger N.
author_sort Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena
title Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov.
title_short Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov.
title_full Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov.
title_sort pseudotanais (pseudotanais) falcifer błażewicz-paszkowycz & bamber, 2011, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2011
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6186193
https://zenodo.org/record/6186193
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.443,9.443,62.612,62.612)
ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
ENVELOPE(18.251,18.251,68.645,68.645)
geographic Arctic
Nyegga
Seta
Storegga
geographic_facet Arctic
Nyegga
Seta
Storegga
genre Arctic
North East Atlantic
genre_facet Arctic
North East Atlantic
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Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6186193
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6186193 2023-05-15T15:21:25+02:00 Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2011, sp. nov. Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena Bamber, Roger N. 2011 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6186193 https://zenodo.org/record/6186193 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFE6FF1AFFCDFFA5FF9D7E4EFF8CC37A https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278931 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFE6FF1AFFCDFFA5FF9D7E4EFF8CC37A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278932 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278933 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278934 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278935 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6186192 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 Tanaidacea Pseudotanaidae Pseudotanais Pseudotanais falcifer article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2011 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6186193 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278931 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278932 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278933 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278934 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.278935 https://doi.or 2022-04-01T11:26:29Z Pseudotanais (Pseudotanais) falcifer sp. nov. (Figs 1–4) Material examined. Holotype, Ƥ (MNHN-IU- 2010-2806), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, GCL 1, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.996 ʹN 05° 17.346 ʹE, 736 m, 25 /05/ 2006. Paratypes: 152 specimens (15 adult females, 15 subadult females, 29 juveniles, 63 manca-1, 26 manca-2, 4 males) (in ethanol, MNHN-IU- 2010-2807), 41 adult ƤƤ, 123 subadult ƤƤ (1 dissected), 4033 (1 dissected), 297 juveniles, 437 manca 1, 261 manca 2 (MNHN-MNHN-IU- 2010-2808), 1 subadult Ƥ (dissected ion three slides) (MNHN-IU- 2010-2809), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, GCL 1, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.996 ʹN 05° 17.346 ʹE, 736 m, 25 /05/ 2006; 1 Ƥ with oostegites (MNHN-IU- 2010-2810), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, ASPI 4, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.991 ʹN 005° 17.346 ʹE, 733 m, 25 /05/ 2006; 15 ƤƤ (2 brooding, 7 with oostegites), 3 mancae (MNHN-IU- 2010-2811), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, ASPI 5, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.998 ʹN 005° 17.347 ʹE, 736 m, 25 /05/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN-IU- 2010-2812), Vicking, PL 272 - 2, ASPI 8, G 11 Nyegga, 64 ° 39.980 ʹN 05° 17.351 ʹE, 733 m, 26 /05/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN-IU- 2010-2813), Vicking, PL 275 - 5, ASPI 6, Storegga NE, 64 ° 45.271 ʹN 04° 58.870 ʹE, 746 m, 01/06/ 2006; 1 Ƥ with oostegites (MNHN-IU- 2010-2814), Vicking, PL 275 - 5, GTB 3, Storegga NE, 64 ° 45.273 ʹN 04° 58.871 ʹE, 745 m, 31 /05/ 2006; 1 Ƥ with oostegites, 1 juvenile (MNHN-IU- 2010-2815), Vicking, PL 275 - 5, GTB 2, Storegga NE, 64 ° 45.276 ʹN 05°04.149ʹE, 722 m, 01/06/ 2006; 2 ƤƤ with oostegites, 1 juvenile (MNHN-IU- 2010-2816), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 6, HMMV, 72 °00.187ʹN 14 ° 43.901 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 12 ƤƤ (5 with oostegites), 11 juveniles, 1 manca (MNHN-IU- 2010-2817), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 7, HMMV, 72 °00.183ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 2 ƤƤ, 23, 7 juveniles (MNHN-IU- 2010-2818), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 8, HMMV, 72 °00.184ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 4 juveniles (MNHN-IU- 2010-2820), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, PBT 3, HMMV, 72 °00.166ʹN 14 ° 43.922 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 1 subadult Ƥ (MNHN-IU- 2010-2821), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, ASPI 3, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.335ʹN 14 ° 42.732 ʹE, 1264 m, 06/06/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN- IU- 2010-2822), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, ASPI 4, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.336ʹN 14 ° 42.723 ʹE, 1263 m, 06/06/ 2006; 1 specimen (MNHN-IU- 2010-2823), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, ASPI 8, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.336ʹN 14 ° 42.746 ʹE, 1263 m, 06/06/ 2006; 2 ƤƤ, 13 (MNHN-IU- 2010-2824), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, CL 7, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.335ʹN 14 ° 42.758 ʹE, 1261 m, 06/06/ 2006; 1 Ƥ, 13 (MNHN-IU- 2010-2825), 1 Ƥ (MNHN-IU- 2010-2826), 4 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2827), Vicking, MTB- 5, HMMV, 72 °00.177ʹN 14 ° 43.958 ʹE, 1272 m, 07/06/ 2006; 998 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2828), ARK 22 - 1, PL 170 - 7, CL 21, HMMV, 72 °00.34ʹN 14 ° 43.22 ʹE, 1259 m, 03/07/ 2007; 277 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2829), ARK 22 - 1, PL 170 - 7, CL 12, HMMV, 72 °00.34ʹN 14 ° 43.22 ʹE, 1259 m, 03/ 07/ 2007; 501 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2830), ARK 22 - 1, PL 170 - 7, CL 22, HMMV, 72 °00.34ʹN 14 ° 43.22 ʹE, 1259 m, 03/07/ 2007; 1 3 (1 slide, MNHN-IU- 2010-2831) Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 7, HMMV, 72 °00.183ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006; 1 3 (MNHN-IU- 2010-2832), Vicking, PL 277 - 7, CL 7, PP-V 16 HMMV, 72 °00.335ʹN 14 ° 42.758 ʹE, 1261 m, 06/06/ 2006; 5 specimens (MNHN-IU- 2010-2833), Vicking, PL 276 - 6, ASPI 7, HMMV, 72 °00.183ʹN 14 ° 43.908 ʹE, 1258 m, 04/06/ 2006. Description of female. Holotype length 2.4 mm, body (Fig. 1 A) five times as long as wide. Cephalothorax subtriangular, 1.1 times as wide as long, 1.3 times as long as first three pereonites, naked; eyes absent. Pereonites, mostly with convex lateral margins; pereonite 1 shortest, 0.15 times as long as cephalothorax; pereonite 2 1.5 times as long as pereonite 1, pereonite 3 about 1.6 times as long as pereonite 2, pereonite 4 longest, twice as long as pereonite 3; pereonite 5 with straight sides, 0.85 times as long as pereonite 4; pereonite 6 three times as long as pereonite 1 (all pereonites respectively 7.3, 5, 3, 1.4, 1.6 and 2.4 times as wide as long). Pleon of five free subequal pleonites bearing pleopods plus pleotelson; pleonites 5.7 times as wide as long. Pleotelson semicircular, short, 3 times as long as pleonite 5, 1.6 times as wide as long. Antennule (Fig. 2 A) proximal article 4.5 times as long as wide, 1.5 times as long as distal two articles together, with outer medial and distal tufts of penicillate and simple setae, longest distal seta longer than second article; second article 0.3 times as long as first, with outer distal simple seta almost as long as article and single smaller inner simple and penicillate distal setae; third article just longer than second, with six simple distal setae and one aesthetasc; tips of some terminal antennular setae bifurcate (Fig. 2 Aʹ). Antenna (Fig. 2 B) of six articles, proximal article compact, naked; second article with fine dorsodistal spine; third article 1.2 times as long as second with fine dorsodistal spine; fourth article curved, nearly three times as long as third, and five times as long as wide, with three simple and three penicillate distal setae; fifth article twice as long as third with distal seta; sixth article minute with four distal setae. Labrum (Fig. 2 C) rounded, hood-shaped, naked. Left mandible (Fig. 2 D) with smooth cutting edge on pars incisiva, large, triangular, crenulate lacinia mobilis , pars molaris a very slender spike with simple point, curved proximally at right angles; right mandible (Fig. 2 E) pars incisiva distally serrated and with bifid tip. Labium (Fig. 2 H) bilobed, squared, naked. Maxillule (Fig. 2 F) endite with nine slender distal spines and one subdistal seta; palp (Fig. 2 F’) with two unequal distal setae. Maxilla (Fig. 2 G) subtriangular, naked. Maxilliped (Fig. 2 I) endites flared, distal third unfused, each with slight distal tubercles and small subdistal seta; palp first article naked, second article with slender outer distal spine, distally with one simple and one finely-denticulate inner setae; third article with three distally-finely-denticulate and one simple inner setae; fourth article with five distal finely-denticulate setae and one subdistal outer simple seta; basis with single short seta. Epignath not recovered. Cheliped (Fig. 3 A) sclerite attachment well-developed, basis 1.6 times as long as wide, with dorsodistal outer seta; merus subtriangular, with single mid-ventral seta; carpus 1.6 times as long as wide, with one shorter and one longer mid-ventral setae, and dorsodistal and dorso-sub-proximal single setae; chela not forcipate, propodus palm as long as fixed finger, with ventral seta distal to fixed finger origin, small seta in axis of chela, comb-row of six spines; fixed finger slender, cutting edge with three distal setae; dactylus with fine dorsoproximal seta and two spinules distally on cutting edge. Pereopod 1 (Fig. 3 B) slender; coxa simple with one seta; basis 5.8 times as long as wide; ischium with single small ventral seta; merus short, about half as long as carpus, naked; carpus with single inner distal and dorsodistal setae; propodus 1.8 times as long as carpus with ventroproximal seta and slight pointed dorsodistal apophysis; dactylus just over half as long as slender unguis, both together 1.1 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 2 (Fig. 3 C) somewhat more compact, basis 5.4 times as long as wide with single dorsal penicillate seta; ischium with single small seta; merus and carpus subequal in length, merus with paired ventrodistal setae, carpus with single dorsodistal seta and large, blade-like, distally-denticulate ventrodistal spine; propodus 1.5 times as long as carpus, with distal spine longer than dactylus but not reaching half length of unguis, dactylus plus longer unguis 0.8 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 3 (Fig. 3 D) similar to pereopod 2, merus stouter, propodus 1.25 times as long as carpus. Pereopod 4 (Fig. 3 E) basis 4.1 times as long as wide with single ventral penicillate seta; ischium with two setae; merus one-third as long as carpus, with two fine ventrodistal simple spines, carpus with two dorsodistal setae, inner–distal seta and blade-like, distally-denticulate ventrodistal spine (as that on pereopod 5, Fig. F’); propodus 1.1 times as long as carpus with one long dorsodistal seta 0.8 times as long as propodus and twice as long as dactylus plus unguis, paired ventrodistal setae, and dorsal penicillate seta; dactylus and unguis not fused into claw, dactylus with inner distal denticulation and outer distal spine-like apophysis (Fig. 3 E’), unguis 0.25 times as long as dactylus, both together 0.4 times as long as propodus. Pereopod 5 (Fig. 3 F, F’) similar to pereopod 4. Pereopod 6 (Fig. 3 G) as pereopod 4, but propodus with two simple distal setae, dactylus with distal crown of spinules (Fig. 3 G’). Pleopods (Fig. 3 H) all alike, with naked basis, exopod larger than endopod, with six distal plumose setae; exopod with four distal plumose setae. Uropod (Fig. 3 I) basis naked, endopod of two partially fused segments, proximal segment with one simple and one penicillate distal setae, distal segment with five simple and two penicillate setae; exopod of one segment, half as long as endopod, single outer subdistal seta and paired distal unequal setae. Distinctions of juvenile female : body (Fig. 1 B) smaller and more compact than adult, 1.3 mm long, 3.8 times as long as wide. Cephalothorax tapering slightly less than that of adult female, 0.8 times as long as wide. Pereonites 4 and 5 subequal in length, twice as wide as long, pereonite 6 as long as pereonite 3. Description of male : (Fig. 1 C) similar to (but smaller than) female, 0.8 mm long, 4.9 times as long as wide. Cephalothorax with indentations anterior to branchial chambers, eyes absent. Pereonites 4 and 5 subequal in length, pleon ovoid rather than parallel-sided. Antennule (Fig. 4 A) peduncle more compact than that of female; first article 2.3 times as long as wide with three fine and one longer outer-distal setae; second article 0.6 times as long as first and with single inner-distal seta, outer-distal corner with long simple seta and three penicillate setae; third article 0.74 times as long as second, with single inner-distal seta; flagellum of four segments, first segment very short, much wider than long, with five or six ventral aesthetascs, second segment much longer than wide but shorter than third peduncle article with four ventrodistal aesthetascs, third segment with four aesthetascs, fourth article with three distal aesthetascs and four setae. Antenna similar to that of female. Mouthparts highly reduced: maxillule (Fig. 4 D) without endite, palp with two distal setae; maxilliped (Fig. 4 C) bases and endites naked, palp with simple setae much longer and more slender than in female, articles 1 to 3 with as many setae as in female, article 4 with four distal setae; epignath slender, twisted, naked. Cheliped (Fig. 4 B) somewhat more robust than that of female, propodus much larger than carpus with distal comb–row of 16 spines. Other appendages not noticeably different from those of female. Etymology. From the Latin, falcifer, “scythe-carrying”, referring to the recurved pars molaris on the mandible (noun in apposition). Remarks. The Pseudotanaidae of the North-East Atlantic and Mediterranean were reviewed comprehensively by Bird and Holdich (1989 a), since when the only new species described from this region was Pseudotanais (P.) stiletto Bamber, 2009 ( vide Bamber et al. 2009), from muddy substrata at 25–62 m depth off the Mediterranean coast of Israel. With a blade-like distal spine on the carpus of pereopods 2 to 6, a non-forcipate chela, and a ventrodistal spine on the propodus of pereopods 2 and 3, which is much shorter than the dactylus and unguis combined, the present species is of the nominate subgenus, but not a member of the “ P. forcipatus -group” nor of the “ P. affinis -group” of Bird and Holdich (1989 a). From their identification key, it keys out as, and indeed it is closest to, P. colonus Bird and Holdich 1989 b, a species known only from recolonization experiments in the northern Bay of Biscay at 2150 m. Pseudotanais falcifer sp. nov. is distinguished from P. colonus by its much lower differentiation in habitus between the sexes (males of P. colonus having all pereonites subequal in length), by having more-attenuate articles in the antennule (proximal article in P. colonus being 3.3 times as long as wide compared with 4.5 times in P. falcifer ), slender (as opposed to stout, robust) spines on the second and third peduncle articles of the antenna, a downcurved (as opposed to straight) pars molaris on the mandibles, subdistal setae on the maxilliped endites (naked in P. c o l o n u s ), and two setae on the ischium of the posterior pereonites (only one seta in P. colonus ), inter alia . P. falcifer is immediately distinguished from P. stiletto as the latter has a straight pars molaris on the mandible, and a two-segmented uropod exopod. Pseudotanais falcifer differs from the other species of Pseudotanais recorded from the Norwegian-Arctic region, viz. P. m a c ro c h e l e s Sars, 1882, P. lilljeborgi Sars, 1882 and P. corollatus Bird & Holdich, 1989, by onesegmented uropod exopod (these other three having two segments) and shorter uropod endopod distal article, a less elongate distal antennule article, a shorter merus on pereopod 1 (half as long as the carpus, compared with 0.7 to 0.8 times as long in the other three), the downcurved pars molaris on the mandibles, and additionally from P. m a c ro c h e l e s in having the chela fingers not longer than the palm. Pseudotanais falcifer was taken over a depth range of 722 to 1263 m, at the HMMV, Storegga and Nyegga sites, including sympatrically with P. affinis . : Published as part of Błażewicz-Paszkowycz, Magdalena & Bamber, Roger N., 2011, Tanaidomorph Tanaidacea (Crustacea: Peracarida) from Mud-Volcano and Seep Sites on the Norwegian Margin, pp. 1-35 in Zootaxa 3061 on pages 3-9, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.278931 : {"references": ["Bird, G. J. & Holdich, D. M. (1989 a) Tanaidacea (Crustacea) of the north-east Atlantic: the subfamily Pseudotanainae (Pseudotanaidae) and the family Nototanaidae. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 97, 233 - 298.", "Bamber R. N., Bird G. J., Blazewicz-Paszkowycz, M. & Galil B. (2009) Tanaidaceans (Crustacea: Malacostraca: Peracarida) from soft-sediment habitats off Israel, Eastern Mediterranean. Zootaxa, 2109, 1 - 44.", "Bird, G. J. & Holdich, D. M. (1989 b) Recolonisation of artificial sediments in the deep Bay of Biscay by tanaidaceans (Crustacea: Peracarida), with a description of a new species of Pseudotanais. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 69, 307 - 317."]} Text Arctic North East Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Nyegga ENVELOPE(9.443,9.443,62.612,62.612) Seta ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645) Storegga ENVELOPE(18.251,18.251,68.645,68.645)