Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov.

Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa sp. nov. Material : 1 female, holotype (NHM. 2004.47), CP 214, East Coast of Taiwan, N/ O 'Fishery Researcher 1 ' TAIWAN 2003, 24º 28.59 'N 122 º 12.66 'E to 24 º 25.66 'N 122 º 12.78 'E, 490 to 1027 m; 27 /08/ 2003, coll. T­Y Chan. Description :...

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Main Author: Bamber, Roger N.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2004
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6271541
https://zenodo.org/record/6271541
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6271541
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
Pycnogonida
Pantopoda
Pycnogonidae
Pycnogonum
Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Pycnogonida
Pantopoda
Pycnogonidae
Pycnogonum
Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa
Bamber, Roger N.
Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Pycnogonida
Pantopoda
Pycnogonidae
Pycnogonum
Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa
description Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa sp. nov. Material : 1 female, holotype (NHM. 2004.47), CP 214, East Coast of Taiwan, N/ O 'Fishery Researcher 1 ' TAIWAN 2003, 24º 28.59 'N 122 º 12.66 'E to 24 º 25.66 'N 122 º 12.78 'E, 490 to 1027 m; 27 /08/ 2003, coll. T­Y Chan. Description : relatively large Pycnogonum , trunk length (anterior of cephalon to posterior of fourth lateral processes) 4.5 mm, leg span approximately 20 mm. Integument surface densely ornamented with small wart­like papillae, each papilla with minute tubercles or occasional setae over surface (Fig. 4 B); pale straw­coloured in life grading to pale grey on tarsi. Trunk (Figure 4 A, C) fully segmented, tapering from anterior to posterior, lateral processes short. Dorsal trunk­midline tubercles present: tall pointed tubercles mounted on raised posterior rim of first to third trunk segments; smaller, rounded tubercles on anterior of fourth trunk segment, and centrally on cephalon. Cephalon hexagonal, 40 % of trunk length, domed ocular tubercle about 1.5 times as high as wide, bearing four eyes coloured red in life; second and third trunk segments each half as long as cephalon, second 0.77 times as wide as trunk length; fourth trunk segment slightly longer than third; dorsodistal tubercles present on all lateral processes, additional posterodistal lateral process tubercles present on first and second trunk segments. Abdomen truncate, naked, not articulating, held horizontal, wider distally, reaching back as far as distal edge of coxa 2 of fourth legs. Proboscis naked, strongly tapering, without tubercles or papillae, 1.3 times as long as cephalon; oral glands ( sensu Staples 2002) not seen. Oviger absent. Third leg (Figure 4 D) mainly without conspicuous swellings or tubercles. Coxae subequal, wider than long; femur longest article, 2.25 times as long as wide, with midventral swelling bearing short spine; tibia 1 0.85 times as long as femur, twice as long as wide, with one midventral spine; tibia 2 0.85 times as long as tibia 1, without spines but with ventrodistal tuft of fine setae; tarsus short, quadrangular, with fine ventral setae; propodus slender, curved, with ventral fine setae mainly in a single row, and occasional small lateral spines; main claw 0.4 times length of propodus; auxiliary claws absent. Ventral setae on tibia 2, tarsus and propodus not bifurcate. Female gonopore conspicuous on posterodorsal surface of coxa 2 of fourth legs (arrowed on Fig. 4 A). Coxal glands ( sensu Staples 2002) not seen. Measurements (mm) : trunk length 4.51; width across second lateral processes 3.49; proboscis length 2.42; abdomen length 1.52; third leg, coxa 1 0.68, coxa 2 0.78, coxa 3 0.68, femur 2.03, tibia 1 1.75, tibia 2 1.46, tarsus 0.23, propodus 1.38, claw 0.26. Etymology : from the Greek kranaos —rugged, rocky, and byrsa —hide or skin, referring to the complex pustulation of the integument of the present species (female, noun in apposition). Remarks : There is a number of Pycnogonum species with a slender tapering proboscis, no auxiliary claws and pointed mid­dorsal trunk tubercles, but only the present species has the pustulate integument together with a rounded ocular tubercle. Using the key to the genus of Stock (1966), P. cranaobyrsa identifies to couplet 20, where both P. t o r re s i Clark, 1963 and P. indicum Sundara Raj, 1930 are distinct from the present species in having a distally rounded abdomen and blunt (distally rounded) trunk tubercles. P. i n d i c u m is further distinguished owing to its compact leg articles, both femur and tibia 1 being less than twice as long as wide (Sundara Raj 1930). P. cranaobyrsa bears more similarity to P. o c c a Loman, 1908, but the latter species has a distally pointed ocular tubercle and more slender leg articles (Staples 2002). Of other similar species described since Stock's (1966) review of the genus, P. eltanin Fry & Hedgpeth, 1969 is different from the present species in having distally rounded trunk tubercles; P. (N) moniliferum Stock, 1991 does have distally pointed trunk tubercles (see Bamber in press), but differs from P. cranaobyrsa in having a distally pointed ocular tubercle, a dorsal tubercle on coxa 3, and numerous spines and setae on the leg articles. : Published as part of Bamber, Roger N., 2004, with description of three new species, pp. 1-12 in Zootaxa 458 on pages 9-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.157995 : {"references": ["Staples, D. A. (2002) Pycnogonum (Pycnogonida: Pycnogonidae) from Australia with descriptions of two new species. Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria, 59, 541 - 553.", "Stock, J. H. (1966) 4. Pycnogonida. Campagne de la Calypso au large des cotes atlantiques de l'Amerique du sud (1961 - 62). Resultats Scientifiques de la Campagne de la Calypso, 7. In Annales de l'Institut Oceanographique, Monaco, 44, 385 - 406.", "Sundara Raj, B. (1930) Pycnogonida of Krusadai Island (Supplement). Bulletin of the Madras Government Museum (N. S.), 1 (2) (7), 73 - 76.", "Fry, W. G. & Hedgpeth, J. W. (1969) Pycnogonida, 1. Colossendeidae, Pycnogonidae, Endeidae, Ammotheidae. Fauna of the Ross Sea, 7. Memoirs of the New Zealand Oceanographic Institute, 49, 1 - 139.", "Stock, J. H. (1991) Pycnogonida of the MUSORSTOM campaigns to the Philippines. In: Crosnier, A. (Ed.), Resultats des Campagnes MUSORSTOM, Vol 8. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris (A), 151, 213 - 228."]}
format Text
author Bamber, Roger N.
author_facet Bamber, Roger N.
author_sort Bamber, Roger N.
title Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov.
title_short Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov.
title_full Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov.
title_sort pycnogonum cranaobyrsa bamber, 2004, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2004
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6271541
https://zenodo.org/record/6271541
geographic New Zealand
Ross Sea
geographic_facet New Zealand
Ross Sea
genre Ross Sea
genre_facet Ross Sea
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http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF88590BFFE26D30856DFFA7FF96507C
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cc0-1.0
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6271541
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6271541 2023-05-15T18:07:35+02:00 Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa Bamber, 2004, sp. nov. Bamber, Roger N. 2004 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6271541 https://zenodo.org/record/6271541 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF88590BFFE26D30856DFFA7FF96507C https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.157995 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF88590BFFE26D30856DFFA7FF96507C https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.158000 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6271542 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 Pycnogonida Pantopoda Pycnogonidae Pycnogonum Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2004 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6271541 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.157995 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.158000 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6271542 2022-04-01T12:35:38Z Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa sp. nov. Material : 1 female, holotype (NHM. 2004.47), CP 214, East Coast of Taiwan, N/ O 'Fishery Researcher 1 ' TAIWAN 2003, 24º 28.59 'N 122 º 12.66 'E to 24 º 25.66 'N 122 º 12.78 'E, 490 to 1027 m; 27 /08/ 2003, coll. T­Y Chan. Description : relatively large Pycnogonum , trunk length (anterior of cephalon to posterior of fourth lateral processes) 4.5 mm, leg span approximately 20 mm. Integument surface densely ornamented with small wart­like papillae, each papilla with minute tubercles or occasional setae over surface (Fig. 4 B); pale straw­coloured in life grading to pale grey on tarsi. Trunk (Figure 4 A, C) fully segmented, tapering from anterior to posterior, lateral processes short. Dorsal trunk­midline tubercles present: tall pointed tubercles mounted on raised posterior rim of first to third trunk segments; smaller, rounded tubercles on anterior of fourth trunk segment, and centrally on cephalon. Cephalon hexagonal, 40 % of trunk length, domed ocular tubercle about 1.5 times as high as wide, bearing four eyes coloured red in life; second and third trunk segments each half as long as cephalon, second 0.77 times as wide as trunk length; fourth trunk segment slightly longer than third; dorsodistal tubercles present on all lateral processes, additional posterodistal lateral process tubercles present on first and second trunk segments. Abdomen truncate, naked, not articulating, held horizontal, wider distally, reaching back as far as distal edge of coxa 2 of fourth legs. Proboscis naked, strongly tapering, without tubercles or papillae, 1.3 times as long as cephalon; oral glands ( sensu Staples 2002) not seen. Oviger absent. Third leg (Figure 4 D) mainly without conspicuous swellings or tubercles. Coxae subequal, wider than long; femur longest article, 2.25 times as long as wide, with midventral swelling bearing short spine; tibia 1 0.85 times as long as femur, twice as long as wide, with one midventral spine; tibia 2 0.85 times as long as tibia 1, without spines but with ventrodistal tuft of fine setae; tarsus short, quadrangular, with fine ventral setae; propodus slender, curved, with ventral fine setae mainly in a single row, and occasional small lateral spines; main claw 0.4 times length of propodus; auxiliary claws absent. Ventral setae on tibia 2, tarsus and propodus not bifurcate. Female gonopore conspicuous on posterodorsal surface of coxa 2 of fourth legs (arrowed on Fig. 4 A). Coxal glands ( sensu Staples 2002) not seen. Measurements (mm) : trunk length 4.51; width across second lateral processes 3.49; proboscis length 2.42; abdomen length 1.52; third leg, coxa 1 0.68, coxa 2 0.78, coxa 3 0.68, femur 2.03, tibia 1 1.75, tibia 2 1.46, tarsus 0.23, propodus 1.38, claw 0.26. Etymology : from the Greek kranaos —rugged, rocky, and byrsa —hide or skin, referring to the complex pustulation of the integument of the present species (female, noun in apposition). Remarks : There is a number of Pycnogonum species with a slender tapering proboscis, no auxiliary claws and pointed mid­dorsal trunk tubercles, but only the present species has the pustulate integument together with a rounded ocular tubercle. Using the key to the genus of Stock (1966), P. cranaobyrsa identifies to couplet 20, where both P. t o r re s i Clark, 1963 and P. indicum Sundara Raj, 1930 are distinct from the present species in having a distally rounded abdomen and blunt (distally rounded) trunk tubercles. P. i n d i c u m is further distinguished owing to its compact leg articles, both femur and tibia 1 being less than twice as long as wide (Sundara Raj 1930). P. cranaobyrsa bears more similarity to P. o c c a Loman, 1908, but the latter species has a distally pointed ocular tubercle and more slender leg articles (Staples 2002). Of other similar species described since Stock's (1966) review of the genus, P. eltanin Fry & Hedgpeth, 1969 is different from the present species in having distally rounded trunk tubercles; P. (N) moniliferum Stock, 1991 does have distally pointed trunk tubercles (see Bamber in press), but differs from P. cranaobyrsa in having a distally pointed ocular tubercle, a dorsal tubercle on coxa 3, and numerous spines and setae on the leg articles. : Published as part of Bamber, Roger N., 2004, with description of three new species, pp. 1-12 in Zootaxa 458 on pages 9-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.157995 : {"references": ["Staples, D. A. (2002) Pycnogonum (Pycnogonida: Pycnogonidae) from Australia with descriptions of two new species. Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria, 59, 541 - 553.", "Stock, J. H. (1966) 4. Pycnogonida. Campagne de la Calypso au large des cotes atlantiques de l'Amerique du sud (1961 - 62). Resultats Scientifiques de la Campagne de la Calypso, 7. In Annales de l'Institut Oceanographique, Monaco, 44, 385 - 406.", "Sundara Raj, B. (1930) Pycnogonida of Krusadai Island (Supplement). Bulletin of the Madras Government Museum (N. S.), 1 (2) (7), 73 - 76.", "Fry, W. G. & Hedgpeth, J. W. (1969) Pycnogonida, 1. Colossendeidae, Pycnogonidae, Endeidae, Ammotheidae. Fauna of the Ross Sea, 7. Memoirs of the New Zealand Oceanographic Institute, 49, 1 - 139.", "Stock, J. H. (1991) Pycnogonida of the MUSORSTOM campaigns to the Philippines. In: Crosnier, A. (Ed.), Resultats des Campagnes MUSORSTOM, Vol 8. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris (A), 151, 213 - 228."]} Text Ross Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) New Zealand Ross Sea