Haploniscus kensleyi George 2004, n. sp.

Haploniscus kensleyi n. sp. (figure 8) Diagnosis. Haploniscus with body broader posteriorly between pereonites 5 and 7. Cephalon with a median projection, about as long as the anterior two pereonites combined. Pereonite 7 in female fused with the shield-like pleotelson. Antenna 1 with flagellum of f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: George, Robert Y.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/5259766
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5259766
Description
Summary:Haploniscus kensleyi n. sp. (figure 8) Diagnosis. Haploniscus with body broader posteriorly between pereonites 5 and 7. Cephalon with a median projection, about as long as the anterior two pereonites combined. Pereonite 7 in female fused with the shield-like pleotelson. Antenna 1 with flagellum of five articles. Material examined. Holotype: female, length 2.1 mm, maximum width 0.9 mm. USNM Cat No. 138673. Type locality. R / V Eastward Sta. 7786, site Alpha-B over the Carolina upper slope. Etymology. This new species is named in honour of isopodologist Dr Bryan Kensley of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Description of female. Body broader at pereonites 5 and 6, narrower anteriorly and posteriorly. Cephalon with rounded lateral and anterior margin, with a conspicuous median projection. Pereonites 1–3 subequal, pereonite 4 longer. Lateral suture well-developed between pereonites 4 and 5. Pereonite 5 the longest, and pereonite 6 the shortest of all pereonites. Pereonite 7 fused with pleotelson. Pleotelson shield-like, with posterolateral angles produced beyond the rounded apex. Antenna 1 with peduncle of two articles, basal article globular and partly concealed by cephalon. Flagellum of antenna 1 composed of five articles. Mandible with a long, stout and truncated molar process; a row of three serrated and two long movable middle spines, incisor process narrow and trifid. Maxilliped with three coupling hooks on the endite and palp composed of five narrow articles, basal and terminal articles of similar width. Depth is the minimum depth of occurrence; distribution is the general zoogeographic area of distribution. *Eurybathyal species. Remarks. This new species is one of the few deep-sea species of the genus Haploniscus from the north-west Atlantic; other north-west Atlantic species include H. curvirostris Vanhoffen, 1914 (also known from the Antarctic and south Atlantic deep sea), Haploniscus retrospinis Richardson, 1908 from 713 m off New England and Haploniscus ...