Published October 17, 2017 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Epimeria (Subepimeria) adeliae d'Acoz & Verheye 2017, sp. nov.

  • 1. Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Service Heritage, Rue Vautier 29, B- 1000 Brussels, Belgium. & Corresponding author: cdudekem @ naturalsciences. be
  • 2. Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Operational direction Taxonomy and Phylogeny, Rue Vautier 29, B- 1000 Brussels, Belgium. & Email: mverheye @ naturalsciences. be

Description

Epimeria (Subepimeria) adeliae sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 76F9695C-487B-434F-B09C-52CA334ACD5B

Figs 294–298

‘ Clade B puncticulata complex - PUN4’ – Verheye et al. 2016a, supplement: 3 (online).

Etymology

The noun Adelia, -ae is a Latinization of Adèle (referring to Adèle Pépin, the wife of Jules Sébastien César Dumont d’Urville), and alludes to Adélie Coast (discovered by J.S.C. Dumont d’Urville), where the type material of the species was collected. The name is a genitive.

Type material

Holotype

RV Aurora Australis cruises:

SOUTHERN OCEAN: ♀, cruise CEAMARC, sample CEAMARC 2072, stn 65EV322, Adélie Coast, 65°48ʹ09″ S, 143°03ʹ46″ E, 750–788 m, beam trawl, 5 Jan. 2008, coll. IPEV-AAD-MNHN (MNHN- IU-2014-4288) [extraction M4; Genbank nr, COI: KU870888, 28S: KU759671].

Paratypes

RV Aurora Australis cruises:

SOUTHERN OCEAN: 1 spec., cruise CEAMARC, sample CEAMARC 2072, stn 65EV322, Adélie Coast, 65°48ʹ09″ S, 143°03ʹ46″ E, 750–788 m, beam trawl, 5 Jan. 2008, coll. IPEV-AAD-MNHN (MNHN-IU-2014-7339, removed from MNHN-IU-2014-4288); 1 spec., cruise CEAMARC, sample CEAMARC 2072, stn 65EV322, Adélie Coast, 65°48ʹ09″ S, 143°03ʹ46″ E, 750–788 m, beam trawl, 5 Jan. 2008, coll. IPEV-AAD-MNHN (MNHN-IU-2014-7340, removed from MNHN-IU-2014-4288) [extraction M3; Genbank nr, 28S: KU759670].

Description

ROSTRUM. In lateral view short and narrow, nearly reaching tip of article 1 of peduncle of antenna 1, distinctly curved on the proximal half of its anterior border, posterior border straight, tip acute; in frontal view triangular: fairly broad and with straight converging borders, with tip blunt.

EYES. Large, broadly elliptic.

PEREION–PLEOSOME TOOTH PATTERN. Pereionites 1–6 totally smooth; pereionite 7 keeled with small blunt posterodorsal tooth; pleonites 1–2 keeled with well developed acute posterodorsal tooth; pleonite 3 keeled with posterodorsal tip forming a distinct squared angle.

COXAE 1–3. Tip blunt but narrow.

COXA 4. Of medium width; anterodorsal border proximally nearly straight, curving ventrally and followed by curved anteroventral border (transition between anterodorsal and anteroventral border very gradual, without distinct anterior corner); the coxa is not projecting forward; ventral corner forming a squared angle of which the tip is blunt but not rounded; posteroventral border nearly straight (very weakly concave); posterodorsal border as long as posteroventral border.

COXA 5. Very broad, posteroventral corner forming a blunt but distinct angle.

COXA 6. Posterior border regularly rounded.

COXA 7. Posterior border nearly straight (very weakly convex); posteroventral corner broadly rounded.

EPIMERAL PLATES 1–3. Posteroventral angle blunt and squared in plate 1, produced into a medium-sized tooth in plate 2, into a large tooth in plate 3.

UROSOME TOOTH PATTERN. Urosomite 1 with distinct triangular dorsal process, anteriorly weakly concave, tip subacute, posterior border weakly convex.

TELSON. Cleft on 0.4; lobes with tips bluntly angulate; notch narrowly V-shaped.

GNATHOPODS 1–2. Carpus and propodus of normal slenderness; propodus not narrowing distally, and palm distinct.

PEREIOPOD 5. Basis of normal width, with posteroproximal process forming a low but distinct rounded lobe, with posterodistal corner forming a long, narrowly triangular blunt-tipped tooth; merus, carpus and propodus stout.

PEREIOPOD 6. Basis of normal width, with posteroproximal process very low and rounded, posterior border nearly straight, diverging from anterior border and terminated in blunt squared angle; merus, carpus and propodus stout.

PEREIOPOD 7. Basis broad; posterior border weakly convex, with inconspicuous trace of concavity in distal 0.9, terminated into a blunt, obtuse (nearly squared) angle.

Body length

Up to 16 mm.

Distribution

Adélie Coast, 750– 788 m.

Remarks

The pattern of dorsal teeth of Epimeria adeliae sp. nov. is reminiscent to that of E. (Subepimeria) sp. 1 from South Georgia and different from that of other species of the subgenus Subepimeria.

Notes

Published as part of d'Acoz, Cédric d'Udekem & Verheye, Marie L., 2017, Epimeria of the Southern Ocean with notes on their relatives (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Eusiroidea), pp. 1-553 in European Journal of Taxonomy 359 on pages 141-142, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2017.359, http://zenodo.org/record/3855694

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
MNHN
Event date
2008-01-05
Family
Epimeriidae
Genus
Epimeria
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
MNHN- IU-2014-4288
Order
Amphipoda
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
d'Acoz & Verheye
Species
adeliae
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2008-01-05
Taxonomic concept label
Epimeria (Subepimeria) adeliae d'Acoz & Verheye, 2017

References

  • Verheye M., Backeljau T. & d'Udekem d'Acoz C. 2016 a. Looking beneath the tip of the iceberg: diversification of the genus Epimeria on the Antarctic shelf (Crustacea, Amphipoda). In: Gutt J., David B. & Isla E. (eds) High environmental variability and steep biological gradients in the waters off the northern Antarctic Peninsula. Polar Biology 39 (5): 925 - 945, online supplementary material https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / s 00300 - 016 - 1910 - 5