Published December 31, 2009 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Macrochiridothea multituberculata Nordenstam 1933

Description

Macrochiridothea multituberculata Nordenstam, 1933

Macrochiridothea stebbingi. — Stebbing, 1914: 354. — Moreira, 1972: 395 –399, fig. 1C. — Moreira, 1973: 13 –15, fig. 1 (only).

Macrochiridothea stebbingi var. multituberculata Nordenstam, 1933: 110 –112, pl. 1 fig. 7, fig 26. — Sheppard, 1957: 170 –172. — Menzies, 1962: 101.

Material. Holotype: Rocks at Port William, Falkland (Malvinas) Islands, 51°40'S, 57°47'W, SMNH (ovigerous female, 13 mm).

Diagnosis. Total body length of female 13 mm. Dorsal surface tuberculate (pereonite 1 with pair of lateral longitudinal rows of 3 tubercles and transverse row of 9 tubercles; pereonites 1–4 with 5 longitudinal rows of tubercles: median, 2 sublaterals and 2 laterals, plus smaller intermediate tubercles between them; pereonite 5 with 7 tubercles; pereonite 7 with 3 tubercles; pleonite 1 with 3 tubercles); pleotelson with a single strong median keel. Lateral lobes on head rounded. Pereopods 2 and 3 dactyli subchelate, closing on truncate palm. Pereopod 5 ischium without a prominent hook on upper margin.

Distribution. Falkland (Malvinas) Islands (51°40'S, 57°47'W), Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil (34°S); 65 m.

Remarks. Stebbing (1914) reported on two females of M. stebbingi collected from the Falkland Islands in 1898. Both are about twice as long as the female holotype of the nominal species. Nordenstam’s (1933) subspecies was based on another ovigerous female of similar length and judging on his detailed description of the sculpture and photograph a separate species is justified. Menzies (1962) agreed. Two features clearly distinguish the species: M. multituberculata has wide acute lateral lobes on the head (more rounded in M. stebbingi) and a double lateral tubercle anteriorly on the pleotelson (not evident in M. stebbingi). Moreira’s (1972; 1973) figures of an adult male from off Arroio Chuí, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, that he attributed to M. stebbingi has more but much smaller tubercles than M. stebbingi. It lacks eyes and has acute head lobes. The pattern of tubercles, notably the lateral longitudinal rows of three tubercles on pereonite 1 and the pattern of median tubercle plus double lateral tubercles on the pleotelson, match the description of M. stebbingi multituberculata.

Notes

Published as part of Poore, Gary C. B., 2009, A new species of Chaetiliidae (Crustacea: Isopoda: Valvifera) from the Río de la Plata estuary, Argentina-Uruguay, and reconsideration of Macrochiridothea and Chiriscus, pp. 51-65 in Zootaxa 2119 on page 61, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.188066

Files

Files (2.8 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:c1b12aa200f0b92da3ce837b287750cd
2.8 kB Download

System files (14.8 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:6d5f87de8395f6068b30f8e32b5575b5
14.8 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

References

  • Nordenstam, A. (1933) Marine Isopoda of the families Serolidae, Idotheidae, Pseudidotheidae, Arcturidae, Parasellidae and Stenetriidae mainly from the South Atlantic. Further Zoological Results of the Swedish Antarctic Expedition, 1901 - 1903, 3, 1 - 284, 2 pls, errata.
  • Stebbing, T. R. R. (1914) Crustacea from Falkland islands collected by Mr. Rupert Valletin, F. L. S. Part II. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 341 - 378, 9 pls.
  • Moreira, P. S. (1972) On the distribution of species of Macrochiridothea Ohlin, 1901 in southern Brazil (Crustacea, Isopoda, Valvifera). Revista Brasileira de Biologia, 32, 395 - 399.
  • Moreira, P. S. (1973) Species of Macrochiridothea Ohlin, 1901 (Isopoda, Valvifera) from Southern Brazil, with notes on remaining species of the genus. Boletim do Instituto Oceanografico, Sao Paulo, 22, 11 - 47.
  • Sheppard, E. M. (1957) Isopod Crustacea Part II. The sub-order Valvifera. Families: Idoteidae, Pseudidotheidae and Xenarcturidae fam. n. With a supplement to isopod Crustacea, Part 1. The family Serolidae. Discovery Reports, 29, 141 - 197, pls 8, 9.
  • Menzies, R. J. (1962) Reports of the Lund University Chile Expedition 1948 - 49. 42. The zoogeography, ecology, and systematics of the Chilean marine isopods. Lunds Universitets Arsskrift, 2, 1 - 162.