Published April 18, 2018 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Eocyzicus careyensis Tippelt & Schwentner 2018, sp. nov.

Description

Eocyzicus careyensis sp. nov.

(Fig. 19 c, d and e)

Eocyzicus lineage R Schwentner et al., 2014, 2015b

Etymology. " Careyensis" refers to Lake Carey, which is the only known locality for this species. The species name means "lives in Lake Carey".

Type locality. Western Australia, Lake Carey, 29°10´S, 122°20´E.

Type material. Holotype. Female (Western Australian Museum registration number 55044, GenBank KC583813), collected by B. V. Timms, 08-III-2011.

Further material examined. No material from other localities available

Description. Holotype female (Fig. 19 c, d and e). Carapace. 5.0 mm high, 8.5 mm long, height/length ratio 0.59; height without "crowded" growth lines 4.7 mm, length without "crowded" growth lines 8.0 mm; shape oval; dorso-posterior corner nearly absent; 13 growth lines, of these twelve "non-crowded" and one "crowded"; umbo small, hemispheric, growth lines present (Fig. 19c).

Head. Condyle rounded; section between condyle and external eye contour concave; eye bulge small, compound eye oval; straight angle between head and rostrum; anterior margin of rostrum straight; transition between anterior and ventral margin angular (Fig. 19d). Antennule with twelve lobules, widely arranged; reaches to third antennary segments. Antenna with twelve antennary segments, middle antennary segment anteriorly with two spines.

Thorax. 23 thorax segments, of these 21 "complete" and two "incomplete" (Fig. 19e); dorsal spines beginning at 13th thorax segment, eight thorax segments with dorsal spines; one dorsal spine at each thorax segment, first dorsal spine smaller than following one, last dorsal spine smaller than preceding one, last "complete" thorax segment without dorsal spine (Fig. 19 e).

Telson. 20 telsonic spines, of these three enlarged, telsonic spines end after base of apex; telson symmetric; telsonic filaments situated between third and fourth telsonic spine. Furca with 22 setae, longer than proximal part of furca; small spine before row of spinules absent, spinules short (Fig. 19e).

Ovigerous flagella situated at 9th and 10th thorax segment.

Differential diagnosis. According to Schwentner et al. (2014) the putative sister species are Eocyzicus armatus sp. nov. and E. parooensis. The PCA showed a clear differentiation between E. careyensis sp. nov. and these two as well as all other species (Fig. 2c). Eocyzicus careyensis sp. nov. can be morphologically differentiated from E. armatus sp. nov. and E. parooensis by the number of all growth lines, number of lobules on the antennules, number of thorax segments with dorsal spines and number of setae on the furca (Table 2). Eocyzicus armatus sp. nov. can be delimited following the PSC (Wheeler & Platnick, 2000) and the ESC (Wiley & Mayden, 2000). However, it does not occur in sympatry with any other Eocyzicus species and, therefore, its species status following the BSC (Mayr, 1942) remains ambiguous.

Distribution and ecology. This species is known only from Lake Carey, a large clear hyposaline lake. Eocyzicus careyensis sp. nov. does not occur sympatrically with any other studied Eocyzicus species.

Notes

Published as part of Tippelt, Lisa & Schwentner, Martin, 2018, Taxonomic assessment of Australian Eocyzicus species (Crustacea: Branchiopoda: Spinicaudata), pp. 401-452 in Zootaxa 4410 (3) on page 438, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4410.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/1221684

Files

Files (3.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:1aeda2d7f6513da19e0e62246ce0eb48
3.9 kB Download

System files (22.6 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:04aeee201d29cac02b01810c2f4c25d5
22.6 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Event date
2011-03-08
Family
Cyzicidae
Genus
Eocyzicus
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Diplostraca
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Tippelt & Schwentner
Species
careyensis
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2011-03-08
Taxonomic concept label
Eocyzicus careyensis Tippelt & Schwentner, 2018