Published October 8, 2009 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Seba gruneri Yerman & Coleman 2009, sp. nov.

  • 1. Crustacea Section, Australian Museum, 6 College Street, Sydney, NSW 2010, Australia. & School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, National Marine Science Centre, Charlesworth Bay, Coffs Harbour, NSW, 2450, Australia.
  • 2. Humboldt-University, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Abteilung Sammlungen, D- 10099 Berlin, Germany.

Description

Seba gruneri sp. nov.

(Figs 1–3)

Type material. Holotype, male, 3.9 mm, AM P71239, Horseshoe Reef, Lizard Island (14°41.21’S 145°26.49’E), sponge, large coral bommies surrounded by sand and rubble, by hand on scuba, 9 m, C. Serejo, 2 March 2005 (QLD 1760). Paratypes: 7 males from type locality; and 1 female, 2.5 mm, AM P71237, from type locality.

Other material examined. 32 females, 5 juvenile males AM P71237 (QLD 1760); 1 male JDT/LIZ-19; 3 juveniles, 1 male JDT/LIZ-7.

Type locality. Horseshoe Reef, Lizard Island, Queensland, Australia (14°41.21’S 145°26.49’E).

Etymology. Named for the late Professor Dr. Hans Eckhard Gruner, the predecessor of COC at the Natural History Museum in Berlin, to acknowledge his valuable contributions to crustacean research.

Description. Based on male holotype, 3.9 mm, AM P71239.

Head. Head eyes apparently absent. Antenna 1 peduncular article 1 subequal in length to article 2; article 2 length 2.9 x breadth. Maxilla 1 palp 1-articulate. Maxilla 2 with two plates.

Pereon. Gnathopod 1 subchelate; larger than gnathopod 2; coxa with posteroventral corner rounded; propodus thumb absent, palm obtuse, sculptured; dactylus curved. Gnathopod 2 chelate; ischium long, 3.3 x breadth; carpus not lobate, carpus more than 0.6 x length of propodus. Pereopod 3 coxa with posteroventral corner subquadrate to rounded. Pereopod 4 coxa with posteroventral lobe absent. Pereopod 5 basis evenly expanded, margins subparallel; merus expanded, extending 75% along carpus. Pereopod 6 basis evenly expanded, margins subparallel. Pereopod 7 basis broadly expanded, posterior margin evenly convex; merus broadly expanded, extending past distal margin of carpus.

Pleon. Epimeron 2 posteroventral corner acutely produced. Epimeron 3 posteroventral corner subquadrate. Urosomites 2–3 coalesced. Uropod 1 peduncle subequal in length to uropod 2 peduncle; outer ramus subequal in length to inner ramus. Uropod 2 outer ramus subequal in length to inner ramus. Uropod 3 peduncle about half length of ramus. Telson longer than broad, lateral margins slightly convex.

Female (sexually dimorphic characters). Based on paratype, female, 2.5 mm, AM P71237. Antenna 1 peduncular article 2 length 2.5 x breadth. Gnathopod 1 chelate; smooth, straight. Pereopod 5 extending halfway along carpus. Pereopod 7 merus expanded, extending about halfway along carpus.

Habitat. Sponges on large coral bommies surrounded by sand and rubble.

Remarks. Similar to Seba gruneri sp. nov., there are a few sebid species that have a characteristically widened merus lobe that surpasses the distal margin of the carpus on pereopod 7 in the male sex. However, details of the morphology or combination of characters are different. Seba aloe Karaman, 1971, Seba antarctica Walker, 1907 and Seba gloriosae Ledoyer, 1986 have the same merus shape, but on pereopods 5–7 (vs on pereopod 7 only) and a finger like palm process creating a chelate gnathopod 1 (vs a subchelate, sculptured palm). Also similar is the material that Griffiths (1974, 1976) described from Southern Africa as Seba saundersi. This species has a ventrally strongly elongate merus lobe on pereopod 7 (weaker on pereopod 6) and a subchelate, though differently sculptured subchelate palm region. A similar merus lobe arrangement appears in Seba subantarctica Schellenberg, 1931, but this species has a clearly chelate gnathopod 1. Seba chiltoni Moore, 1987 and Seba typica (Chilton, 1884) in the descriptions by Ledoyer, 1978 and 1986 are very similar to the new species in the shape of the gnathopod 1 palm and the protrusion on the inner curvature of the dactylus, but compared to Seba gruneri sp. nov. the merus lobe on pereopod 7 is not longer than the distal carpus margin. Seba robusta Ortiz & Lemaitre, 1997 has also a very similar palm morphology of gnathopod 1, however, the meral lobes are short and rather slender.

Distribution. Australia. Queensland: Lizard Island (current study).

Notes

Published as part of Yerman, Michelle N. & Coleman, Charles Oliver, 2009, Sebidae *, pp. 861-871 in Zootaxa 2260 (1) on pages 861-865, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.2260.1.48, http://zenodo.org/record/5309437

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
AM
Event date
2005-03-02
Family
Sebidae
Genus
Seba
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Amphipoda
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Yerman & Coleman
Species
gruneri
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype , paratype
Verbatim event date
2005-03-02
Taxonomic concept label
Seba gruneri Yerman & Coleman, 2009

References

  • Karaman, G. S. (1971) Zum Problem der Seba - Arten: Seba aloe n. sp. und Seba armata (Chevreux) (Fam. Sebidae). - 35. Beitrag zur Kenntnis der Amphipoden. Memoria del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale Verona, 19, 73 - 90.
  • Walker, A. O. (1907) Crustacea. III. Amphipoda. National Antarctic Expedition 1901 - 1904 " Discovery ", 1 - 39. Walker, A. O. (1908) Amphipoda from the Auckland Islands. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 8, 2 (7), 33 - 39.
  • Ledoyer, M. (1986) Crustaces amphipodes gammariens. Familles des Haustoriidae a Vitjazianidae. Faune de Madagascar, 59, 599 - 1112.
  • Griffiths, C. L. (1974) The Amphipoda of Southern Africa. Part 4. The Gammaridea and Caprellidea of the Cape Province east of Cape Agulhas. Annals of the South African Museum, 65, 251 - 336.
  • Griffiths, C. L. (1976) Guide to the benthic marine amphipods of Southern Africa. Trustees of the South African Museum. Cape Town, 1 - 106.
  • Schellenberg, A. (1931) Gammariden und Caprelliden des Magellangebietes, Sudgeorgien und der Westantarktis. Further zoological Results of the Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1901 - 1903, 2, 1 - 290.
  • Moore, P. G. (1987) Taxonomic studies on Tasmanian phytal amphipods (Crustacea): the families Anamixidae, Leucothoidae and Sebidae. Journal of Natural History, 21, 239 - 262.
  • Chilton, C. (1884) Additions to the sessile-eyed Crustacea of New Zealand. Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute, 16, 249 - 265.
  • Ledoyer, M. (1978) Amphipodes gammariens (Crustacea) des biotopes cavitaires organogenes recifaux de l'ile Maurice (Ocean Indien). The Mauritius Institute Bulletin, 8, 197 - 332.
  • Ortiz, M. & Lemaitre, R. (1997) Seven new amphipods (Crustacea: Peracarida: Gammaridea) from the Caribbean Coast of South America. Boletin de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras, 26, 71 - 104.