Metapseudinae Lang, 1970
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4370.4.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0AC1BCEC-0153-46EF-9C61-592C42214EDF |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5979417 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B28783-A53B-FF8E-8DEA-FD8FFBF4FE91 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Metapseudinae Lang, 1970 |
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Subfamily Metapseudinae Lang, 1970 View in CoL
Diagnosis (modified from Guţu 1996). Body usually dorsoventrally flattened; pleon with five free, partially fused, or fused pleonites. Antennule peduncle usually with apophyses or spinose processes; inner flagellum with two or more articles, outer flagella with three or more articles. Antenna with squama usually present; peduncle having four or five articles with apophyses; flagellum with three or more articles. Cheliped with short carpus and large propodus; exopod present or absent; pereopod-1 with or without exopod; dactylus of pereopods 4–6 with ventral apophysis. Pleopods in two to five pairs in male, usually reduced; in female present or absent. Sexual dimorphism expressed in chelipeds, pleopods, and antennules.
Type species. Metapseudes aucklandiae Stephensen, 1927 .
Other genera included: Apseudomorpha ; Cryptapseudes ; Cyclopoapseudes ; Labraxeudes Błażewicz- Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2007; Metapseudes ; Plectrocopus Guţu, 2006 ; Pseudoapseudomorpha Guţu, 1991 ; Ronabus n. gen. (see below).
Remarks. Metapseudes and Ronabus n. gen. are the only members of the Metapseudinae that lack an antennal squama. The other genera have retained the squama and some have exopods on the cheliped and pereopod-1. When present, pleopods occurring on members of the subfamily are weakly developed with few setae.
Ronabus Stępień, Drumm and Heard, n. gen.
Synonymy. Synapseudes Gardiner, 1973 (in part).
Etymology. Abbreviation for Roger Norman Bamber = ronab + us. Named in honor of the late Roger N. Bamber in recognition of his expertise and many contributions to our knowledge of the arthropod classes Pycnogonida and Malacostraca, especially the Tanaidacea .
Gender: male.
Type species. Synapseudes idios Gardiner, 1973 .
Species included
Diagnosis. Body about 3 mm long, about 5.7 times as long as wide; strongly calcified. Cephalothorax length twice that of antennular peduncle article-1. Pleon functionally fused, but with dorsal surface showing vestiges of five pleonites, pleonite-1 and usually pleonite-2, distinctly indicated both dorsally and ventrally, pleonites 3–5 reduced and only indicated dorsally. Antennular peduncle article-1 having inner row tubercles, article-2 with apophyses on outer and inner distal margins; inner flagellum with two articles and outer flagellum with three. Antenna with seven articles, apparently four peduncular and three flagella. Mandibular palp triarticulate, with articles 1–2 each having single seta, article-3 with five or six terminal setae, largest distally serrate. Cheliped without exopod. Pereopod-1 without exopod. Pleopods, one reduced pair, either uniramous or biramous, usually present on pleonite-1. Uropodal exopod with three articles, endopod with four.
Remarks. Ronabus n. gen. appears to be transitional between the subfamilies Synapseudinae and Metapseudinae . Because it lacks an antennal squama and exopods on the cheliped and pereopod-1, the new genus cannot be included among the more plesiomorphic members of the Chondropodinae . Ronabus can no longer be accommodated within the Synapseudinae as defined here, since its members exhibit more highly derived characters (e.g., complete fusion of at least the last four pleonites with telson, reduced setation of the mandibular palp, one or two articles in the antennal flagellum, and complete absence of pleopods). The genus does, however, appear to have affinities to Metapseudes , which also lacks an antennal squama and has pleopods.
In addition to the partial fusion of the pleon and presence of single pair of uniramous or biramous pleopods on pleonite-1 ( Fig. 3I –K View FIGURE 3 ), Ronabus differs further from Metapseudes (see Fig. 3A, C View FIGURE 3 , E-H) by having (1) an antenna composed of seven articles ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ), (2), mandibular palp with distal article having several terminal setae, including at least two being distally serrate ( Fig. 3D View FIGURE 3 ), and (3) the uropodal endopod composed of three articles ( Fig. 3L View FIGURE 3 ). In Metapseudes , article-3 of the mandibular palp lacks terminal serrate setae ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ), and the antenna ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ) and uropodal endopod ( Fig. 3H View FIGURE 3 ) resemble those of Synapseudes (see Fig. 4G, N View FIGURE 4 ).
Characters such as the absence of an antennal squama and chelipedal and pereopod-1 exopods, as well as other characters shared by Ronabus and Metapseudes , may eventually warrant a systematic re-evaluation of the Metapseudinae . Pending future study, we place Ronabus within the Metapseudinae .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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