Oncaea venusta Philippi, 1843

Juan M. Fuentes-Reinés & Eduardo Suárez-Morales, 2017, New records of poecilostomatoid copepods (Crustacea) from a coastal system in the Colombian Caribbean with notes on morphology, Check List 13 (5), pp. 513-523 : 514-516

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.15560/13.5.513

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4606021

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B487B5-E028-2D27-D727-686E1286FEEB

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Plazi (2017-09-28 15:32:26, last updated 2024-11-27 13:27:20)

scientific name

Oncaea venusta Philippi, 1843
status

 

Oncaea venusta Philippi, 1843

Figures 2–5 View Figures 2 – 5

Synonymy ( Medellín-Mora and Navas 2010: 302): Antaria coerulescens Claus, 1866 ; Antaria gracilis Dana, 1849 ; Oncäa venusta Giesbrecht, 1892 ; Oncaea obtusa Brady, 1883 ; Oncaea praeclara Humes, 1988 ; Oncaea pyriformis Lubbock, 1860

Material examined. Fifteen adult females undissected, 2 dissected ( UARC 284M).

Remarks. The specimen from Colombia bears the diagnostic features of O. venusta as reported by Böttger- Schnack (2001) and Böttger-Schnack and Huys (2004). The body is cyclopiform, robust, habitus as in Figure 2 View Figures 2 – 5 . Body length, excluding caudal setae = 940–965µm, average: 0.95 µm (n = 15). Colombian specimens are characterized by 1) prosome tapering posteriorly, with small dorsal swelling on the P2-bearing somite ( Fig. 2 View Figures 2 – 5 ), 2) P6 with 4 pores on surface of genital double-somite (arrowed, Fig. 3 View Figures 2 – 5 ), 3) genital double-somite about 1.8 times as long as wide ( Fig. 4 View Figures 2 – 5 ), anal somite with paired dorsal pore on posterior margin ( Fig. 5 View Figures 2 – 5 ). Caudal ramus about 3.5 times as long as wide ( Fig. 5 View Figures 2 – 5 ).

Among the oncaeid copepods, O. venusta was the most frequently found species in the surveyed area. It is an epipelagic form ( Böttger-Schnack 2001) but it has been collected also from bathypelagic depths (Böttger- Schnack 1996, Nishibe et al. 2009), and our data indicate that they can dwell locally in shallow littoral conditions as well, probably as a result of passive transportation processes from adjacent shelf waters. The species is known for its high variability in total body length, ranging from 0.75 to 1.4 mm in the female and from 0.55 to 0.98 mm in the male ( Böttger-Schnack and Huys 2004). Based on its size range the species has been categorized into 3 groups ( Böttger-Schnack 2001, Böttger-Schnack and Huys 2004). Molecular studies using of 2 DNA markers (cyt b and ITS1) could differentiate 4 genetic clades where the small and large size groups were separated genetically and both could be deemed as distinct species (see Elvers et al. 2006, fig. 2, table 4). Therefore, some authors prefer to designate the group with the large size as O. venusta (960–1260 µm) and the smaller forms as O. venella (800–830 µm) ( Wi et al. 2008); our specimens could be included in the first group.

The maximum size of our Colombian specimens (ca 0.96 mm) is not within the range of the typical form of the species, which is usually larger than 1 mm (see Böttger-Schnack and Huys 2004; table 1). In addition, these specimens possess a small dorsal swelling on the second pedigerous somite which is visible in lateral view (arrowed in Fig. 2 View Figures 2 – 5 ) and indicates that the local population of O. venusta from Colombia belongs to the Atlantic form of the medium-sized group of the species (see Böttger- Schnack and Huys 2004; table 1).

Distribution. It is considered a cosmopolitan species (Razouls et al. 2005–2016) and has been recorded in the Indian, Atlantic, and Pacific Oceans at latitudes between 65° N and 45°S ( Farran 1929, Malt 1983, Böttger- Schnack et al. 1989, Heron 2002, Böttger-Schnack and Huys 2004). In Colombia this species has been reported in the Pacific coast and in oceanic waters of the Colombian Caribbean: Magdalena, Guajira, and San Andres Island ( Michel and Foyo 1976, Campos and Plata 1990, Bernal and Zea 2000, Martínez-Barragán et al. 2009, López and Mojica 2015). This is the first record from Rodadero Bay.

Oncaea scottodicarloi Heron & Bradford-Grieve, 1995 Figures 6–8

Bernal A, Zea S (2000) Estructura taxonomica y trofica de la comuni- dad de zooplancton bajo un regimen alternante entre descarga continental y afloramiento costero en Santa Marta, Caribe colombiano. Boletin de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras 29: 3 - 26.

Bottger-Schnack R, Schnack D, Weikert H (1989) Biological observations on small cyclopoid copepods in the Red Sea. Journal of Plankton Research 11: 1089 - 1101. https: // doi. org / 10.1093 /plankt / 11.5.1089

Bottger-Schnack R (2001) Taxonomy of Oncaeidae (Copepoda: Poecilostomatoida) from the Red Sea. II. Seven species of O ncaea s. str. Bulletin of the Natural History Museum London (Zoology) 67: 25 - 84. https: // doi. org / 10.1093 / plankt / fbp 051

Bottger-Schnack R, Huys R (2004) Size polymorphism in Oncaea venusta Philippi, 1843 and the validity of O. frosti Heron, 2002: a commentary. Hydrobiologia 513: 1 - 5. https: // doi. org / 10.1023 / B: hydr. 0000018301.50664.3 d

Campos N, Plata J (1990) Crustaceos epiplanctonicos de la region de Santa Marta, Caribe colombiano. In: CVC-Colciencias (Ed.) Memorias VII Seminario Nacional de Ciencias y Tecnologias del Mar. Comision Colombiana de Oceanografia, Bogata, 255 - 264.

Dana JD (1849) Conspectus crustaceorum quae in Orbis terrarium circumnavigatione, Carolo Wilkes e Classe Reipublicae Foederate Duce, lexit et descripsit Jacobus D. Dana. Pars II. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 2: 9 - 61.

Elvers D, Bottger-Schnack R, Blohm D, Hagen W (2006) Sympatric size variants of the microcopepod Oncaea venusta exhibit distinct lineages in DNA sequences. Marine Biology 149: 503 - 513.

Farran GP (1929) Crustacea. Part X. - Copepoda. Natural History Reports. British Antarctic (' Terra Nova') Expedition, 1910, Zoology 8: 203 - 306.

Heron GA, Bradford-Grieve JM (1995) The marine fauna of New Zealand: pelagic Copepoda: Poecilostomatoida: Oncaeidae. New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir 104: 1 - 57.

Heron GA (2002) Oncaea frosti, a new species (Copepoda: Poecilostomatoida) from the Liberian coast and the Gulf of Mexico. Hydrobiologia 480: 145 - 154. http: // doi. org / b 926 dx

Lopez RH, Mojica H (2015) Distribution and abundance of Oncaea media and O. venusta (Crustacea: Copepoda) in the Colombian Pacific Ocean during two periods in 2001. Revista U. D. C. A Actu- alidad & Divulgacion Cientifica 18 (1): 197 - 206.

Malt SJ (1983) Copepoda, Oncaea. Fiches d'Identification du Zoo- plancton 169 / 170 / 171: 1 - 11.

Martinez-Barragan M, Medina-Calderon J, Franco-Herrera A, Santos- Martinez A (2009) La comunidad de copepodos (Crustacea) en las islas de Providencia y Santa Catalina (Caribe colombiano) durante el periodo lluvioso de 2005. Boletin de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras 38 (1): 85 - 103.

Medellin-Mora J, Navas G (2010) Listado taxonomico de copepodos (Arthropoda: Crustacea) del mar Caribe colombiano. Boletin de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras 39 (2): 265 - 306.

Michel H, Foyo M (1976) Studies of Caribbean zooplankton. Cooperative investigations of the Caribbean and adjacent regions-II. Symposium on Progress in Marine Research in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions. FAO Fisheries Report 200: 275 - 289.

Nishibe Y, Hirota Y, Ueda H (2009) Community structure and vertical distribution of oncaeid copepods in Tosa Bay, southern Japan. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 89 (3): 491 - 498. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0025315409003087

Philippi A (1843) Fernere Beobachtungen uber die Copepoden des Mittelmeeres. Archiv fur Naturgeschichte 9 (1): 54 - 71

Wi JH, Suh HL, Yang HS, Soh HY (2008) Two species of the genus Oncaea (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida, Oncaeidae) from the East Sea, Korea. Ocean Science Journal 43 (4): 183 - 193. https: // doi .org / 10.1007 / BF 03029923

Gallery Image

Figures 2 – 5.   Oncaea venusta, adult female from Rodadero Bay, Colombia. 2. Habitus, lateral view, arrow indicates the small dorsal protuberance on the second pedigerous somite. 3. P 6, arrows points at the four ventral pores adjacent to P 6. 4. Urosome, dorsal view. 5. Anal somite and caudal rami, dorsal view. 6 – 8.   Oncaea scottodicarloi, adult female. 6. Habitus, dorsal view. 7. Urosome, ventral view. 8. Genital double-somite showing ventral sclerotization (arrowed).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Maxillopoda

Order

Poecilostomatoida

Family

Oncaeidae

Genus

Oncaea