Diamysis fluviatilis Wittmann & Ariani, 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4142.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FA423164-276C-44B0-A417-8E97AC3DF0AA |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6088657 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B9BA4E-1813-FFC7-CAF6-FD8DFAA24214 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Diamysis fluviatilis Wittmann & Ariani, 2012 |
status |
|
Diamysis fluviatilis Wittmann & Ariani, 2012
Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 A–C
Mysis oculata relicta: Stammer 1932 View in CoL (partim).
Diamysis bahirensis: Holmquist 1955 View in CoL ; Minelli & Trevisanello 1985. Diamysis bahirensis View in CoL ssp.: Ariani 1981b (partim).
Diamysis mesohalobia: Cibinetto et al. 2006 View in CoL .
Diamysis mesohalobia heterandra: Corazza et al. 2010 .
Diamysis fluviatilis Wittmann & Ariani 2012b : Mees 2014; Wittmann et al. 2014.
Material examined. 23 samples from freshwater tributaries of the North Adriatic Sea , see Wittmann & Ariani (2012b). Additional materials are from the lower Timavo system, 45.79N 013.58E, Gulf of Trieste, NE-Adriatic: 4 slides labelled " Diamysis biharensis . Herzegovina & Timavo. Det GoogleMaps . Ch. Holmquist, prep. 60–63"; the data given by Stammer (1932) and Holmquist (1955: Tab. 1) suggest that this material was collected in 1928/29 by Hans Jürgen Stammer in waters of the Timavo system: prep. nos. 60, 61 ( SMNH reg. nos. 140111, 140112) are dissected parts of 1 M ad. 8.5 mm and of 1 F ad. 9.5 mm with nauplioid larvae from former fresh-waters in the meadows (now industrial port zone) between the Timavo estuary and the Monfalcone creek , 45.789N 013.581E; prep. nos. 62, 63 ( SMNH reg. nos. 140113, 140114) are parts of 1 M ad. 8.5 mm and of 1 F ad. 8.5 mm with nauplioid larvae from still existing springs of the Monfalcone creek GoogleMaps , 45.7984N 013.5701E.
Diagnosis. Rostrum well rounded or forming a wide convex angle with broadly rounded tip ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 A). Male carapace with fringes arranged in two submedian stripes ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 B), no such fringes in females. Palpus of maxilla with subcircular terminal segment, armed with 9–19 denticles along distal margin. Basal segment of thoracic exopods 1–8 in males and exopods 1–3 in females with spiniform outer corner (as in Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 D); this corner variable in exopods 4–8 of females. Thoracic endopod 3 with 3-segmented carpopropodus being longer than 5 times its maximum width; thoracic endopods 3–8 with long and slender claw. Penis with smooth setae only. Male pleopod 4 biramous with 2-segmented sympod, with small, 1–2-segmented endopod, and with moderately long, rod-like, 2- segmented exopod bearing a modified, strong seta at tip and a smaller, smooth seta subterminally on the basal segment (as in Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 G). Scutellum paracaudale well rounded to apically pointed, margins not or inconspicuously undulate. Endopod of uropod with one strong spine below large statocyst; statolith composed of vaterite. Telson subquadrangular, 0.7–0.9 times length of last abdominal somite; its apical cleft with slightly to strongly convex margins. Bottom of cleft concave, rounded. Cleft is 9–17% telson length, cleft lined by 15–48 laminae.
Distribution ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ). In wells, springs, tributaries, canals, main courses, and estuaries of rivers flowing to the NE to NW coasts of the Adriatic Sea (Reno, Po, Mincio, Adige, Brenta, Sile, Livenza, Lemene, and Isonzo), including the Timavo system. Maximum observed sea distance 182 km, maximum altitude 16 m. Mostly in freshwater, also oligohaline; only in the lower Timavo estuary observed down to the mesohaline reach (S = 2–13).
SMNH |
Saskatchewan Museum of Natural History |
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Diamysis fluviatilis Wittmann & Ariani, 2012
Wittmann, Karl J., Ariani, Antonio P. & Daneliya, Mikhail 2016 |
Diamysis fluviatilis
Wittmann & Ariani 2012 |
Diamysis mesohalobia heterandra:
Corazza et al. 2010 |
Diamysis mesohalobia:
Cibinetto et al. 2006 |
Diamysis bahirensis:
Holmquist 1955 |
Mysis oculata relicta:
Stammer 1932 |