Allocypria Rome, 1962
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2820.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5294250 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EB87C8-6F6D-FFDE-FF30-FABAA05977B6 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Allocypria Rome, 1962 |
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Genus Allocypria Rome, 1962 View in CoL
1962 Allocypria Rome View in CoL : 83.— Type species: Allocypria inclinata Rome, 1962 View in CoL (by original designation).
Diagnosis. Carapace reniform, often with elongated posterior end, and sometimes terminating with sharply pointed postero-ventral margin. Distal ends of ovaries curved upwards (see the illustration on the Figure 5A, I View FIGURE 5 ). Marginal pore canals often well-pronounced. A1 7-segmented, male A2 with subdivided penultimate segment and with male sensory bristles (t2 and t3) developed. Swimming setae on A2 long, well exceeding distal end of terminal claws. Terminal segment of Md usually square, sometimes with L:W ratio more than 2:1. Terminal segment of Mxl palp square, endites usually with strongly serrated teeth. Prehensile palps asymmetrical. T2 with basal seta (d1). T3 4- segmented with basal segment carrying all setae (“d1”, “d2” and “dp”). Setae “e” and “f” long, reaching half length of the proceeding segments; seta “g” very short. Terminal segment short, with short “h1” and “h2” setae and long “h3” seta. Caudal ramus completely developed. Hemipenis with two lobes (“a” and “b”) both being quite thin and elongated; Zenker organ with 7 whorls of spines. Genital field in female without any extensions.
Type species. Allocypria inclinata Rome, 1962 View in CoL .
Other species. A. aberrans Rome, 1962 View in CoL ; A. claviformis ( Sars, 1910) View in CoL ; A. mucronata Rome, 1962 View in CoL ; A. navicula Rome, 1962 View in CoL .
Remarks and affinities. The genus Allocypria Rome, 1962 has the broadest diagnosis of all genera in the subfamily Cyclocypridinae . It is, however, most closely related to the genus Physocypria Vávra, 1897 , with which it shares a similar carapace shape, similar shape of prehensile palps and hemipenis, as well as the same chaetotaxy of T2 and T3. The main difference is the orientation of the ovaries which have the distal ends curved upwards in Allocypria .
The species Paracypria curta Sars, 1910 , P. flexuosa Sars, 1910 , P. humilis Sars, 1910 , and P. reniformis Sars, 1910 were described by Sars (1910) from Lake Tanganyika and were originally assigned to the genus Paracypria Sars, 1905 . A marine species, Paracypria tenuis Sars, 1905 was chosen as type species by Sars (1910). However, this species is not closely related to the species described from Lake Tanganyika but to the species of the subfamily Paracypridinae , because of the 5-segmented cleaning leg, absence of the posterior seta on the UR, and peculiar appearance of the hemipenis, and also it is a marine species. Most of the species described by Sars (1910) in the genus Paracypria from this lake were transferred into the genus Mecynocypria by Rome (1962), but not the four species mentioned above. Although, based on the drawings of Sars (1910) they most probably belong to the genus Allocypria , there is not sufficient information (such as the morphology of the Mxl and the presence of serrated claws on its endites) to formally assign these species into Allocypria . Rome (1962) included A. aberrans in the genus although the endites on the Mxl do not have strongly serrated claws. It needs to be pointed out that the genus Allocypria requires a revision based on the study of the type material.
Distribution. The genus is endemic to Lake Tanganyika.
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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Allocypria Rome, 1962
Karanovic, Ivana 2011 |
Allocypria
Rome 1962 |
Allocypria inclinata
Rome 1962 |