Petalophthalminae Czerniavsky, 1882

Wittmann, Karl J., 2020, Lophogastrida and Mysida (Crustacea) of the “ DIVA- 1 ” deep-sea expedition to the Angola Basin (SE-Atlantic), European Journal of Taxonomy 628, pp. 1-43 : 5-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.628

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DFA628B3-900F-493E-98E4-C9B28CC7CDFD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3806794

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F087F6-2A15-FF8A-B29D-FA91FD4123C3

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Petalophthalminae Czerniavsky, 1882
status

 

Subfamily Petalophthalminae Czerniavsky, 1882

Petalophthalmidae Czerniavsky, 1882: 56 View in CoL (in key).

Petalophthalmidae View in CoL – Tattersall & Tattersall 1951: 113 (partim). — O.S. Tattersall 1955: 58 (partim). — Murano 1971: 46. — Lagardère 1983: 814. — Tchindonova 1993: 152 (partim). — Nouvel et al. 1999: 78 (partim). — Meland & Willassen 2007: 1096 (partim). — Fukuoka 2009: 409. — Price & Heard 2009: 939. — Ortiz et al. 2012: 985. — Petryashov 2014: 185 (partim). — San Vicente et al. 2014: 78. — Sawamoto 2014 (partim). — Many additional references not listed.

Petalophthalminae – Wittmann et al. 2014: 331. — Meland et al. 2015: table 4. — San Vicente & Corbari 2015: 243. — San Vicente 2017: 154. — Mees & Meland 2019 (in database).

Petalophthalmidae Holt & Tattersall, 1906: 21–22 View in CoL (this invalid taxon erroneously described as a new one although already having been established by Czerniavsky (1882), who used the same name based on the same implicitly defined type genus).

Diagnosis (revised from Wittmann et al. 2014)

Petalophthalmidae with large antennula showing distinct sexual dimorphism; eyes normal or modified, in any case not miniaturized, visual elements present or absent; mandibular palp long, powerful, and prehensile; thoracopods 1–2 without exopod, thoracopods 3–8 with well-developed exopod; powerful subchelae are formed by opposition of dactylus with large claw to the propodus in thoracic endopod 1, and to the carpopropodus in endopod 2; merus of endopod 1 with large endite; ischium of endopod 2 with again larger, subquadrangular endite; endopod 5 with more than three segments; endopods 3–4 and 6–8 normal or reduced to different degrees; well-developed oostegites on thoracopods 2–8; female pleopods uniramous or biramous, male pleopods biramous; exopod of uropods with subterminal suture.

Type genus

Petalophthalmus Willemoës-Suhm, 1874 View in CoL .

Genera included

Petalophthalmus Willemoës-Suhm, 1874 View in CoL [4 species]

Ipirophthalmus gen. nov. [4 species]

Pseudopetalophthalmus Bravo & Murano, 1997 View in CoL [2 species]

Parapetalophthalmus Murano & Bravo, 1998 View in CoL [1 species]

Distribution

The pooled taxa of Petalophthalminae show a panoceanic distribution between 56 ° N and 46° S, total depth range 0–5500 m, mainly 100– 500 m.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Mysida

SubOrder

Petalophthalmida

Family

Petalophthalmidae

Loc

Petalophthalminae Czerniavsky, 1882

Wittmann, Karl J. 2020
2020
Loc

Petalophthalminae

San Vicente C. 2017: 154
San Vicente C. & Corbari L. 2015: 243
Wittmann K. J. & Ariani A. P. & Lagardere J. - P. 2014: 331
2014
Loc

Petalophthalmidae

Petryashov V. V. 2014: 185
San Vicente C. & Frutos I. & Cartes J. E. 2014: 78
Ortiz M. & Winfield I. & Chazaro-Olvera S. 2012: 985
Fukuoka K. 2009: 409
Meland K. & Willassen E. 2007: 1096
Nouvel H. & Casanova J. - P. & Lagardere J. - P. 1999: 78
Tchindonova Yu. G. 1993: 152
Lagardere J. - P. 1983: 814
Murano M. 1971: 46
Tattersall O. S. 1955: 58
Tattersall W. M. & Tattersall O. S. 1951: 113
1951
Loc

Petalophthalmidae

Holt E. W. L. & Tattersall W. M. 1906: 22
1906
Loc

Petalophthalmidae

Czerniavsky V. 1882: 56
1882
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