Stenobermuda brucei, Kensley & Schotte, 2002
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publication ID |
1464-5262 |
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persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FCF375-FF93-D37B-86CB-2BC0E4E0FE25 |
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treatment provided by |
Felipe |
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scientific name |
Stenobermuda brucei |
| status |
sp. nov. |
Stenobermuda brucei View in CoL sp. nov.
(gure 22)
Type material. HOLOTYPE: ZMUC, 3.1 mm, sta CRU-1894, sand from reef, Bawe Island , Zanzibar, 25 m, 21 September 1995 . PARATYPES: ZMUC, one ovigerous
2.5 mm, one 2.2 mm, same data as holotype.
Diagnosis. Cephalon with antennal tooth low, subacute, anterolateral tooth acute, surpassing antennal tooth; rostrum narrowly triangular, reaching beyond anterolateral tooth. Eye weakly pigmented, consisting of four ommatidia. Pleotelson length subequal to basal width, with single lateral tooth. Pereopod 1 male, ischium, merus, carpus and propodus having stout elongate setae on mesial surface near anterior margins; carpus having cluster of ve stout fringed setae posterodistally; propodus subcircular, with three stout fringed setae on posterior margin, robust seta demarcating palm, latter having four slender fringed setae; dactylus having four fringed setae on cutting margin. Pereopod 2, carpus 3.5 times longer than wide, with two robust setae on posterior margin; propodus with two robust setae on posterior margin; dactylus biunguiculate, with small additional seta on posterior margin.
Remarks. Stenobermuda syzygus (Barnard, 1940) , recorded from the southwest Indian Ocean at Still Bay, South Africa, is the only Stenobermuda known from the Indian Ocean. This is a much larger species ( 6.5 mm) than the present species, and possesses a narrower propodus of pereopod 1 in the male. The two species recorded from Bermuda ( S. acutirostrata Schultz, 1979 , and S. ili V ei Kensley, 1994) both possess much narrower propodi of pereopod 1 in the male, than is seen in S. brucei .
Etymology. The species is named for Dr Niel Bruce of the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand, who collected this species along with several others described here.
| ZMUC |
Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen |
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.
