Epimeria (Urepimeria) monodon Stephensen, 1947
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2017.359 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:703F4B1F-DFAD-47DD-AEA5-9E31A1921508 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3857536 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A5A879B-FF1B-68E1-FE10-FC0ACD22FDA3 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Epimeria (Urepimeria) monodon Stephensen, 1947 |
status |
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Epimeria (Urepimeria) monodon Stephensen, 1947 View in CoL
Epimeria monodon Stephensen, 1947: 53 View in CoL , fig. 19.
Epimeria monodon View in CoL – J.L. Barnard 1961: 103 (key). — McCain 1971: 161. — Thurston 1972: 34. — De Broyer & Klages 1991: 164 (key). — Coleman 1994: 560, 565–569, figs 9–12; 1998b: 224; 2007: 44, fig. 22a–b, colour plate 2c, map 12 (rhomb). — Watling 1981: 206. — Wakabara & Serejo 1999: 644 (key).
Material examined
SOUTHERN OCEAN: 1 exuvia, King George Island, Admiralty Bay, kept in aquarium, 14 Apr. 1992, coll. C. De Broyer ( RBINS, INV. 132831); 1 exuvia, expedition ARCTOWSKI 1992, King George Island, Admiralty Bay, kept in aquarium, 1 Apr. 1992, coll. C. De Broyer ( RBINS, INV. 132832); 1 exuvia, expedition ARCTOWSKI 1992, King George Island, Admiralty Bay, kept in aquarium, 16 Apr. 1992, coll. C. De Broyer ( RBINS, INV. 132833); 1 exuvia, expedition ARCTOWSKI 1992, King George Island, Admiralty Bay, kept in aquarium, 30 Mar. 1992, coll. C. De Broyer ( RBINS, INV. 132834); 2 specs, expedition ARCTOWSKI 1992, King George Island, Admiralty Bay, kept in aquarium, year 1992, coll. C. De Broyer ( RBINS, INV. 132835).
Body length
Up to 29 mm.
Distribution
South Orkney Islands; South Shetland Islands; Palmer Archipelago; 0–15 m ( De Broyer et al. 2007). Epimeria monodon was recorded from rocky intertidal communities ( Aghmich et al. 2016) and was found amidst macro-algae ( Richardson 1977). Thurston (1972) stated: “apparently associated with algae growing on rocks, boulder or gravel bottoms, 3–15 m ”.
Remarks
The record of E. monodon from the eastern shelf of the Weddell Sea at 254 m listed in the data compilation of De Broyer et al. (2007) falls outside of the usual geographical and bathymetric range of the species. It is considered as very suspect. It might be based on E. annabellae , which is common at such depth in the eastern Weddell Sea. It seems possible that E. monodon , which is a very shallow-water species, uses algal rafting as a method of dispersal between islands and archipelagoes. Thurston (1972) recorded a slight sexual dimorphism in the species: “the male has larger eyes and a slightly more prominent projection on pleon segment 3”.
RBINS |
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences |
INV |
Inverness Museum and Art Gallery |
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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Epimeria (Urepimeria) monodon Stephensen, 1947
d’Acoz, Cédric d’Udekem & Verheye, Marie L. 2017 |
Epimeria monodon
Wakabara Y. & Serejo C. S. 1999: 644 |
Coleman C. O. 1994: 560 |
De Broyer C. & Klages M. 1991: 164 |
Thurston M. H. 1972: 34 |
McCain J. C. 1971: 161 |
Barnard J. L. 1961: 103 |
Watling 1981: 206 |
Epimeria monodon
Stephensen K. 1947: 53 |