Nerocila loveni Bovallius, 1887

Ravichandran, S., Vigneshwaran, P. & Rameshkumar, G., 2019, A taxonomic review of the fish parasitic isopod family Cymothoidae Leach, 1818 (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothooidea) of India, Zootaxa 4622 (1), pp. 1-99 : 53-57

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4622.1.1

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4537BB46-452F-4E0C-A444-4AA5E12A64E7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5698825

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E129637E-FFAE-A47B-FF47-FD97FAC8F845

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nerocila loveni Bovallius, 1887
status

 

Nerocila loveni Bovallius, 1887 View in CoL View at ENA

( Figs 8 View FIGURE 8 g–i, 9–12)

Nerocila loveni Bovallius, 1887: 6 View in CoL , pl. l ( figs 13–17 View FIGURE 13 View FIGURE 14 View FIGURE 15 View FIGURE 16 View FIGURE 17 ), 2 ( figs 18–21 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 ). — Stebbing, 1893: 352, pl. 15.— Nierstrasz, 1915:73; 1931: 124. — Trilles, 1979:251, pl. 7 (fig. 2).— Bruce, 1987b: 405. —Bruce & Harrisson-Nelson, 1988: 594, fig. 5. — Trilles, Rameshkumar & Ravichandran, 2013: 1273–1286, fig. 2e. Anand Kumar, Rameshkumar, Ravichandran, Rethna Priya, Nagarajan & Kwang Leng, 2015: 206–210, fig. 2e.—Rameshkumar, Ramesh, Ravichandran & Trilles, 2014a: 940–944, fig. 1f. — Rameshkumar, Ravichandran & Ramesh, 2014c: 124–128, fig. 3.— Rameshkumar, Ramesh, Ravichandran & Trilles, 2016: 968–970, figs 1, 2.

Type and type locality. The type material is not known. Trilles (1979) stated that the type locality is Indonesia .

Material examined. 6 ovig. females (17–21 mm) ( CAS / MBRM 414 –419), 3 non ovig. females (16–20 mm) ( CAS / MBRM 414 –422), Nagapattinam , 8 January 2011 and 1 April 2011, from Eubleekeria splendens (Cuvier, 1829) , coll. G. Rameshkumar ; 1 ovig. female (20 mm), Vedaranyam , 18 September 2016, from Carangoides malabaricus . coll. S. Ravichandran, ( ZSI / MBRC D1-544) , Southeastern coast of India.

Description female. Body about 2.5–3 times as long as wide, widest between pereonites 6–7. Cephalon anterior margin smoothly rounded or with slender medial point. Eyes large and indistinct, occupying 0.5width of cephalon. Pereonites 1, 5–7 longest and subequal, 2–4 shortest and subequal. Posterolateral angles of pereonites 1 and 5–7 produced narrow and pointed process, those of pereonites 2–4 weakly produced. Coxae of pereonites 2–7 produced into successively longer pointed processes, always exceeding posteroventral corners of pereonites and more strongly angled away from the body; coxae 5–7 larger than coxae 2–4. All pleonites visibles; pleonite 1, 2 longest, pleonite 5 shortest, ventrolateral margins of pleonites 1 and 2 produced as far as pleonite 5 curving posteriorly obliquely to the longitudinal body axis; pleonites 3–5 lateral margins weakly acute. Pleotelson about 1.2 times wider than long, smoothly rounded, lateral margins curving to medial point.

Antennula not extending to pereonite 1, composed with 8 articles, articles 1 and 2 longer than article 3, articles 5–8 with plumose or spiny setae. Antenna with 9 articles, articles 4, 5 and 7–9 with plumose or spiny setae. Mandibular palp with 5–8 unequal setae at apex of article 3. Maxillula with 4 terminal recurved apical spines. Maxilla with one spine on medial lobe and 2 spines on lateral lobe. Maxilliped with oostegial lobe, distal palp segment with 3 terminal spines.

Dactylus of pereopods 1, 2 and 4 with swellings; pereopods 1–6 without marginal hooked spines; pereopod 7 with 1 spine on carpus and 4 unequal spines on propodus. Pleopods 1 and 2 with five coupling hooks on protopod medial margin; pleopods 3–4 endopod with a single lobe, proximomedial lobe well-developed and folded; pleopod 5 endopod with several large folds and proximomedial lobe well-developed and folded.

Uropod slender, tapering exopod and endopod, exopod about 2 times longer than endopod, both rami extending far beyond posterior margin of pleotelson, exopod extending by far beyond endopod.

Colour. Pale tan and uropod with sparsely scattered chromatophores.

Size. Ovig. females 17–21 mm; non ovig. females 16–20 mm.

Remarks. Nerocila loveni can be distinguished by the coxae of pereonites produced into successively longer pointed processes, always exceeding posteroventral corners of pereonites and more strongly angled away from the body. Cephalon anterior margin smoothly rounded or with a slender medial point. Ventrolateral margins of pleonites 1 and 2 produced as far as pleonite 5 curving posteriorly obliquely to the longitudinal body axis.

This species can be distinguished from N. depressa by having the coxae and pereonite posterolateral extensions bent dorsally, and expressed laterally rather than posteriorly. Other characters are discussed under Remarks for N. depressa to which this species is similar. Likewise, Bruce & Harrisson-Nelson, (1988) examined Singapore and Thailand specimen and those were reported Nerocila loveni distinguished from N. depressa characterized by coxae of perenoites.

Distribution. The species has been distributed in the northern central Indo–Pacific region: Singapore, Thailand, Borneo and Sarawak (Bruce & Harrisson-Nelson 1988), India ( Trilles et al. 2013; Rameshkumar et al. 2014 a, 2014b) and East Malaysia (Anand Kumar et al. 2015).

Hosts. The species has been collected from the family Leiognathidae : Leiognathus sp. (Bruce & Harrisson-Nelson 1988), Eubleekeria splendens ( Trilles et al. 2013; Rameshkumar et al. 2014a), family Chirocentridae : Chirocentrus dorab (Forsskål, 1775) (Anand Kumar et al. 2015) , family Carangidae : Carangoides malabaricus ( Rameshkumar et al. 2014b) and family Haemulidae : Pomadasys maculatus (Bloch, 1793) ( Rameshkumar et al. 2016) .

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Isopoda

Family

Cymothoidae

Genus

Nerocila

Loc

Nerocila loveni Bovallius, 1887

Ravichandran, S., Vigneshwaran, P. & Rameshkumar, G. 2019
2019
Loc

Nerocila loveni

Bruce, N. L. 1987: 405
Nierstrasz, H. F. 1931: 124
Stebbing, T. R. R. 1893: 352
Bovallius, C. 1887: 6
1887
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