Pseudorchomene plebs (Hurley, 1965)

D’Acoz, Cedric D’Udekem & Havermans, Charlotte, 2012, Two new Pseudorchomene species from the Southern Ocean, with phylogenetic remarks on the genus and related species (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea: Lysianassidae: Tryphosinae), Zootaxa 3310, pp. 1-50 : 36-40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.281003

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6176552

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E687B2-FFCE-FFF6-FF56-FC1DDDB8FD10

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pseudorchomene plebs (Hurley, 1965)
status

 

Pseudorchomene plebs (Hurley, 1965)

( Figs. 23–26 View FIGURE 23 View FIGURE 24 View FIGURE 25 View FIGURE 26 )

Orchomenella plebs Hurley, 1965a: 109 , figs. 1–2.

Orchomene plebs . — Thurston, 1974b: 59. — Andres, 1979: 96. — Andres, 1983: 203 -204. Abyssorchomene plebs . — De Broyer, 1983: 146 –149, fig. 12a. — Andres, 1990: 135, 137, fig. 267 — De Broyer et al., 2007: 161 (ubi syn.).

Type material. Not seen. " HOLOTYPE No. 112416 deposited in the U.S. National Museum, length 20 mm; also PARATYPES. PARATYPES also deposited in N.Z. Oceanographic Institute, Dominion Museum, and British Museum (Nat. Hist.). The material described is from Station A.32, "White Island, 15 Nov. 1961." ( Hurley 1965a).

Material examined. Expedition ARC 94, sta. NA62, King George Island, Admiralty Bay, 62°08'S 58°27'W, 470 m, 29.xii.1963 – 02.i.1964: about 35 specimens, RBINS, INV. 100980 (2 tubes) — R/V “Polarstern” cruise ANT–XV/3 ( EASIZ II), Atka Bay, sta. 280/284, Trap 13, 70°27.4'S 07°55.9'W, 550 m, baited trap, 28–29.ii.1998: 5 specimens, Specimen Id with corresponding GenBank accession number: AP–31100710 ( HM054000 View Materials ), RBINS, INV. 100956. — R/V “Polarstern” cruise ANT–XIX–5 (LAMPOS), sta. 191–1, Saunders Island, 57°41'S 26°24’W, 270 m, baited trap, 15.iv.2002: 29 specimens, Specimen Ids with corresponding GenBank accession numbers: AP– SS270 ( GU109258 View Materials ), AP–08100719 ( HM053987 View Materials ), AP–08100722 ( HM053988 View Materials ), AP–0506081 ( HM053989 View Materials ), RBINS, INV. 100958 (5 tubes). —R/V “Ivan Papanin” cruise BELARE, Crown Bay, 70°S 23°E, 230 m, baited trap, December 2008, 10 specimens, Specimen Id with corresponding GenBank accession number: AP–23110992 ( JQ423245 View Materials ), RBINS, INV. 100960. — R/V “Polarstern” cruise ANT–XXIII/8, Larsen B, sta. 698–1, 65°59’S 60°24’W, 383 m, Amphipod Trap, 11–12.i.2007: 1 specimen, Specimen Id with corresponding GenBank accession number: AP–LB383 ( GU109233 View Materials ), RBINS, INV. 100959. — R/V “Polarstern” cruise ANT–XXIII/8, Larsen B, sta. 713–1, 65°06'S 60°46'W, 299 m, amphipod trap, 18–19.i.2007. 1 female, dissected and mounted on 12 slides in Euparal, RBINS, INV. 100989 /1-12.

Diagnosis. Eye dark brownish/reddish when alive. Somites of pereon and pleosome without posterior humps. Mandibular palp inserted just proximal to molar process. Molar process narrow. Gnathopod 1: basis, anterior margin straight, palm transverse, with basis 2.2 x, ischium 1.9 x, merus 1.5 x, carpus 0.8 x, propodus 1.8 x as long as wide. Gnathopod 2: carpus 2.6 x as long as wide. Pereopod 3: propodus with about 14 spines or pairs of spines (which are small). Pereopod 3–7: on propodus, broadest spine of each pair or triplet with tip acute to subacute. Coxa 4 angular posteroventrally. Pereopod 5: coxa as long as broad; posterior half of basis extremely expanded; merus with setae posteriorly and a few posterodistal fairly slender spines. Ratio length/width of merus of pereopods 5–7: 1.4; 1.7; 1.8. Ratio length/width of carpus of pereopods 5–7: 1.8; 2.3; 2.1. Posterodistal angle of carpus of pereopods 5–7 with spines of normal length and stoutness. Pereopod 7: carpus anterior margin normally spinose, posterior border of carpus and propodus with posterodistal spines only. Epimeron 3 posterior margin regularly rounded. Uropod 3 with medial margin of both rami with many long setae, inner ramus not reaching tip of article 1 of outer ramus.

Maximal length. Up to 25 mm ( Dauby et al. 2001).

Distribution. Circum-Antarctic, as far north as South Orkneys and Macquarie, 0–2889 m ( De Broyer et al. 2007; Havermans et al. 2011), mostly between 400–800 m ( De Broyer et al. 2004).

Biology. "... collected by midwater trawls, indicating a bentho-pelagic way of life. Stomach and gut contents varied from one individual to another. Crustacean parts (eyes or ommatidia, appendages and chitinous plates) were frequent. Some individuals contained fragments of carrion (muscles), while others had ingested diatoms. It is worth noting that A. plebs is more commonly found in baited traps (from 1 to 98% of attracted amphipods) than A. rossi (only few specimens), which could indicate a preference for scavenging" ( Dauby et al. 2001). While it is not an obligatory scavenger, P. p l e b s often enters baited traps in considerable swarms (hence the name of the species) ( Fig. 26 View FIGURE 26 ), sometimes of thousands of specimens ( Rakusa-Suszczewski 1982; De Broyer & Klages 1990; d'Udekem d'Acoz & Robert 2008, Havermans & Robert in press). Such swarms are able to devour fish carcasses in three days, leaving perfectly clean skeletons ( Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ).

Remarks. In Figure 2 View FIGURE 2 of Hurley (1965a), the illustration labelled ‘epimeron 3’ is actually (left) epimeron 2 and that labelled ‘epimera 1–2’ shows (left) epimera 1 and 3. Coxa 4 of the same Hurley’s illustration does not look as angular posteriorly as in specimens studied herein.

ARC

Atlantic Reference Centre

RBINS

Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Amphipoda

Family

Lysianassidae

Genus

Pseudorchomene

Loc

Pseudorchomene plebs (Hurley, 1965)

D’Acoz, Cedric D’Udekem & Havermans, Charlotte 2012
2012
Loc

Orchomene plebs

De 2007: 161
Andres 1990: 135
Andres 1983: 203
De 1983: 146
Andres 1979: 96
Thurston 1974: 59
1974
Loc

Orchomenella plebs

Hurley 1965: 109
1965
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