Hansenocaris undetermined

Olesen, Jørgen & Grygier, Mark J., 2024, Taxonomic diversity of marine planktonic ‘ y-larvae’ (Crustacea: Facetotecta) from a coral reef hotspot locality (Japan, Okinawa), with a key to y-nauplii, European Journal of Taxonomy 929 (1), pp. 1-90 : 20-21

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2024.929.2479

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:832192E7-A85A-4971-BA2F-D7420D299E8D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10988668

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6515E623-0A24-1E11-39A3-6647FD969654

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hansenocaris undetermined
status

 

Y-nauplius Type B

Figs 2 View Fig , 7H–M View Fig

Type B – Dreyer et al. 2023a: figs 2, 5a, c, tables s1–s2.

Material examined

JAPAN – Okinawa, Sesoko I. , laboratory pier, 26°38ʹ09.4ʺ N, 127°51ʹ55.2ʺ E • 1 LSN; 1991–2005 GoogleMaps 3 LSN, 1 of which molted to cyprid; 2018–2019 ( Tables 1 and S1 View Table 1 ).

Description

LAST-STAGE NAUPLIUS (LSN). Lecithotrophic. Body ovate in dorso-ventral view; about twice as long as wide; lateral margins tapering gradually towards caudal end with no discontinuity at posterior end of cephalic shield. Dorsum evenly curved in lateral view, with trunk axis downturned 50–55° relative to cephalic axis. Length 250–265 µm (without dorso-caudal spine), 275 µm in lateral view following body curvature; greatest width 160 µm and greatest dorso-ventral thickness 70–75 µm. Labrum weakly elevated, sub-quadrangular, approximately as long as wide; surface not divided into facets by cuticular ridges; pore pattern not examined in detail. Caudal end narrowly truncate, terminating in short (12 µm), triangular dorso-caudal spine positioned unusually far anteriorly on dorsal side and pair of longer (20 µm), narrow, sharply pointed, slightly upcurved and diverging furcal spines.

CYPRID VIEWED THROUGH CUTICLE OF LSN. Body practically unpigmented, although naupliar appendages weakly brownish. Gut-like tube packed with orange-brown yolk granules. Telson small, wider than long, significantly shorter than half of thorax length.

Identification and variation

Easily recognizable by its unusually forward-positioned dorso-caudal spine, evenly curved (in lateral view) body and broadly triangular ventral trunk region. No distinct variation was apparent among the few examined specimens.

Distribution

Japan (Sesoko Island, Okinawa).

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