Diapontonia maranulus, New Genus, New Species, a Pontoniine Shrimp Associate of a Deep-Water Echinoid

1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 125 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Bruce
Keyword(s):  
Zoosymposia ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-134
Author(s):  
JAMES A. BLAKE ◽  
PATRICIA A. RAMEY-BALCI

A new spionid polychaete was discovered in deep-sea sediments in the eastern Mediterranean Sea during an expedition by the Ocean Exploration Trust. Specimens were collected by the E/V Nautilus in August 2012 off Turkey, at a depth of 2216 m on the Anaximander Seamount at the Amsterdam mud volcano site. Cores were taken from sediments covered with microbial mats. The new species belongs to the Pygospiopsis-Atherospio Group, which has unusual neuropodial hooks, modified neurosetae in some anterior setigers, and branchiae in middle body segments that are broad, flattened, and fused to the dorsal lamellae. The new species is assigned to a new genus and species, Aciculaspio anaximanderi n. gen., n. sp., and is unusual in having a reduced setiger 1 lacking notosetae; well-developed pre- and postsetal lamellae that encompass the neurosetae and notosetae; notopodial lamellae free from the branchiae in anterior setigers that become fused and flattened in middle and posterior segments; unidentate hooded hooks in both noto- and neuropodia; neuropodial spines in setigers 4–10; and a pygidium with three anal cirri. Aciculaspio anaximanderi n. gen., n. sp. is the first species in the Atherospio-Pygospiopsis Group collected from a deep-water cold seep habitat.


Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3158 (1) ◽  
pp. 65
Author(s):  
PETER STAHLSCHMIDT ◽  
DOMINIQUE LAMY ◽  
KOEN FRAUSSEN

The examination of five specimens of a turrid species from various Caribbean locations led us to the recognition of a new species and genus. Although the group of turriform gastropods comprise already about 340 valid genera and subgenera (Taylor et al. 1993) we have not been able to find a genus that, even in a very broad sense, could accommodate the new species. Therefore, we propose the new genus Bathyferula.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (8) ◽  
pp. 1543-1552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl Banse

Morphological and distributional observations on 11 of the 19 ampharetid species and subspecies recorded from British Columbia and Washington are presented. Hobsonia new genus and Sosanopsis hesslei new species are described, and remarks made on the generic diagnosis of Sosanopsis. Amage anops is studied from type material. Ampharete labrops, A. goesi brazhnikovi, Hobsonia florida, and Samytha californiensis are newly recorded for the Oregon biogeographic Province. Ampharete gagarae is shown to be restricted to deep water of the northeast Pacific and adjacent seas.


1996 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. 788-794 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louella R. Saul ◽  
Richard L. Squires ◽  
James L. Goedert

Two previously undescribed species of Bivalvia of Eocene age are herein tentatively considered to belong to the family Lucinidae because of their ligament areas and elongated anterior adductor scars. Both species are elongate for a lucinid, have edentulous hinges, striated muscle scars, and are placed in the new genus Cryptolucina. Both are found in the Humptulips Formation of middle to late Eocene age in western Washington, and both Cryptolucina megadyseides new species and C. elassodyseides new species are associated with deep-water, cold-seep limestone. Cryptolucina megadyseides is also associated with turbiditic mudstone.


Zootaxa ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 1644 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
BERTRAND RICHER DE FORGES ◽  
PETER K.L. NG

A new genus and new species of majid crab, Kasagia arbastoi, is described from the Philippines. Superficially, Kasagia, new genus, is most similar to the pisine genera Eurynome Leach, 1814, Choniognathus Rathbun, 1932, and Seiitaoides Griffin & Tranter, 1986, but can immediately be separated by its simple carapace armature and extremely long chelipeds.


2017 ◽  
Vol 91 (3) ◽  
pp. 444-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steffen Kiel ◽  
Marco Taviani

AbstractEleven species of chemosymbiotic bivalves are reported from middle to late Miocene methane seep deposits (‘Calcari aLucina’) in the Italian Apennines, including seven new species and one new genus. The new species areBathymodiolus(s.l.)moroniaeandB. (s.l.)miomediterraneusamong the Bathymodiolinae andArchivesica aharoni,A.apenninica,A.strigarum, and ‘Pliocardia’italicaamong the Vesicomyidae; specimens from the middle Miocene of Deruta are reported asArchivesicaaff.aharoni.Samiolus iohannesbaptistaenew genus new species is introduced for an unusual mytilid with a commarginally ribbed surface, which might be the first non-bathymodiolin mytilid obligate to the seep environment. The two large lucinid species from which these deposits derived their informal name ‘Calcari aLucina’ are identified asMeganodontia hoernea(Des Moulins, 1868) andLucinoma perusina(Sacco, 1901). WithChanellaxinussp., we report the first thyasirid from a Neogene deep-water seep deposit in Italy and the first fossil occurrence of this genus.


Zootaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4450 (2) ◽  
pp. 151
Author(s):  
JAMES A. BLAKE ◽  
NANCY J. MACIOLEK

Five new species and one new genus of the obscure spioniform family Uncispionidae are described together with three new species of the rare and unusual spionid genus Pygospiopsis Blake, 1983. All species are from offshore habitats with most from deep-sea continental slope depths. Among the Uncispionidae are the second and third species of the genus Uncopherusa Fauchald & Hancock, 1981, collected from off Brunei in the South China Sea and off Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico; two new species of Uncispio Green, 1982, the third and fourth to be described, from deep water off the U.S. Atlantic coast and the Gulf of Mexico; and a new species of a new genus, Rhamphispio n. gen., from off the U.S. Atlantic coast. All species of Uncispionidae are compared and a key to the known species is presented. The genus Pygospiopsis Blake, 1983, is currently known for only two species: P. dubia (Monro, 1930) from Antarctic and sub-Antarctic waters and P. occipitalis Blake, 1996, from shelf depths off southern California. In the present study, new collections of the type-species P. dubia from the Antarctic Peninsula include post-larvae and juveniles as well as adults, thus permitting documentation of the development of some key adult morphology. Three new species of Pygospiopsis are described from deep water off the U.S. Atlantic and Pacific coasts and from the Antarctic Peninsula. A review of all species of Pygospiopsis suggests that, based on branchial distribution patterns, the closely related Pseudatherospio fauchaldi Lovell, 1994, should be referred to Pygospiopsis, bringing the total known species to six. All of these are compared and contrasted and the generic definition of Pygospiopsis updated. The status of Pygospiopsis within the Spionidae relative to the closely related genus Atherospio Mackie & Duff, 1986, is discussed. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2352 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
TOMOYUKI KOMAI ◽  
FENG-JIAU LIN ◽  
TIN-YAM CHAN

One new genus and five new species of axiid burrowing shrimps are described from deep-waters around Taiwan: Formosaxius dorsum n. gen., n. sp.; Ambiaxius propinquus n. sp., Calastacus formosus n. sp.; Eiconaxius rubrirostris n. sp. and E. kensleyi n. sp. The new genus, Formosaxius, appears closest to Bouvieraxius Sakai & de Saint Laurent, 1989 in the arrangement and armature of the gastric carinae on the carapace and the possession of pleurobranchs, but the presence of appendices internae on the third to fifth pleopods readily separates the new genus from Bouvieraxius. Affinities of the other four new species are also discussed. This study raises the number of species of Axiidae known from Taiwan to 13.


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2555 (1) ◽  
pp. 62 ◽  
Author(s):  
TOMOYUKI KOMAI ◽  
TAKUO HIGASHIJI ◽  
PETER CASTRO

A new genus and new species of trapeziid crab, Hexagonaloides bathyalis, is described from Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands (Okinawa Prefecture), Japan, on the basis of two male specimens collected at a depth of 247 m. The new genus is unique among the Trapeziidae in having a combination of the hexagonal carapace bearing a single lateral spine and a smooth frontal margin and the unarmed anterior margin of the cheliped meri. The symbiotic association of the new taxon remains unknown.


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