| Literature DB >> 28573548 |
George W Benz1, Geoffrey A Boxshall2.
Abstract
Tripaphylus musteli (van Beneden, 1851) (Copepoda, Siphonostomatoida, Sphyriidae) is redescribed from an adult female collected from the branchial chamber of a starry smooth-hound, Mustelus asterias Cloquet (Carcharhiniformes, Triakidae), captured in the English Channel off Portland, UK. The new account of T. musteli is the first based on a complete adult female and highlighted the lack of a robust distinction separating Tripaphylus Richiardi, in Anonymous, 1878 and Paeon Wilson, 1919 prompting us to relegate Paeon to a junior subjective synonym of Tripaphylus. In the light of this synonymy the eight former species of Paeon are transferred to Tripaphylus as follows: T. ferox (Wilson, 1919) new combination, T. elongatus (Wilson, 1932) new combination, T. vassierei (Delamare Deboutteville & Nuñes-Ruivo, 1954) new combination, T. lobatus (Kirtisinghe, 1964) new combination, T. asymboli (Turner, Kyne & Bennett, 2003) new combination, T. versicolor (Wilson, 1919) new combination, T. australis (Kabata, 1993) new combination, and T. triakis (Castro Romero, 2001) new combination. Comparisons between terminology used in this report and that in the literature indicate that all transformed adult females of Tripaphylus probably possess a full complement of cephalic appendages and maxillipeds. All limbs, with the exception of the maxillae share a general morphological similarity to the corresponding appendages of conspecific males. The maxilla of the transformed adult female of Tripaphylus is a small digitiform protuberance associated with a swelling in some species.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28573548 PMCID: PMC5486883 DOI: 10.1007/s11230-017-9734-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Parasitol ISSN: 0165-5752 Impact factor: 1.431
Fig. 1Tripaphylus musteli (van Beneden, 1851) (Siphonostomatoida, Sphyriiidae) transformed ovigerous female from a starry smooth-hound Mustelus asterias (Carcharhiniformes, Triakidae) captured in the English Channel off Portland, UK. Scale-bar: 1 cm divided into mm
Fig. 2Tripaphylus musteli (van Beneden, 1851) A, General habitus; decapitated specimen with neck aligned (at dashed line) to approximate intact condition; head in ventral view, trunk in dorsal view; eggs within ovisacs not illustrated; B, Cephalothorax (head), ventral view; C, Left lateral view. Abbreviations: as, antennal swelling; ls, lateral swelling; ms, maxillary swelling; mx2, maxilla; mxp, maxilliped
Fig. 3Tripaphylus musteli (van Beneden, 1851). A, Cephalothorax (head), slightly different ventral view than that depicted in Fig. 1B; B, Antennule; C, Antenna; arrows indicate denticulate patches; numbers correspond to element identification convention of Kabata (1979); D, Mouth tube, anterior view; E, Mandible; F, Maxillule, lateral view; G, Maxilla; H, Maxilliped. Abbreviations: as, antennal swelling; la, labium; lb, labrum; ls, lateral swelling; mr, myxal region of maxilliped; ms, maxillary swelling; mx2, maxilla; mxp, maxilliped; w?, whip?
Comparison of terminology used for the appendages of Tripaphylus species in this and other published accounts (determined by examination of figured appendages and/or text descriptions)
| Species | Appendage terminology used in present account | Reference | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antennule | Antenna | Mandible | Maxillule | Maxilla | Maxilliped | ||
|
| nr | Maxilla | nr | nr | Slender finger-like protuberance (text), migrated second antenna (figure legend) | Second maxilla | Wilson ( |
|
| nr | nr | nr | Maxilla (text), first maxilla (figure legend) | Slender finger-like protuberance (text), migrated second antenna (figure legend) | Second maxilla | Wilson ( |
|
| nr | Second antenna | nr | First mouth-part | nr | Second mouth part | Wilson ( |
|
| nr | nr | Mandible | Maxillule (?) | Maxilliped ? | Maxilla | Lewis ( |
|
| nr | nr | nr | nr | Tentacular projection | nr | Turner et al. ( |
aLewis (1966) tentatively reported his Tripaphylus (as Paeon) specimens as P. vaissierei, but Kabata (1993) considered them to be conspecific with P. lobatus. We consider Lewis (1966) to have been correct in his determination
Abbreviations: nr, not reported; ? indicates reported uncertainty in original account