Affiliation:
1. Zoological Institute
2. Sakhalin branch of the Federal State Budget Scientific Institution «Russian Federal Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography» («SakhNIRO»)
Abstract
Abstract
The article describes a new subspecies Eurytemora caspica thetysiana subsp. nova.
that, according to its genetic and morphological features, is close to the recently described species Eurytemora caspica caspica from the Caspian Sea. According to our hypothesis, both of these taxon are the relics of the fauna of the Tethys Sea in the last phase of existence (Paratethys).
The described form occupies an intermediate position between Eurytemora caspica caspica and Eurytemora carolleeae by its morphological characteristics. The time of divergence of the described subspecies and the original forms according to molecular clocks is in good agreement with the geological events associated with the evolution of the Tethys Sea (8–20 MYA), which indicates a very slow rate of evolution among Eurytemora. The morphological differences of our subspecies from the nominative Caspian subspecies are: the shapes of the genital double-somite and P5 distal segment in females. In males these differences are in the shapes of left rudimentary P5 exopod and distal segment of the right rudimentary P5, in ratio L abdomen/ L caudal rami.
At the same time, both forms belong to the affinis group of species, which includes also Eurytemora carolleeae and Eurytemora affinis. The new taxon is described and the problem of the Eurytemora species’ evolution in the affinis group is discussed in the article.
ZooBank: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9D01B35F-5F4B-40D2-9B9A-539DDD4250DE
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference108 articles.
1. Alekseev V (2023) The modern distribution of two Eucyclops (Eucyclops) Claus, 1893 species (Cyclopoida: Copepoda) as a reflection of the Tethys Sea evolution. Hydrobiologia (in print)
2. A new species within the Eurytemora affinis complex (Copepoda: Calanoida) from the Atlantic coast of U.S.A., with observations on eight morphologically different European populations;Alekseev V;Zootaxa,2011
3. On time and place of origin of continental calanoid families: A hypothesis;Alekseev VR;Crustaceana,2020
4. New records of continental cyclopids (Crustacea: Copepoda: Cyclopiformes) from Eastern Siberia and Russian Far East;Alekseev VR;Arthropoda Selecta,2021
5. Biodiversity of cyclopoid copepods in Thailand - with a description of Afrocyclops henrii sp.n;Alekseev VR;Arthropoda Selecta,2006