Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17143
Title: Revision of the Remaneicaris Argentina-group (Copepoda, Harpacticoida, Parastenocarididae): Supplementary description of species, and description of the first semi-terrestrial Remaneicaris from the tropical forest of Southeast Mexico
Authors: Corgosinho, Paulo Henrique Costa
Mercado-Salas, Nancy Fabiola
Martinez Arbizu, Pedro
Santos-Silva, Edinaldo Nelson
Kihara, Terue Cristina
Keywords: Animals
Animals Dispersal
Animals Structures
Argentina
Body Size
Copepod
El Salvador
Forest
Male
Mexico
Organ Size
Animals Distribution
Animals Structures
Animal
Argentina
Body Size
Copepoda
El Salvador
Forests
Male
Mexico
Organ Size
Issue Date: 2017
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Zootaxa
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 4238, Número 4, Pags. 499-530
Abstract: Remaneicaris is a species-rich Neotropical monophyletic group, easily recognized by the synapomorphic position of the outer seta of the third exopodite of leg 4, localized at 2/3 of the outer margin. The genus, comprising 35 species in five monophyletic groups, plus R. ignotus and R. meyerabichi, retains an unusual set of plesiomorphic characters. Herein we supplement the descriptions of the species belonging to the Remaneicaris Argentina-group, and describe a new species from the tropical forest of Southeast Mexico. The present study extends the geographic distribution of the genus, with the northernmost record until now being from El Salvador. The genus having hitherto been known from interstitial groundwater habitats, this is its first record in epigean semi-terrestrial habitats. Remaneicaris siankaan sp. nov. was found in phytotelmata (bromeliads), leaf litter, moist soil, permanent ponds (known locally as "aguadas"), and temporal and permanent wetlands (savannahs). The new species can be easily characterized by its finely pitted cuticle, the ϵ (epsilon)-shaped thumb of the male P3 and the bifid accessory spine with distal hyaline inner tip, which precedes the thumb. A new method for the 3D reconstruction of microcrustaceans is described. © Copyright 2017 Magnolia Press.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.4.2
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