Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T15:13:54.177Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New species of Paracalanidae along the west coast of India: Paracalanus arabiensis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2009

Kirti Sureshchandra Kesarkar
Affiliation:
National Institute of Oceanography (Council of Scientific & Industrial Research), Dona Paula, Goa, 403-004, India
Arga Chandrashekar Anil*
Affiliation:
National Institute of Oceanography (Council of Scientific & Industrial Research), Dona Paula, Goa, 403-004, India
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: A.C. Anil, Marine Corrosion and Material Research Division (MCMRD), National Institute of Oceanography (NIO), Dona Paula, Goa 403004 email: acanil@nio.org

Abstract

A new species of copepod, Paracalanus arabiensis sp. nov. collected from Mandovi and Zuari estuaries, Goa, central west coast of India, is described. It differs from its congeners mainly in the structure of leg 5, with a row of six teeth along the edge of inner terminal spine resulting in a serrated margin and two small, stiff spines of equal length protrude in between the terminal spines.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Andronov, V.N. (1970) Some problems of taxonomy of the family Paracalanidae (Copepoda). Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, Moskva 49, 980985. [In Russian with English summary.]Google Scholar
Andronov, V.N. (1972) Some new species of the genus Parvocalanus (Copepoda, Paracalanidae). Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, Moskva 51, 139144. [In Russian with English summary.]Google Scholar
Andronov, V.N. (1977) Paracalanus tropicus sp. n. (Copepoda, Paracalanidae) from south-east Atlantic. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, Moskva 56, 154156. [In Russian with English summary.]Google Scholar
Arashkevich, Y.G. (1969) The food and feeding of copepods in the northwestern Pacific. Okeanologiya 9, 857873. [English translation in Oceanology 9, 695–709.]Google Scholar
Bjornberg, T.K.S. (1980) Revisão da distribuição dos gêneros Paracalanus, Clausocalanus e Ctenocalanus (Copepoda, Crustacea) ao largo do Brasil. Boletim do Instituto Ocenografico. São Paulo 29, 6568.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowman, T.E. (1971) The distribution of calanoid copepods off the southeastern United States between Cape Hatteras and southern Florida. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 96, 158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradford-Grieve, J.M. (1994) The marine fauna of New Zealand: pelagic calanoid Copepoda: Megacalanidae, Calanidae, Paracalanidae, Mecynoceridae, Eucalanidae, Spinocalanidae, Clausocalanidae. New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir 102, 1160.Google Scholar
Brady, G.S. (1918) Copepoda. Scientific Reports of the Australasian Expedition 1911–14. Series C. 5, 148.Google Scholar
Brady, G.S. and Robertson, D. (1873) Contributions to the study of the Entomostraca. No. VIII. On marine Copepoda taken in the West of Ireland. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 12, 126142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conway, D.V.P., White, R.G., Hugues-Dit-Ciles, J., Gallienne, C.P. and Robins, D.B. (2003) Guide to the coastal and surface zooplankton of the south-western Indian Ocean. Occasional Publications. Plymouth: Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom (15) 354 pp.Google Scholar
Huys, R. and Boxshall, G.A. (1991) Copepod evolution. London: The Ray Society.Google Scholar
Itoh, K. (1970) A consideration on feeding habits of planktonic copepods in relation to the structure of their oral parts. Bulletin of the Plankton Society of Japan/Nihon Purankuton Gakkaiho 17, 110. [British Library RTS 10131.]Google Scholar
Paffenhöfer, G.A. (1984) Food ingestion by the marine planktonic copepod Paracalanus in relation to abundance and size distribution of food. Marine Biology 80, 323333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sewell, R.B.S. (1914) Notes on the surface Copepoda of the Gulf of Mannar. Spolia Zeylanica 9, 191263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sewell, R.B.S. (1929) The Copepoda of Indian seas. Memoirs of the Indian Museum 10, 1221.Google Scholar
Sewell, R.B.S. (1947) The free swimming planktonic Copepoda. Systematic account. Scientific Reports, John Murray Expedition 8, 1303.Google Scholar
Shen, C.-J. and Bai, S.-O. (1956) The marine Copepoda from the spawning ground of Pneumatophorus japonicus (Houttuyn) off Chefoo, China. Acta Zoologica Sinica 8, 217234.Google Scholar
Shen, C.-J. and Lee, F.-S. (1963) The estuarine copepoda of Chiekong and Zaikong Rivers, Kwangtung Province, China. Acta Zoologica Sinica 15, 571596. [In Chinese with English abstract.]Google Scholar
Shen, C.-J. and Lee, F.-S. (1966) On the estuarine copepods of Chaikiang River, Kwangtung Province. Acta Zoologica Sinica 3, 215223. [In Chinese with English summary.]Google Scholar
Vervoort, W. (1946) The bathypelagic coepepoda Calanoida of the Snellius Expedition 1. Families Calanidae, Eucalanidae, Paracalanidae and Pseudocalanidae. Biological Results of the Snellius Expedition 15. Temminckia 8, 1181.Google Scholar
Vervoort, W. (1963) Pelagic Copepoda. Part 1. Copepoda Calanoida of the families Calanidae up to and including Euchaetidae. Atlantide Report 7, 77194.Google Scholar
Yoo, K.-I. and Lee, W.C. (1994) A planktonic copepod, Paracalanus gracilis Chen & Zhang, new to Korea. Korean Journal of Environmental Biology 12, 8791.Google Scholar