Figure 2 - uploaded by Salma Shalla
Content may be subject to copyright.
Leucon ( Leucon ) holti sp. nov. ( A ) Holotype: NMSZ 1999.238.0005, AFEN 54592#2 preparatory female; ( B^J ) BIOGAS VI DS86 brooding female; ( K ) Paratype: BMNH 2002.111^118, SMBA ES 12 incomplete mature male. (A) Whole animal lateral view; (B) antero-lateral angle of carapace lateral view; (C) ¢rst antenna; (D) third maxilliped; (E) ¢rst pereopod; (F) second pereopod; (G) third pereopod; (H) fourth pereopod; (I) ¢fth pereopod; (J) uropod; (K) mature male carapace lateral view. Scale bars: A&K, 1 mm; B^J, 0.2 mm. 

Leucon ( Leucon ) holti sp. nov. ( A ) Holotype: NMSZ 1999.238.0005, AFEN 54592#2 preparatory female; ( B^J ) BIOGAS VI DS86 brooding female; ( K ) Paratype: BMNH 2002.111^118, SMBA ES 12 incomplete mature male. (A) Whole animal lateral view; (B) antero-lateral angle of carapace lateral view; (C) ¢rst antenna; (D) third maxilliped; (E) ¢rst pereopod; (F) second pereopod; (G) third pereopod; (H) fourth pereopod; (I) ¢fth pereopod; (J) uropod; (K) mature male carapace lateral view. Scale bars: A&K, 1 mm; B^J, 0.2 mm. 

Source publication
Article
Full-text available
Four new species of the genus Leucon and subgenus Leucon (sensu Watling, 1991) are described from the Atlantic Frontier Margin and other north-east Atlantic localities. They are L. sarsi sp. nov., L. holti sp. nov., L. hanseni sp. nov. and L. afeni sp. nov. Leucon hanseni sp. nov. has previously been wrongly identified as L. serratus, the holotype...

Contexts in source publication

Context 1
... Figure 2) ...
Context 2
... and brooding-form females ( Figure 2A): body length 3.2^5.2 mm. ...
Context 3
... ( Third maxilliped ( Figure 2D): basis longer than the distal articles combined; distal projection not extending beyond ischium. Ischium 0.5 times length of merus; merus with two teeth, one at the distal point of the lateral margin and one on the ventral margin. ...
Context 4
... pereopod ( Figure 2E): long and slender, carpus ending just beyond antero-lateral corner of the carapace. Basis 0.8 times the length of the distal articles combined. ...
Context 5
... pereopod ( Figure 2F): basis subequal to the distal articles combined; ischium plus merus subequal to carpus; carpus 0.8 times the length of propodus plus dactyl; dactyl two times propodus. Carpus with two setulose stout setae on the distal ventral corner. ...
Context 6
... pereopod ( Figure 2G): basis 2.2 times the distal arti- cles combined. Exopod sub-equal to basis, basal segment exceeding the length of the distal articles combined. ...
Context 7
... and ¢fth pereopods ( Figure 2H,I): no exopod; basis *1.5 and 1.1 times length of the distal articles combined in the 4th and 5th pereopod respectively. ...
Context 8
... ( Figure 2J): 0.23 times body length, peduncle 0.7^0.8 times the length of the exopod. ...
Context 9
... male ( Figure 2K): carapace dorsal crest dentition similar to that of female. Pseudorostrum shorter than that of female and immature male, 0.22 times carapace length, its entire ventral margin serrated. ...

Citations

... Considering all available information, the characters to distinguish Nippoleucon hinumensis females from females of European species of the genus Leucon Krøyer, 1846 are (compare Sars 1899; Shalla and Bishop 2004): ...
Article
Full-text available
The cumacean Nippoleucon hinumensis was recorded for the first time in Europe during a national monitoring survey of macrozoobenthos in the German Baltic Sea in April 2019. In total, five female individuals were found in the Strelasund near Stralsund, Germany. Nippoleucon hinumensis is native to the northwest Pacific and a successful invader of the American west coast since the 1970s. Since ovigerous females were detected among the collected individuals, N. hinumensis might have already reproduced successfully in the Baltic Sea.
... Previous papers (Shalla & Bishop, 2004 have reported aspects of the cumacean fauna collected during Atlantic Frontier Environmental Network (AFEN) surveys north and west of Scotland in 1996 and 1998, and the UK Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) White Zone (WZ) survey in the Faeroe-Shetland channel in 2000 (see Bett, 1997Bett, , 1999Bett, and 2001a for sampling localities etc.). In 2002, the DTI carried out another survey in the area north and west of Orkney and Shetland; no reports from this survey have been published, but see DTI (2003) for details. ...
... Measurements of total body length were made from the anterior tip of the pseudorostrum to the end of the telson. For the definition of the developmental stages used in the descriptions, see Shalla & Bishop (2004 ...
Article
Full-text available
Material collected during surveys of the Atlantic Frontier Margin (north-east Atlantic) in 1996, 1998, 2000 and 2002 includes ten species of the cumacean family Lampropidae belonging to three genera. A new species of the genus Hemilamprops, H. pterini, is described. Hemilamprops cristatus is partially re-illustrated from specimens sent to A.M. Norman by G.O. Sars. A key to the North Atlantic species of Hemilamprops is provided. A new species of the genus Mesolamprops, M. hartleyi, is described from the Atlantic Frontier Margin and the North Sea. The first record of Mesolamprops denticulatus from the Atlantic is reported. A key to the species of Mesolamprops is provided. Two species of the genus Platysympus were also found. A list of other lampropid species found in the Atlantic Frontier Margin is given.
Chapter
Our knowledge on the deep-sea peracarids at a global scale is limited, and this gap in knowledge is still larger when we refer to the peracarids from off the coast of Argentina. With the aim of improving this situation, a complete and accurate inventory of the deep-sea isopods, cumaceans, and amphipods from off the coast of Argentina is presented. This inventory is based mainly on data taken from the literature, but some records provided in the GBIF database were included as well. A total of 126 stations taken during 24 oceanographic surveys carried out by seven countries were compiled. Isopoda showed the highest number of species (107 spp.) followed by Cumacea (50 spp.) and Amphipoda (47 spp.). A large amount of specimens, including many new species, has been collected in recent years and wait to be described. Thus, it is expected that the number of species recorded from the area substantially increases in the near future.
Article
Benthic environmental assessments associated with oil and gas explorations along the UK Atlantic Margin have revealed deficiencies in the taxonomy of many deep-water taxa. Amongst the Bivalvia the protobranch genera Yoldiella and Portlandia are particularly complex. This study presents tabular keys, shell and gut loop descriptions for those taxa living on the continental slope and abyssal areas of the Atlantic Margin west and north of Scotland. The study is based primarily on samples collected in three surveys under the direction of the Atlantic Frontier Environmental Network (AFEN) between 1996 and 2000, with additional material from museum collections. Specimens were found at 239 stations from depths ranging from 98m on the outer continental shelf to 2046 m in Rockall Trough. One species of Portlandia and eight species of Yoldiella were recognized in the AFEN material P. intermedia, Y. annenkovae, Y. curta, Y. jeffreysi, Y. lucida, Y. nana, Y. philippiana, Y. propinqua and Y. valorousae nom. nov. Yoldiella annenkovae is recorded for the first time in British or Irish waters. Yoldiella valorousae nom. nov. is a replacement name for Y. lata sensu Allen, Sanders & Hannah 1995). A further 8 species that occur in parts of the NE Atlantic adjacent to the AFEN study area are included. Y. biscayensis, Y. fabula, Y. frigida, Y. incala, Y. insculpta, Y. lenticula, Y. solidula, Y. thaerella sp. nov. Y. thaerella sp. nov. is Y. inconspicua inconspicua sensu Allen, Sanders & Hannah 1995 non Y. inconspicua Verrill & Bush, 1898. Y. incala is a taxon raised to species rank from Y. obesa incala Allen, Sanders & Hannah 1995).