Australian Biological Resources Study

Australian Faunal Directory

<I>Parawaldeckia yamba</I>

Parawaldeckia yamba

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Family LYSIANASSIDAE Dana, 1849

Introduction

The Lysianassidae are the largest amphipod family with 77 genera and nearly 500 species. The family is currently divided into two subfamilies, the Lysianassinae and the Tryphosinae. The lysianassines are epibenthic amphipods characterised by a simple first gnathopod, a reduced mandibular molar and usually with an entire telson. Not much is known about the life styles of lysianassines. The Tryphosinae are three times as speciose as the lysianassines. They are characterised by subchelate first gnathopods, a well-developed, triturating molar and, usually, a cleft telson. Many tryphosines are demersal scavengers feeding dead animals on the sea bottom.

In Australian waters there are 35 known lysianassid species, but the group is currently under study by Lowry & Stoddart and many new species are being described. The main scavengers are in the genus Tryphosella. Lysianassids are traditionally known as cold-water amphipods and they are diverse in the Australian Antarctic Territories, particularly the tryphosine scavengers in the genera Orchomenella and Tryphosella.

 

Diagnosis

Head exposed, concealed or partially concealed; as long as deep, longer than deep or deeper than long; anteroventral margin weakly recessed, moderately recessed, rounded or oblique and deeply, shallowly or not excavate; anteroventral corner rounded or subquadrate; rostrum short or absent; eyes well developed (round, ovoid, reniform, lageniform, long and narrow, subsigmoid or subrectangular), obsolescent or absent. Body laterally compressed; smooth or dorsally carinate; with sparse slender setae, densely covered in short setae or without setae. Antenna 1 shorter than or subequal to antenna 2; peduncular article 1 longer than article 2; article 2 subequal to, or longer than article 3; article 3 shorter than article 1; peduncular articles 1–2 geniculate or not; accessory flagellum present or absent; primary flagellum less than or more than 5-articulate; callynophore present or absent. Antenna 2 short, medium length, long or longer than body; flagellum shorter than, as long as or longer than peduncle; less than or more than 5-articulate; calceoli present or absent. Mouthparts well developed or reduced. Mandible incisor smooth; lacinia mobilis present on left side only or absent; molar medium, small, vestigial or absent; triturating, weakly triturating, setose with reduced triturating surface, fully setose or a smooth, nonsetose flap; palp present or absent. Maxilla 1 inner plate weakly setose apically or without setae; palp 1- or 2-articulate or absent. Maxilliped inner plates well developed; outer plates very large, large or small. Coxae 1–4 longer than broad or as long as broad, overlapping. Coxae 1–3 with none vestigial or reduced or with coxa 1 reduced, tapering or vestigial. Gnathopod 1 sexually dimorphic or not; smaller (or weaker) than, subequal to, or larger (or stouter) than gnathopod 2; simple, weakly subchelate, subchelate, parachelate or chelate; coxa vestigial, hidden or partially hidden by coxa 2, or smaller than, subequal to, or larger than coxa 2; carpus shorter than, subequal to, or longer than propodus; dactylus large, small or minute, strongly or weakly covered in setae. Gnathopod 2 sexually dimorphic or not; subchelate or chelate; coxa subequal to but not hidden by coxa 3; ischium long; carpus long, subequal to, or longer than propodus; dactylus minute or absent. Pereopod 3 coxa longer than broad; carpus shorter than, subequal to, or longer than propodus, not produced. Pereopod 4 coxa subequal to, or larger than coxa 3, with well developed posteroventral lobe; carpus shorter than, subequal to, or longer than propodus, not produced. Pereopods 5–7 with many marginal slender setae and few or no robust setae or with few setae. Pereopod 5 shorter than or subequal to pereopod 6; coxa smaller than, subequal to, or larger than coxa 4, with ventrally produced posterior lobe or without posterior lobe; basis expanded or slightly expanded, subrectangular, subquadrate or subovate, with or without posteroventral lobe; carpus linear. Pereopod 6 shorter than, subequal to, or longer than pereopod 7; basis expanded or slightly expanded. Pereopod 7 subequal to, or longer than pereopod 5; basis expanded or slightly expanded, with broad posteroventral lobe, subrectangular or subovate. Pleonites 1–3 with or without dorsal carina. Urosomites 1–3 free or 1 free, 2 and 3 coalesced; urosomite 1 longer or much longer than urosomite 2; urosomite 1 carinate, urosomite 3 carinate or urosomites not carinate. Uropods 1–2 apices of rami without robust setae. Uropod 1 peduncle with or without long plumose setae, without ventromedial spur. Uropod 3 biramous, uniramous or rami absent; peduncle short or long; rami lanceolate; outer ramus shorter than, subequal to, or longer than peduncle; inner ramus not apically setose. Telson laminar or hemiacetabulate; deeply, moderately or weakly cleft, notched, emarginate or entire; longer than broad, as long as broad or broader than long; dorsal and apical robust setae present or absent.

 

General References

Barnard, J.L. 1972. Gammaridean Amphipoda of Australia, Part I. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 103: i-vi 1-333

Barnard, J.L. & Karaman, G.S. 1991. The families and genera of marine gammaridean Amphipoda (except marine gammaroids). Records of the Australian Museum, Supplement 13: 1-866

Boudrias, M. 1991. Methods for the study of amphipod swimming: behavior, morphology, and fluid dynamics. pp. 11-25 in Watling, G. (ed.). Proceedings of the VIIth International Colloquium on Amphipoda held in Walpole, Maine, USA, 14–16 September 1990. Hydrobiologia 223: 1-299

Boudrias, M.A. 2002. Are pleopods just "more legs"? The functional morphology of swimming limbs in Eurythenes gryllus. Journal of Crustacean Biology 22(3): 581-594

Charmasson, S.S. & Calmet, D.P. 1987. Distribution of scavenging Lysianassidae amphipods Eurythenes gryllus in the Northeast Atlantic: comparison with studies held in the Pacific. Deep-Sea Research, Part A, Oceanographic Research Papers 34(9): 1509-1523

Dana, J.D. 1849. Synopsis of the genera of Gammaracea. American Journal of Science and Arts 2 8: 135-140

De Broyer, C. 1977. Révision des genres Ambasiopsis K.H. Barnard et Neoambasia Dahl (Crustacea, Amphipoda). Journal of Natural History 11: 679-692

De Broyer, C. 1985. Description de Falklandia gen.n. de l'Océan Australe et definition des Lysianassoidea uristidiens (Crustacea, Amphipoda). Zoologica Scripta 14: 303-312

Hessler, R.R., Ingram, C.L., Yayanos, A.A. & Burnett, B.R. 1978. Scavenging amphipods from the floor of the Philippine Trench. Deep-Sea Research 25(11): 1029-1047

Hurley, D.E. 1963. Amphipoda of the family Lysianassidae from the west coast of North and Central America. Occasional Papers of the Allan Hancock Foundation 25: 1-160

Lowry, J.K. 1984. Systematics of the pachynid group of lysianassoid Amphipoda (Crustacea). Records of the Australian Museum 36(2): 51-105

Lowry, J.K. & Kilgallen, N.M. 2014. New tryphosine amphipods from Australian waters (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Lysianassoidea, Lysianassidae, Tryphosinae). Zootaxa 3844(1): 1-64

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1983. The shallow-water gammaridean Amphipoda of the subantarctic islands of New Zealand and Australia: Lysianassoidea. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 13(4): 279-394

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1986. Protandrous hermaphrodites among the lysianassoid Amphipoda. Journal of Crustacean Biology 6(4): 742-748

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1987. A new South American genus and species in the amaryllidid group of lysianassoid Amphipoda. Journal of Natural History 21: 1303-1309

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1989. Stephonyx, a new, widespread genus of lysianassoid Amphipoda. Zoologica Scripta 18(4): 519-525

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1990. The Wandinidae, a new Indo-Pacific family of lysianassoid Amphipoda (Crustacea). Records of the Australian Museum 42(2): 159-171

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1992. A revision of the genus Ichnopus (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea: Uristidae). Records of the Australian Museum 44(2): 185-245

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1993. The Onisimus problem (Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea: Uristidae). Zoologica Scripta 22(2): 167-181

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1995. The Amphipoda (Crustacea) of Madang Lagoon: Lysianassidae, Opisidae, Uristidae, Wandinidae and Stegocephalidae. pp. 97-174 in Lowry, J.K. The Amphipoda (Crustacea) of Madang Lagoon, Papua New Guinea, Part 1. Records of the Australian Museum, Supplement 22: 1-174

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1996. New lysianassoid amphipod species from Namibia and Madagascar (Lysianassidae Dana, 1849 and Podoprionidae fam. nov.). Bollettino del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Verona 20: 225-247

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 1997. Amphipoda Crustacea IV. Families Aristiidae, Cyphocarididae, Endevouridae, Lysianassidae, Scopelocheiridae, Uristidae. Memoirs of the Hourglass Cruises 10(1): 1-148

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 2002. The Amaryllididae of Australia (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea). Records of the Australian Museum 54: 129-214

Lowry, J.K. & Stoddart, H.E. 2003. The Pachynidae n. fam. (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea). (in prep.) ***.

Stoddart, H.E. & Lowry, J.K. 2003. Revision of the deep-sea lysianassoid genus Eurythenes (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Eurytheneidae n. fam.). Zoosystematica Rossica 26(3): 425-468

Thurston, M.H. 1979. Scavenging abyssal amphipods from the north-east Atlantic Ocean. Marine Biology, Berlin 51(1): 55-68

Thurston, M.H. 1989. A new species of Valettia (Crustacea: Amphipoda) and the relationship of the Valettidae to the Lysianassoidea. Journal of Natural History 23: 1093-1107

Thurston, M.H. 1990. Abyssal necrophagous amphipods (Crustacea: Amphipoda) in the northeast and tropical Atlantic Ocean. Progress in Oceanography 24(1–4): 257-274

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
05-Aug-2022 AMPHIPODA 06-Feb-2013 MOVED Dr Jim Lowry (AM)
05-Aug-2022 22-Nov-2012 MODIFIED
05-Aug-2022 17-Oct-2011 MODIFIED
12-Feb-2010 (import)