Title of article :
First record of the harpacticoid genus Nitocrellopsis (Copepoda, Ameiridae) in Australia, with descriptions of three new species
Abstract :
Three new freshwater ameirid species were discovered in the Western Australian subterranean
habitats and described in this paper. They all proved to belong to the genus Nitocrellopsis Galassi,
De Laurentiis & Dole-Olivier, 1999, representing the first record of this genus in Australia. Nitocrellopsis
operculata sp. nov. was collected in 2003 in the Pilbara region, during the Pilbara Regional Survey, led by the
Western Australian Department of Environment and Conservation (DEC). It can be distinguished from all
other congeners by the reduced armature of the antennal exopod, which is an autapomorphic feature. Also,
no other species of Nitocrellopsis has cuticular windows on prosomal or urosomal somites, or six elements
on the third exopodal segment of the second leg. Nitocrellopsis halsei sp. nov. and N. pinderi sp. nov. are
sister-species, collected in 2007 in the neighbouring Yilgarn region, by the private environmental consulting
company Bennelongia Pty Ltd. Numerous morphological similarities include somite ornamentation, armature
patterns of the swimming legs and the fifth leg, as well as the shape and armature of the antennula, antenna
and almost all mouth appendages, while the main differences between the two are observed in the body size
and habitus appearance, caudal rami shape and size, presence/absence of large lateral pores on the fourth
pedigerous somite, number of spinules on the anal operculum, number of setae on the madibular endopod,
and shape of the exopod of the fifth leg. Although they differ from any other congener by a combination of
characters, no significant autapomorphic features were observed. In order to find a more natural allocation
of these three species, a cladistic analysis is performed on all current members of Nitocrellopsis and
three outgroup taxa, based on 45 morphological characters. The resulting cladogram shows that the ingroup
is well defined by at least four synapomorphies, but the Australian species from the two regions are only
remotely related to each other, showing the importance of looking at small-scale patterns when inferring
Gondwanan biogeography. Three sister-species pairs are recognized in the genus and a key to all 12 members
is provided.
Keywords :
Western Australia , Yilgarn , zoogeography , Phylogeny , stygofauna , Tethyan relics , subterranean , Pilbara , cladistics