Postnaupliar stages of a thaumatopsyllid copepod from a reef area of the western Caribbean Sea

Copepods of the recently established order Thaumatopsylloida are semi‐parasitic forms in which naupliar development takes place inside ophiurid echinoderms; the postnaupliar stages are free‐living. The morphology and development of the postnaupliar stages of this order remain practically unstudied. Plankton samples collected at night time following the lunar cycle in a reef area of the Mexican Caribbean coast yielded different copepodid stages of Caribeopsyllus chawayi Suárez‐Morales, one of the two thaumatopsylloid species known in the western hemisphere. Five female copepodid stages (CI-III, CV, CVI) are described and illustrated in detail. Both copepodid and adult forms are devoid of mouthparts and antennae. This species appears to moult rapidly from CIII into a pre‐adult CV by acquiring a distinctive elongation of the anal somite and a clearly different segmentation pattern of legs 1-3. Morphological and morphometric changes during postnaupliar development of several structures were analysed and compared with unpublished observations on another thaumatopsylloid (Thespesiopsyllus paradoxus Sars). Among other characters, the one‐step elongation of the anal somite in our specimens contrasts with the gradual pattern shown by T. paradoxus. It is suggested that the pre‐adult form of C. chawayi appears after the CIII stage; unlike other copepods, the number of setal elements in the CIII stage is unchanged in older copepodids.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Suárez Morales, Eduardo Doctor autor/a 2036, Tovar Juárez, Edgar autor/a 15992
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Caribeopsyllus chawayi, Thespesiopsyllus paradoxus, Copépodos, Morfología animal, Zooplancton, Artfrosur,
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