Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T10:42:32.114Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Taxonomy and biogeography of the genus Heteroteuthis (Mollusca: Cephalopoda) in the Atlantic Ocean

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 January 2010

Natalie Rotermund*
Affiliation:
Biozentrum Grindel und Zoologisches Museum Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146 Hamburg, Germany
Jürgen Guerrero-Kommritz*
Affiliation:
Biozentrum Grindel und Zoologisches Museum Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146 Hamburg, Germany
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: N. Rotermund & J. Guerrero-Kommritz, Biozentrum Grindel und Zoologisches Museum Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146 Hamburg, Germany emails: [email protected]; [email protected]
Correspondence should be addressed to: N. Rotermund & J. Guerrero-Kommritz, Biozentrum Grindel und Zoologisches Museum Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146 Hamburg, Germany emails: [email protected]; [email protected]

Abstract

Two species of the bobtail squid Heteroteuthis are reported from the Atlantic Ocean, H. dispar in the North Atlantic Ocean and H. dagamensis in the South Atlantic Ocean. In total 58 individuals were examined, 23 belonging to the species Heteroteuthis dispar and 35 belonging to the species H. dagamensis. All specimens were captured during the Walther Herwig Expeditions 1966, 1968, 1976 and 1982. A full description of both sexes of H. dispar and H. dagamensis is provided. These two species can only be distinguished by means of the male's enlarged suckers on arm pair III. Females are not useful for taxonomic identifications and are morphologically identical in both species. The results do not support the definition of subgenera in this genus. This is the first report for Heteroteuthis dagamensis in the South-West Atlantic Ocean.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2010

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

Allan, J. (1945) Planctonic cephalopod larvae from eastern Australian coast. Records of the Australian Museum 21, 317350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belcari, P. and Sartor, P. (1993) Bottom trawling teuthofauna of the northern Tyrrhenian Sea. Scientia Marina 57, 145152.Google Scholar
Bello, G. (1995) A key for the identification of the Mediterranean sepiolids (Mollusca: Cephalopoda). Bulletin de l'Institut Océanographique Special no. 16, 4155.Google Scholar
Bello, G. (1998) Cephalopods in the diet of albacore, Thunnus alalunga, from the Adratic Sea. Journal of Molluscan Studies 65, 233240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bello, G. and Biagi, V. (1995) How benthic are sepiolids? Bulletin de l'Institut Océanographique Special no. 16, 5761.Google Scholar
Bello, G. and Pipitone, C. (2002) Predation on cephalopods by the giant shrimp Aristaemorpha foliacea. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 82, 213218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, S.S. (1909) Diagnosis of new cephalopods from Hawaiian Islands. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 37, 407419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boletzky, S.V. (1978) Premières données sur le dévelopement embryonnaire du Sépiolide pelargique Heteroteuthis (Mollusca, Cephalopoda). Haliotis 9, 8184.Google Scholar
Hoving, H.J.T., Laptikhovsky, V., Piatkowski, U. and Önsoy, B. (2008) Reproduction in Heteroteuthis dispar (Rüppel, 1844) (Mollusca: Cephalopoda): a sepiolid reproductive adaptation to an oceanic lifestyle. Marine Biology 154, 219230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jereb, P., Roper, C.F.E. and Vecchione, M. (2005) Introduction. In Jereb, P. and Roper, C.F.E. (eds) Cephalopods of the world. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of species known to date. Vol. 1. Chambered nautiluses and sepioids (Nautilidae, Sepiidae, Sepiadariidae, Idiosepiidae and Spirulidae). Rome: FAO, pp. 119. [FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes, no. 4, vol. 1.]Google Scholar
Joubin, L. (1902) Observation sur divers Céphalopodes. 7e note: Heteroteuthis weberi n. sp. Bulletin de la Société Scientifique et Medicale de l'Òuest 11, 401404.Google Scholar
Leach, W.E. (1817) Synopsis of the Orders, Families, and Genera of the Class Cephalopoda. The Zoological Miscellany; being Descriptions of New or Interesting Animals 3, 137141.Google Scholar
Lo Bianco, S. (1903) Le pesche abissali eseguite da F.A. Krupp col Yacht Puritan nelle adjacenze di Capri ed altere località del Mediterraneo. Mittheilungen aus der Zoologischen Station zu Neapel 16, 109278.Google Scholar
Naef, A. (1923) Die Cephalopoden. Fauna e Flora de Golfo di Napoli, Monograph 35, 595600.Google Scholar
Nesis, K.N. (1987) Cephalopods of the world. Neptune City, NJ: The THF Publications, 351 pp. [Translated from the Russian by Levitov, B.S..]Google Scholar
Nixon, M. and Young, J.Z. (2003) The brain and lives of cephalopods. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Reid, A. and Jereb, P. (2005) Family Sepiolidae. In Jereb, P. and Roper, C.F.E. (eds) Cephalopods of the world. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of species known to date. Vol. 1. Chambered nautiluses and sepioids (Nautilidae, Sepiidae, Sepiadariidae, Idiosepiidae and Spirulidae). Rome: FAO, pp. 153203. [FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes, no. 4, vol. 1.]Google Scholar
Relini, O. (1995) Notes on midwater collections of Heteroteuthis dispar (Cephalopoda, Sepiolidae) Bulletin de l'Institut Océanographique Special no. 16, 6372.Google Scholar
Robson, G.C. (1924) Preliminary report on the Cephalopoda (Decapoda) procured by the S.S. “Pickle”. Report of the Fisheries and Marine Biological Survey of the Union of South Africa 3, 114.Google Scholar
Roper, C.F.E. and Voss, G.L. (1983) Guidelines for taxonomic descriptions of cephalopod species. Memoirs of the National Museum of Victoria 44, 4963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rüppel, E. (1844) Intorno ad alcuni cefalopodi del mare di messina. Lettera del D. Eduardo Rüppel di Frankfort sul Meno al Prof. Anastasio Cocca. Giornale del Gabinetto Letterario di Messina 5, 129135.Google Scholar
Schlitzer, R. (2002) Ocean Data view, http://www.awi-bremerhaven.de/GEO/ODV.Google Scholar
Sweeney, M.J. and Roper, C.F.E. (1998) Classification, type localities, and type repositories of recent Cephalopoda. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 586, 561595.Google Scholar
Troschel, H. (1857) Bemerkungen über die Cephalopoden von Messina. Archiv für Naturgeschichte 23, 4076.Google Scholar
Vecchione, M., Young, R.E. and Roper, C.F.E. (2007) Heteroteuthis dagamensis Robson, 1924. Version 26 December 2007 (under construction), http://tolweb.org/Heteroteuthis_dagamensis/20053/2007.12.26 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org. Accessed on 29 July 2008.Google Scholar
Verany, J.B. (1851) Mollusques Méditerranéens. Prémiere Partie: Céphalopodes de la Méditerranée. Gênes, imprimerie des Souds-Muets, 132 pp., 44 plates.Google Scholar
Voss, G.L. (1955) The Cephalopoda obtained by the Harvard–Havanna Expedition off the Coast of Cuba in 1938–39. Bulletin of Marine Science of the Gulf and Caribbean 5, 81115.Google Scholar
Young, R.E. (1977) Bioluminescent counter shading in midwater cephalopods. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 38, 161190.Google Scholar
Young, R.E., Roper, C.F.E. and Mangold, (1922–2003) , K.M. (2008) Heteroteuthis Gray, 1849. Version 04 April 2008 (under construction), http://tolweb.org/Heteroteuthis/20030/2008.04.04 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org. Accessed on 29 July 2008.Google Scholar