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Lernaeopoda globosa n. sp., a Parasitic Copepod of Scyllium canicula

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Extract

Habitat and Record. On 10. iv. 1918 my attention was called to five specimens of Lernaeopoda occurring on Scyllium canicula obtained at Plymouth. The largest copepod was attached outside and about one inch ventral to the left spiracle. The other four were deeply concealed within the left nasal groove, so that the nasal flap had to be cut away in order to detach the parasites. These specimens exhibit characters of their own which seem to combine those of other established species. The most striking modification is that the ends of the attaching “arms” (2nd maxillae) are expanded into large discs on either side of a vestigial bulla, thus recalling L. bidiscalis Kane, 1892, though that species is described as possessing discs of a different conformation, and as having no bulla. In other respects they agree more with L. musteli Thomson, 1899, notably as to their small size, and the proportion of the arms to their trunk. But to these points I do not attach much importance, since both may be due to the confined space in which the parasites are domiciled.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1918

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References

Kane, (1892). On a new species of Lernaeopoda (bidiscalis) from the West Coast of Ireland and Polperro, Cornwall. Proc. Roy. Irish Acad. Ser. 3, II. 203.Google Scholar
Leigh-Sharpe, (1915). Lernaeopoda scyllicola n.sp., a parasitic copepod of Scyllium canicula. Parasitology, VIII. 262.Google Scholar
Thomson, (1899). Parasitic Copepoda of New Zealand with descriptions of New Species. Trans. New Zealand Institute, XXII. 353.Google Scholar