Abstract
A new species of Thetispelecaris is described from a submarine cave in Japan as the first record of the genus from thePacific Ocean. Thetispelecaris kumejimensis n. sp. differs from its congeners in the following combination of characters:carapace 1.1 times as long as wide; antennal scale with 3–4 setae; maxilliped dactylus with 4 slender setae; basis of pere-opod 1 with 2 long setae ventrodistally; exopod of pereopods 4 and 5 4-segmented; basis and ischium of pereopod 3 sep-arated; basis and ischium of pereopods 4–6 partly fused; and pleopods 4 and 5 with 2 setae apically. This study represents the sixth species of the order Bochusacea.References
Gutu, M. (1998) Spelaeogriphacea and Mictacea (partim) suborders of a new order, Cosinzeneacea (Crustacea, Peracarida). Travaux du Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle Grigore Antipa, 40, 121–129.
Gutu, M. & Iliffe, T.M. (1998) Description of a new hirsutiid (n. g., n. sp.) and reassignment of this family from order Mictacea to the new order, Bochusacea (Crustacea, Peracarida). Travaux du Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle Grigore Antipa, 40, 93–120.
Jaume, D., Boxshall, G.A. & Bamber, R.N. (2006) A new genus from the continental slope off Brazil and the discovery of the first males in the Hirsutiidae (Crustacea: Peracarida: Bochusacea). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 148, 169-–208.
Ng, P.K.L. (2002) On a new species of cavernicolous Neoliomera (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Xanthidae) from Christmas Island and Ryukyus, Japan. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 50(1), 95–99.
Ohtsuka, S., Hanamura, Y. & Kase, T. (2002) A new species of Thetispelecaris (Crustacea: Peracarida) from submarine cave on Grand Cayman Island. Zoological Science, 19, 611–624.
Sanders, H.L., Hessler, R.R. & Garner, S.P. (1985) Hirsutia bathyalis, a new unusual deep-sea benthic peracaridan crustacean from the tropical Atlantic. Journal of Crustacean Biology, 5(1), 30–57.
Takeda, M. (2003) Atoportunus dolichopus, a new cavernicolous crab of the family Portunidae (Crustacea: Decapoda) from the Ryukyu Islands. Bulletin of the National Science Museum, Tokyo, Series A (Zoology), 29(3), 141–146.