Taxonomic Studies on British and Irish Amphipoda. the Genus Gammaropsis
- 1 February 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
- Vol. 62 (1) , 93-100
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0025315400020129
Abstract
INTRODUCTIONLincoln (1979) stated that ‘four species (of Gammaropsis Liljeborg) are reported from the British Isles, Gammaropsis maculata (Johnston), G. palmata (Stebbing & Robertson), G. nitida (Stimpson) and G. sophiae (Boeck)’. In fact, six species of Gammaropsis have been reported from the British Isles in the literature, the records of G. lobatus (Chevreux) (Spooner, i960) and G. melanops (Sars) (Jones, 1948) having apparently been overlooked by Lincoln (1979). Spooner's (1960) material is apparently no longer extant, but the material attributed to G. melanops by Jones (1948) has been re-examined by us and found to be referable to G. lobata. Recent collections of G. lobata from the west coast of Ireland confirm a rather wide distribution of this species in the southwest of these islands.Five species of Gammaropsis are therefore now known from these islands, and G. melanops can, at least for the present, be deleted from the British and Irish list of species.Lincoln (1979) was unable to examine any British material of G. sophiae, everything labelled as such, in the material examined by him (including the Norman collection at the B.M.N.H.)* being referable to G. nitida. He therefore figured the species from West African material. G. sophiae is quite widespread along the southwest coast of Ireland and since it differs somewhat from the material described by Lincoln (1979) it is figured herein from the Celtic Sea.Krapp-Schickel & Myers (1979) reviewed the Mediterranean species of Gammaropsis and segregated the species into two groups, group ‘A’ species characterized by the possession of a toothed urosome, toothed coxa 1 and long acute epistome, and group ‘B ‘ species characterized by having a smooth urosome, smooth coxa 1 and short epistome.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The occurrence of Ingolfiella in the Eddystone shell gravel, with description of a new speciesJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1960
- The Ecology of the Amphipoda of the South of the Isle of ManJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1948
- II. On four new British AmphipodaThe Transactions of the Zoological Society of London, 1891
- Synopsis of the marine Invertebrata of Grand Manan: or the region about the mouth of the Bay of Fundy, New BrunswickPublished by Biodiversity Heritage Library ,1853