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Simpson, L. A.; Ambrosio, L. J.; Baeza, J. A. (2017). A new species of Carcinomertes, Carcinomertes conanobrieni sp. nov. (Nemertea: Carcinomertidae), an egg predator of the Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus. Plos One
339348
10.1371/journal.pone.0177021 [view]
Simpson, L. A.; Ambrosio, L. J.; Baeza, J. A.
2017
A new species of Carcinomertes, Carcinomertes conanobrieni sp. nov. (Nemertea: Carcinomertidae), an egg predator of the Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus
Plos One
12(5): e0177021
Publication
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A new species of nemertean worm belonging to the genus Carcinonemertes is described from egg masses of the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus from the Florida Keys, Florida, USA. This is the first species of Carcinonemertes reported to infect P. argus or any other lobster species in the greater Caribbean and western Atlantic Ocean. Carcinonemertes conanobrieni sp. nov. varies in body color from a translucent white to a pale orange, with males ranging in total body length from 2.35 to 12.71 mm and females ranging from 0.292 to 16.73 mm. Among the traits that separate this new species from previously described species in the genus Carcinonemertes are a relatively wide stylet basis, minimal sexual size dimorphism, and a unique mucus sheath decorated with external hooks. Also, juvenile worms were found to encyst themselves next to lobster embryos and female worms lay both long strings of eggs wound throughout the lobster’s setae as well as spherical cases that are attached to lobster embryos. The stylet length and stylet basis remain unchanged throughout ontogeny for both male and female worms. Maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference phylogenetic analyses separated this newly described species from all other species of Carcinonemertes with available COI sequences. Carcinonemertes spp. are voracious egg predators and have been tied to the collapse of various crustacean fisheries. The formal description of this new species represents the first step to understand putative impacts of this worm on the population health of one of the most lucrative yet already depressed crustacean fisheries.
Western Atlantic warm temperate to tropical
Associations, Symbiosis, Commensalism (parasitism see *PAR)
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