A
new calanoid copepod species from South
Carolina,
U.S.A.: Aglaodiaptomus savagei (Crustacea: Copepoda: Calanoida: Diaptomidae)
Adrienne
E. DeBiase and Barbara E. Taylor
The
University of Georgia, Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, P.O. Drawer E,
Aiken,
South Carolina 29802, U.S.A.
Abstract.-Aglaodiaptomus savagei, new species,
was collected from a seasonal wetland pond in Kershaw County, South Carolina,
U.S.A. Additional
populations were found in eastern North Carolina, U.S.A. The female most
closely resembles A. forbesi Light, 1938, and A.
lintoni Forbes, 1893, but they
are separated by the armament of the antennule, body
length, and geographic
range.Male
A. savagei can be confused with male A. spatulocrenatus Pearse,
1906.Differences occur mainly in
the ornamentation of the fifth leg, as well
as segment sizes in the fifth leg.
SREL Reprint #2485
DeBiase, A. E., and B. E. Taylor. 2000. A new
calanoid copepod species from South Carolina, U.S.A.: Aglaodiaptomus savagei
(Crustacea: Copepoda: Calanoida: Diaptomidae). Proceedings of the Biological
Society of Washington.113:681-689.