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A review of the Leptostraca of the British Isles with discussion of the genus Sarsinebalia Dahl

Abstract

A survey of the Leptostracan fauna of the British Isles collected from routine environmental monitoring samples revealed six species of Nebaliidae to be present in shallow waters. These species were identified as Nebalia herbstii Leach, 1814, Nebalia strausi Risso, 1826, Nebalia borealis Dahl, 1985, Nebalia kocatasi Moreira, Koçak and Katagan, 2007, Nebalia reboredae Moreira and Urgorri, 2009 in Moreira et al., 2009a and Sarsinebalia urgorrii Moreira, Gestoso and Troncoso, 2003. The presence of N. strausi , N. kocatasi , N. reboredae and S. urgorrii is reported from the British Isles for the first time. Three further species have been previously reported from the waters surrounding Britain and Ireland but were not recorded in the current study. Thus, the number of species recorded in the British Isles now stands at nine and the range of several species is extended northwards from previous records in the Mediterranean and the Iberian Peninsula. The diagnostic characters of Sarsinebalia Dahl, 1985 are discussed and it is suggested that a formal reappraisal of the genus be conducted. A key to European Leptostraca is provided based on adult females.

Key words
Nebaliidae; Ireland; United Kingdom; identification key; new records

Introduction

Leptostraca are the only extant members of the marine crustacean subclass Phyllocarida. They possess a movable rostrum, six pairs of pleopods, a pair of uropods and a bivalve carapace covering eight thoracopods. Leptostracans have long been documented from the British Isles and are known from

shallow-and deep-water locations. However, the group is morphologically conservative and the traditionally used identifying characters were inadequate for species separation. Revisions of the group (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.; Moreira et al. 2003Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209.; 2007Moreira, J.; Koçak, C. and Katagan, T. 2007Neba lia kocatasi sp. nov., a new species of leptostracan (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from Izmir Bay (Aegan Sea, eastern Mediterranean) Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 87(5): 1247-1254.; 2009aMoreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.; 2009bMoreira, J.; Cacabelos, E. and Troncoso, J.S. 2009b. Primer registro de Nebalia kocatasi Moreira, Koçak et Katagan, 2007 (Crustacea, Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) en la Península Ibérica. Boletín de la Real Sociedad española de Historia Natural (Sección Biológica) , 103(1-4): 65-72.), including descriptions of several new species, have made it apparent that the list of species reported from the British Isles is inaccurate and the distribution of the previously reported species must be re-evaluated.

Mauchline (1984)Mauchline, J. 1984. Euphausiid, Stomatopod and Leptostracan crustaceans: keys and notes for the identification of the species. Synopsis of the British Fauna (New Series)30. London, E.J. Brill & W. Backhuys, 91p. lists four species of Leptostraca within the fauna of the British Isles. These include Nebalia bipes (Fabricius, 1780Fabricius, O. 1780. Fauna Groenlandica. Hafniae et Lipsiae, 452p.), Sarsinebalia typhlops (G.O. Sars, 1870Sars, G.O. 1870. Nye Dybvandscrustaceer fra Lofoten. Forhandlinger i Videnskabs-Selskabet i Christiana (1869): 147-174.), Nebaliella cabotiClark, 1932Clark, A.E. 1932Nebaliella caboti n. sp., with observations on other Nebaliacea Transactions of the Royal Societ y of Canada, 26(5): 217-235. and Nebaliopsis typica G.O. Sars, 1887Sars, G.O. 1887. Report on the Phyllocarida collected by H.M.S. 'Challenger' during the years 1873-6. The Voyage of the H.M.S. 'Challenger', 19: 1-38.. Nebalia bipes has historically been widely recorded from British and Irish coasts. Tattersall (1911)Tattersall, W.M. 1911. Part 41. Nebaliacea, Cumacea, Schizopoda, and Stomatopoda. In: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section A: Mathematical and Physic al Sciences, 41: 1-10. recorded it from the Clare Island Survey "at low water at spring tides, under stones and seems to prefer the neighbourhood of black, evil-smelling mud". Fahy (1985)Fahy, E. 1985. Feeding, Growth, and Parasites of Trout Salmo Trutta L. from Mulroy Bay, an Irish Sea Lough. Irish Fisheries Investigations Series A,No. 25, 1-12. recorded it from the gut contents of sea trout from Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal. Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. provided a revision of the European Leptostraca and demonstrated that N. bipes is not a cosmopolitan species recorded throughout western European coastal waters but instead is a boreal, circum-Arctic species known only from Greenland, Arctic North America, and Svalbard to western Norway. Considering Dahl's (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. revised distribution of N. bipes and his statement that Nebalia herbstiiLeach, 1814Leach, W.E. 1814. The zoological miscellany, being descriptions of new and interesting animals. Vol. 3. London, E. Nodder, 149p. was the commonest species of NebaliaLeach, 1814Leach, W.E. 1814. The zoological miscellany, being descriptions of new and interesting animals. Vol. 3. London, E. Nodder, 149p. of the British Isles and the western coast of France, O'Reilly et al. (2001)O'Reilly, M.; Hamilton, E. and Heaney, L. 2001. New records of Amphipods and Leptostracans from the Forth Sea Area, with notes on their copepod parasites (Siphonostomatoida: Nicothoidae) Glasgow Naturalist, 23(6): 35-42. suggested that it seems probable that most of the British records of N. bipes should refer to N. herbstii . Correspondingly, it should be considered that all historical identifications of N. bipes from the British Isles should be seen as suspect and should be re-examined.

In addition to N. bipes , historical records of British and Irish Nebaliidae include N. herbstii , Nebalia borealisDahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165., Nebalia strausiRisso, 1826Risso, A. 1826. Histoire naturelle des principales productions de l'Europe méridionale et particulièrement de celles des environs de Nice et des Alpes Maritimes. Paris, Levrault, 5, 1-495. and Sarsinebalia typhlops , Nebaliella caboti and Nebaliopsis typica. Sarsinebalia typhlops has previously been recorded (as Nebalia typhlops ) by Tattersall (1905)Tattersall, W.M. 1905. On Nebalia typhlops GO SarsReport on the Sea and Inland Fisheries of Ir eland, 1902-1 90 3, 2: 210. off the west coast of Ireland: 60 miles west of Achill Head in 364 m of water and 50 miles off Cleggan Head, Co. Galway in 220 m of water. Linder (1943)Linder, F. 1943. Über Nebali opsis typica G.O. Sars, nebst einigen allgemeinen Bemerkungen über die Leptostraken Dana Reports, 4: 1-38. recorded N. typica from the extreme south-west of the continental slope. Mauchline and Gage (1983)Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631. also recorded S. typhlops (as Nebalia typhlops ), N. caboti and N. typica at >1500 m from the Rockall Trough. Nebalia herbstii is previously recorded from the south-west and western coast of England (Leach, 1814Leach, W.E. 1814. The zoological miscellany, being descriptions of new and interesting animals. Vol. 3. London, E. Nodder, 149p.; Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.), the Channel Islands, Dublin Bay in the gut of Gaidropsarus mediterraneus (Linnaeus, 1758) and off SW Ireland, location not specified (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.). British records of N. strausi are confined to the Channel Islands (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.) whilst N. borealis has only been reported from Shetland (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.).

The current study examines recent collections of Nebaliidae from inshore and offshore waters around the Irish and British coasts, providing further records for some of the previously known species and demonstrating the occurrence of additional species in these waters.

Material and Methods

Specimens of Nebaliidae were collected from numerous locations during surveys of inshore and offshore waters around the British Isles. The surveys included benthic surveys of Marine Natura 2000 sites, benthic audits of marine fish farms, ecological surveys related to marine aggregate extraction and the oil and gas industry and the U.K.'s Marine Conservation Zone programme. Macrofaunal samples were collected using 0.1 m2 Day grabs, 0.1 m2 mini-Hamon grabs, dredges and diver-operated cores but did not deliberately target leptostracans. During these surveys macrofaunal samples were fixed in 10% buffered formalin, sieved over either a 0.5 or a 1.0 mm mesh and the residues were sorted under either a Nikon SMZ-10 or Nikon SMZ-645 stereomicroscope into various taxa and transferred to 70% ethanol prior to identification. The leptostracan material was subsequently re-analysed for the current study. All specimens were compared against published descriptions of the species with all diagnostic characters carefully considered. Where available, accompanying habitat and collection data have been included in the material examined; however, since some of the macrofaunal samples were provided by third-party contractors these data have not always been made available. Where grain size analysis was carried out the substrate classification is based on that of Folk (1954)Folk, R.L. 1954. The distinction between grain size and mineral composition in sedimentary-rock nomenclature The Journal of Geology, 62(4): 344-359.. Where this analysis was not carried out the substrate descriptions were based on visual examination of the sediment in the field. In total, 1,251 leptostracan specimens were examined. Sex of a proportion of the material was determined using the relative length of the antennae to the body to provide an indication of the proportion of males to females but this was not conducted for all lots. Voucher specimens have been deposited in the zoological collections of the National Museum of Ireland - Natural History (NMINH) and Oxford University Museum of Natural History (OUMNH.ZC). Specimens that had previously been cited by O'Reilly et al. (2001)O'Reilly, M.; Hamilton, E. and Heaney, L. 2001. New records of Amphipods and Leptostracans from the Forth Sea Area, with notes on their copepod parasites (Siphonostomatoida: Nicothoidae) Glasgow Naturalist, 23(6): 35-42. are housed at SEPA. Irish specimens examined by Juan Moreira, (JM), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, are retained in his collection. The remaining leptostracan specimens are retained in the collections of the authors (Irish material with Aquafact International Services Ltd. and U.K. material with APEM Ltd.). Line drawings were made using a camera lucida connected to a Nikon YS2-B microscope. Maps are presented for each species discussed. For Sarsinebalia typhlops , Nebaliella caboti and Nebaliopsis typica these are based on the records presented by Tattersall (1905)Thiele, J. 1904. Die Leptostraken.-Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der DeutschenTiefsee-Expedition auf dem Dampfer "Valdiva," 1898-1899, 8: 1- a26. and Mauchline and Gage (1983)Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631. since no material was available to us. For all other species, maps are based only on material reviewed in the present study, given the likelihood of previous misidentifications. Various records of Leptostraca from online datasets and grey literature have not been referenced as confirmation of identifications could not be established.

Results

Family Nebaliidae Samouelle, 1819Samouelle, G. 1819. The entomologist's useful compendium; or an introduction to the knowledge of British insects, comprising the best means of obtaining and preserving them, and a description of the apparatus generally used; together with the genera of Linné, and the modern method of arranging the classes Crustacea, Myriapoda, Spiders, Mites and insects, from their affinities and structure, according to the views of Dr. Leach. Also an explanation of the terms used in entomology; a calendar of the times of appearance and usual situations of near 3,000 species of British insects; with instructions for collecting and fitting up objects for the microscope. London, 496p.

Genus NebaliaLeach, 1814Leach, W.E. 1814. The zoological miscellany, being descriptions of new and interesting animals. Vol. 3. London, E. Nodder, 149p.

Nebalia strausi Risso, 1826Risso, A. 1826. Histoire naturelle des principales productions de l'Europe méridionale et particulièrement de celles des environs de Nice et des Alpes Maritimes. Paris, Levrault, 5, 1-495.

Material examined . Ireland. 1♂, 3♀, Kilkieran Bay, Co. Galway, 53°19.548'N 009°38.9165'W, 7.9 m, sandy gravel, 15.x.2010. 4♂, 4♀, Kingstown Bay, Co. Galway, 53°30.905'N 10°7.6979'W, 10 m, gravelly muddy sand, 16.x.2010. 3♀, Valentia Island, Co. Kerry, 51°53.819'N 10°18.786'W, 4 m, muddy sandy gravel, 16.ix.2010 (NMINH:2016.1.5, 1♀). 1♀, Valentia Island, Co. Kerry, 51°53.2439'N 10°21.948'W, 6 m, maërl, 16.ix.2010 (NMINH:2016.1.4, 1♀). 1♂, 5♀, Ahabeg, Bantry Bay, Co. Cork, at edge of stocked salmon farm cage located at 51°39.7302'N 009°45.1727'W, 20-23.4 m, mud with broken shell, 4.ix.2012 (JM:2014, 1♂, 4♀). 1♂ adult, Glinsk, Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, 55°12.1368'N 007°47.0682'W, 8-15 m, medium sand with both live and dead maërl, 14.viii.2012. 1♂ adult, Millstone, Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, 50 m from stocked salmon farm, 55°11.4205'N 007°45.388'W, 5-12.9 m, medium sand with maërl gravel, 15.viii.2012 (JM:2014, 1♂).

British and Irish Distribution . South-west, west, and north of Ireland (Co. Cork, Co. Kerry, Co. Galway and Co. Donegal) and Guernsey (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.) (Fig. 1A).

Distribution beyond the study area . Gulf of Naples, Italy (type locality), Eastern Atlantic, from the north-west coast of France to St. Helena (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.). Western Mediterranean (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.). Eastern Mediterranean (Koçak and Katagan, 2006Koçak, C. and Katagan, T. 2006. A new record of Ne balia straus (sic) Risso, 1827 (Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) from the eastern Mediterranean Crustaceana, 79(3): 319-325.; Koçak et al., 2007Koçak, C.; Moreira, J. and Katagan, T. 2007. First occurrence of N ebalia straus (sic) Risso, 1827 (Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) in the Levantine Basin (eastern Mediterranean) Crustaceana, 80(4): 447-453.). Concarneau, Brittany, France (J.M.C. Holmes, pers. comm.).

Ecology . Coarse sediments, from gravel to coarse sand at depths of 12.7-15.2 m, Total Organic Matter (%TOM) 0.6-4.9 (Moreira et al. 2009aMoreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.). Maërl, medium sand to mud at depths of 4-23.4 m, %TOM 2.92-18.93 (present study).

Remarks . Nebalia strausi is recorded for the first time from Irish waters. Records of N. strausi to date suggest a southerly distribution with the specimens from Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, representing the northernmost extent of its range. Features distinguishing N. strausi from other species of Nebalia within the North-East Atlantic include distally acute denticles on the posterior margin of pleonites 6 and 7, in conjunction with an antennular flagellum with more than 10 articles and the exopod of the 2nd maxilla barely extending past the proximal article of the endopod. However, research (Moreira et al., 2004Moreira, J.; Quintas, P. and Troncoso, J.S. 2004. Sobre la presencia de Nebalia strausi Risso, 1826 (Crustacea, Leptostraca) en la peninsula Ibérica. Boletín de la Real Sociedad Española de Historia Natural , 99(1-4): 83-92.; Koçak et al., 2010Koçak, C.; Moreira, J. and Katagan, T. 2010. New records of leptostracans (Crustacea, Phyllocarida) from the eastern Mediterranean Turkish Journal of Zoology, 34(1): 69-77.) has shown that specimens of N. strausi from different localities can exhibit variation in a number of characters including the shape of the anal scales and the denticles of the posterior border of pleonites 6-7. Koçak et al. (2011)Koçak, C.; Moreira, J. and Katagan, T. 2011. New Records of the Genus Nebalia Leach, 1814 (Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) from the Mediterranean Coast of Turkey, with a Checklist of the Mediterranean Species of Leptostraca Crustaceana, 84(4): 401-409. suggested that the existence of cryptic species cannot be ruled out for N. strausi.

Figure 1
Distribution of Leptostraca in the British Isles: (A) Nebalia strausi Risso, 1826; (B) Nebalia kocatasi Moreira, Koçak and Katagan, 2007; (C) Nebalia reboredae Moreira and Urgorri, 2009 in Moreira et al., 2009a; (D) Nebalia herbstii Leach, 1814.

Nebalia kocatasi Moreira, Koçak and Katagan, 2007Moreira, J.; Koçak, C. and Katagan, T. 2007Neba lia kocatasi sp. nov., a new species of leptostracan (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from Izmir Bay (Aegan Sea, eastern Mediterranean) Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 87(5): 1247-1254.

Material examined . Ireland. 40♀, 16♂, 52 juveniles, Finavarra, Co. Clare, 53°9.270'N 009°7.059'W, intertidal, semi-exposed shingle, stone and sand beach, 18.ix.2009 (NMINH:2016.1.1, 3♂, 5♀). 5♀, 1♂, Corranroo, Co. Clare, 53°9.033'N 009°0.509'W, intertidal sheltered rocky shore with a muddy substrate, 10.x.2009. 3♀♀, 22♀, 10♂, 19 juveniles, Carna, Co. Galway, 53°18.712'N 009°51.535'W, intertidal, exposed rocky shore with a sandy substrate, 21.ix.2009. 1♀, Aran Island, Co. Donegal, 54°58.2359'N 008°31.0488'W, 5.7 m, sandy gravel, 1.ix.2010. 7♀, 3♂, 17 juveniles, Kilkieran Bay, Co. Galway, 53°17.508'N 009°36.3858'W, 4 m, gravelly muddy sand, 17.x.2010. 22♂, 132♀, 43 juveniles, Kingstown Bay, Co. Galway, 53°30.905'N 10°7.6979'W, 10 m, gravelly muddy sand, 16.x.2010. 6♂, 2♀, 30 juveniles, Kingstown Bay, Co. Galway, 53°30.93'N 10°7.8359'W, 6 m, muddy sandy gravel, 16.x.2010. 4♀, Valentia Island, Co. Kerry, 51°53.418'N 10°21.5879'W, 5 m, muddy sandy gravel, 16.ix.2010. 1♀, Valentia Island, Co. Kerry, 51°53.2439'N 10°21.948'W, 6 m, maërl, 16.ix.2010. 3♂, 18♀, 28 juveniles, Deenish, Kenmare Bay, Co. Cork, at the edge of a stocked salmon farm located at 51°44.364'N 10°12.8189'W, 23.2 m, medium sand with mussel shell, signs of low oxygen/organic enrichment (Beggiatoa spp. patches), 13.ix.2012 (NMINH:2016.1.2, 3♂, 1♀, 4 juveniles; JM:2014, 2♂, 5♀, 4 juveniles ). 1 ♂, 3♀, 2 juveniles, Inishfanard, Kenmare Bay, Co. Cork, at the edge of a stocked salmon farm at 51°42.702'N 10°0.4408'W, 20-23 m, muddy sand with shell debris, signs of signs of low oxygen/organic enrichment (Beggiatoa spp. patches), 13.ix.2012 (JM:2014, 1♂, 1♀, 2 juveniles). 16♂, 39♀, 59 juveniles, Ahabeg, Bantry Bay Co. Cork, at edge of stocked salmon farm cage located at 51°39.7302'N 009°45.1727'W, 20-23.4 m, mud with shell fragments, 4.ix.2012 (JM:2014, 11♂, 3♀, 3 juveniles). 46♂, 31♀, 34 juveniles, Inishdoonver, Clew Bay, Co. Mayo, at edge of a stocked salmon farm, 53°52.7711'N 009°39.052'W, 21.7 m, cobbles with shell and stone gravel and patches of sand, 20.vii.2012 (JM:2014, 45♂, 30♀, 31 juveniles). 6♂, 10♀, 16 juveniles, Glinsk, Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, at edge of a stocked salmon farm located at 55°12.0912'N 007°46.9314'W, 8-13.1 m, medium sand with shell gravel, signs of signs of low oxygen/organic enrichment (small patches of Beggiatoa spp.), 14.viii.2013 (JM:2014, 2♂, 4♀, 3 juveniles). 1♀, Glinsk, Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, 150 m from edge of stocked salmon farm, 55°12.1368'N 007°47.06819'W, 8-13.1 m, medium sand with live and dead maërl and shell debris, 14.viii.2013 (JM:2014, 1♀). 10♀, 6 juveniles, Millstone, Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, at the edge of a stocked salmon farm, 55°11.446'N 007°45.4068'W, 5-12.9 m, medium sand with a shell gravel fraction and maërl debris, 15.viii.2012 (JM:2014, 1♀). 4♂, 7♀, Cranford, Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, near edge of a stocked salmon farm, 55°10.4491'N 007°42.1786'W, 5-12.9 m, fine/medium sand with silt and shell debris, sparse patches of bacterial mats (Beggiatoa spp.) and feed from salmon farm, 14.viii.2012 (JM:2014, 2♂, 2♀). Northern Ireland. 2 specimens, Strangford Lough, 54°27.000'N 005°36.000'W, 19.7 m, mud with shell, 30.v.2012. 1 specimen, Strangford Lough, 54°25.000'N 005°37.480'W, 17.1 m, shelly mud, 30.v.2012 (OUMNH.ZC.2016-01-008, 1 specimen). 2 specimens, Strangford Lough, 54°24.500'N 005°35.400'W, 60.1 m, muddy sand with shell, 31.v.2012. 1 specimen, Strangford Lough, 54°27.730'N 005°36.640'W, 18.8 m, mud with shell, 18.vi.2013. England. 1 specimen, Falmouth, Cornwall, 50°93.770'N 005°39.100'W, 4.4 m, clean broken shells/maërl, 01.v.2013. Scotland. 9 specimens, Sian Bay, Loch Eriboll, Highlands, 58°31.325'N 004°40.011'W, 20.1 m, sand with shell, 05.xi.2010 (OUMNH.ZC.2016-01-007, 9 specimens). 2 specimens, Sian Bay, Loch Eriboll, Highlands, 58°31.325'N 004°40.011'W, 20.1 m, sand with shell, 05.xi.2010. 1 specimen, south-west Scotland, 55°15.901'N 004°51.197'W, 1.9 m, poorly sorted very coarse sand, 11.vii.2015. 5 specimens, south-west Scotland, 55°16.139'N 004°51.483'W, 11.6 m, poorly sorted very fine gravel, 11.vii.2015. 5 specimens, North Sandwick, Yell, Shetland, 60°39.122'N 000°59.450'W, 15 m, 2003.

British and Irish Distribution . North, west and south-west of Ireland (Co. Donegal, Co. Mayo, Co. Galway, Co. Kerry, Co. Cork), Cornwall, western and northern Scotland, Shetland (Fig. 1B).

Distribution beyond the study area. Izmir Bay, Turkey (type locality). Cyprus and the Aegean Sea to the western Iberian Peninsula and the Canary Islands (Moreira et al., 2007Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209.; Koçak et al., 2011Koçak, C.; Moreira, J. and Katagan, T. 2011. New Records of the Genus Nebalia Leach, 1814 (Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) from the Mediterranean Coast of Turkey, with a Checklist of the Mediterranean Species of Leptostraca Crustaceana, 84(4): 401-409.). Based on the previously known distribution and the present records it seems likely that this species is also present along the west coast of France and southern North Sea coasts but this requires confirmation.

Ecology . Gravel to fine sand with mats of Zostera marina , at depths of 4.5-13.8 m, %TOM 1.2-4.9 (Moreira et al., 2009aMoreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.). Cobbles and gravel to mud, at depths of 4-23.2 m, %TOM 0.69-18.93 (present study). Intertidal on semi-exposed and sheltered rocky shores. The study of their distribution relative to aquaculture cages indicates that this species is most abundant at the edges of the cages as distinct from directly beneath them or further out.

Remarks . The specimens examined agree closely with the description and figures given by Moreira et al. (2007)Olesen, J. 1999. A new speci es of Nebalia (Crustacea, Leptostraca) from Unguja Island (Zanzibar), Tanzania, East Africa, with a phylogenetic analysis of leptostracan genera Journal of Natu ral History, 33(12): 1789-1809.. A comparison of diagnostic characters of Mediterranean species of Nebalia by Koçak and Moreira (2015)Koçak C. and Moreira, J. 2015. A new Nebalia species (Crustacea, Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) from the eastern Mediterranean Sea Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 95(08): 1667-1675. highlights useful differences between N. kocatasi and other species, in particular the lateral armature of the 3rd article of the antenna (N. kocatasi has 3 thin setae and 3 spine-like setae with the proximal spine-like seta smallest (Fig. 5A). Nebalia kocatasi is the only species that has been recorded in this study from the intertidal zone. This likely reflects the sampling methodology rather than true habitat preferences. Numerous specimens of N. kocatasi from Kenmare, Co. Kerry, and Finavarra, Co. Clare as well as two specimens from Shetland, had epibionts on the pleonites and on the carapace (Fig. 6). These had a total length of 306~392 µm, capsule length of 219~274 µm and stalk length of 86~141 µm (n=15). A study of these by Gregorio Fernandez-Leborans (Universidad Complutense, Madrid) could not determine their identity but concluded they were most likely protozoans. Over 40 species of chonotrich ciliates are known from Nebaliaceans (Fernandez-Leborans, 2001Fernandez-Leborans, G. 2001. A review of species of protozoan epibionts on crustaceans. III. Chonotrich Ciliates Crustaceana, 74(6): 581-607.).

Nebalia reboredae Moreira and Urgorri, 2009 in Moreira et al. , 2009aMoreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.

Material examined . Ireland. 2♀, Deenish, Kenmare Bay, Co. Kerry, 51°44.364'N 10°12.8189'W, 23.2 m, on medium sand with shell gravel, 13.ix.2012 (NMINH:2016.1.3, 2♀). 3♂, 1♀, Aran Island, Co. Donegal, 54°58.2359'N 008°31.0488'W, 5.7 m, sandy gravel, 1.ix.2010. 2♀, 1 juvenile, Sound of Aran, Co. Donegal, 54°57.4439'N 008°28.6248'W, 5.5 m, gravelly sand, 1.ix.2010. 3♀, 1 juvenile, Sound of Aran, 54°56.562'N 008°28.2629'W, 9.9 m, gravelly sand, 1 September 2010. 12 specimens, Lough Foyle, Co. Donegal, 55°11.510'N 007°00.765'W, 9.5 m, sand with shell, 29.iii.2012. 1 specimen, Lough Foyle, Co. Donegal, 55°11.510'N 007°00.765'W, 15.6 m, sand with shell, 26.vi.2013. 2 juveniles, Kingstown Bay, Co. Galway, 53° 30.9829'N 10°8.22'W, 9.3 m, gravelly sand, 16.x.2010. 3♀, Valentia Island, Co. Kerry, 51° 52.5599'N 10° 24.444'W, 40 m, gravelly sand. Northern Ireland. 1♀, NE of Skernaghan Pt, Larne, Co. Antrim, dredge, 54°51.6869'N 005°45.384'W, 25 m, gravel and shell, 15.iv.2010. 5 specimens, Larne Lough, 54°50.352'N 005°47.802'W, 5.7 m, muddy sand, 14.iii.2013. 2 specimens, Carlingford Lough, 54°03.271'N 006°09.058'W, 7 m, muddy sand with shell, 05.vii.2013. Scotland. 1 specimen, Oban Bay, 56°24.862'N 005°29.708'W, 37.6 m, gravelly shelly mud, 09.xii.2010. 19 specimens, Kirkwall Bay, 59°02.014'N 002°59.722'W, 13 m, 25.v.2014. 2 specimens, Kirkwall Bay, 59°01.281'N 002°58.329'W, 12 m, 25.v.2014. 1 specimen, St. Abbs, 56°04.500'N 002°05.460'W, 55 m, 02.vi.1986 [specimen previously cited by O'Reilly et al. (2001)O'Reilly, M.; Hamilton, E. and Heaney, L. 2001. New records of Amphipods and Leptostracans from the Forth Sea Area, with notes on their copepod parasites (Siphonostomatoida: Nicothoidae) Glasgow Naturalist, 23(6): 35-42. as N. herbstii ]. 1 specimen, Ayr Bay, 55°28.570'N 002°41.000'W, 17 m, 08.ix.1989. 1 specimen, Shuna Island, Loch Linnhe, 56°35.570'N 005°22.750'W, 01.vi.1992. 1 specimen, Bring Head, Hoy, Orkney, 58°54.050'N 003°16.191'W, 20 m, sand, 17.x11.2012. 1 specimen, St. Margaret's Hope, Orkney, 15.v.2015. 1 specimen, south-west Scotland, 55°16.121'N 004°51.617'W, 10.6 m, poorly sorted coarse sand, 11.vii.2015. 3 specimens, Moray Firth (Hilton of Cadboll Water Body), 57o38.09'N 003o57.49' W, 19 m, 23.vi.2015. Wales. 1 specimen, Cardigan Bay, 52°15.054'N 004°22.582'W, 21.7 m, 2.vii.2014. England. 1 specimen, Plymouth Sound, 50°19.933'N 004°09.200'W, 9.6 m, coarse sand, 30.iii.2011. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°27.845'N 000°32.794'E, 43.7 m, sandy gravel, 2.viii.2014. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°23.765'N 000°45.489'E, 39.8 m, sandy gravel, 1.viii.2014. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°26.977'N 000°36.590'E, 46.8 m, gravelly sand, 2.x.2014. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°21.401'N 000°18.366'E, 43.9 m, sandy gravel, 30.vii.2014. 1 specimen, Cromer Shoals, 52°59.807'N 001°28.649'E, 11.6 m, sand, 12.ix.2014. 1 specimen, Cromer Shoals, 53°04.062'N 001°27.237'E, 10.7 m, mixed sediments, 12.ix.2014. 1 specimen, Liverpool Bay, 53°29.165'N 003°30.429'W, 21.9 m, gravelly sand, 29.x.2014. 2 specimens, Liverpool Bay, 53°26.970'N 003°23.971'W, 16.0 m, gravelly sand, 30.x.2014. 4 specimens, Liverpool Bay, 53°26.038'N 003°24.593'W, 13.8 m, sandy gravel, 30.x.2014. North Sea. 5 specimens, Osprey Field, 61°19.530'N 004°32.601'E, 159.9 m, muddy sand, 6.xii.2008. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°18.115'N 001°32.060'E, 155 m, muddy sand, 11.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°13.141'N 001°30.927'E, 148.1 m, muddy sand, 08.xi.2009. 2 specimens, Clipper Field, 53°23.826'N 001°47.205'E, 25.1 m, sandy gravel, 27.xii.2008. 2 specimens, Clipper Field, 53°24.179'N 001°46.431'E, 24. m, sandy gravel, 27.xii.2008 (OUMNH.ZC.2016-01-009, 2 specimens). 2 specimens, Dunbar Field, 60°37.700'N 001°39.200'E, 145 m. 6 specimens, Clipper Field, 53°21.452'N 001°44.148'E, 29.9 m, muddy sand, 2.ii.2009. 1 specimen, Juliet Field, 53°35.444'N 000°46.261'E, 33.3 m, sandy gravel, 10.ix.2009.

British and Irish Distribution . West and north-west of Ireland (Co. Kerry, Co. Galway, Co. Donegal) and east of Northern Ireland (Co. Antrim) (Fig. 1C).

Distribution beyond the study area. Ría de Ferrol, Galicia, Spain (type locality). Based on the previously known distribution and the present records it seems likely that this species is also present along the west coast of France and continental southern North Sea coasts but this requires confirmation.

Ecology . Medium sand at depth of 6.4 m, 1.4 % TOM (Moreira et al., 2009aMoreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.). Gravelly sand at depths of 5.5-40 m, 0.69-3.1% TOM (present study). Nebalia reboredae appears to be the European species of Nebalia which shows a greater affinity for sandy sediments.

Remarks . The specimens examined agree closely with the description and figures given by Moreira et al. (2009a)Moreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.. Contrary to Dahl's statement that Nebalia herbstii is the dominant Nebalia species in British waters, N. reboredae was the most commonly recorded in this study.

Nebalia herbstii Leach, 1814Leach, W.E. 1814. The zoological miscellany, being descriptions of new and interesting animals. Vol. 3. London, E. Nodder, 149p.

Material examined. Scotland. 16 specimens, Rubha Stillaig, Loch Fyne, Stn 17:2, 55°51.860'N 005°18.900'W, 08.vi.1999. England. 1 specimen, Falmouth, Cornwall, 50°54.740'N 005°54.910'W, 6.8 m, clean shells/maërl, 2.v.2013. 9 specimens, north-east Isles of Scilly, 49°55.289'N 006°19.926'W, 15.9 m, sand, 26.v.2013. 110 specimens, north-east Isles of Scilly, 49°58.125'N 006°19.257'W, 6.1 m, coarse (3-4 cm) gravel with mud and abundant macroalgae, 27.v.2013.

British and Irish Distribution . Shetland, western British Isles (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.), south-west and western coasts of England (Leach, 1814Leach, W.E. 1814. The zoological miscellany, being descriptions of new and interesting animals. Vol. 3. London, E. Nodder, 149p.), Loch Fyne, Isles of Scilly, Falmouth (present study) (Fig. 1D).

Distribution beyond the study area . Western France to Spanish border (Walker-Smith and Poore, 2001Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.); northern coast of the Iberian Peninsula (Martínez et al., 2007Martínez, J.; Adarraga, I. and Ruiz, J.M. 2007. Tipificación de poblaciones bentónicas de los fondos blandos de la plataforma continental de Guipúzcoa (sureste del golfo de Vizcaya). Boletín del Instituto Español de Oceanografía , 23(1-4), 85-110.).

Ecology . Shallow (6.1-15.9 m), near-shore waters over sands, muds, gravels and maërl (present study). Occurring under stones that lay on mud amongst the hollows of the rocks (Leach, 1814Leach, W.E. 1814. The zoological miscellany, being descriptions of new and interesting animals. Vol. 3. London, E. Nodder, 149p.).

Remarks . Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. believed N. herbstii to be the dominant species of the genus in the British Isles. For this reason, many subsequent records of Nebalia from the British Isles have been attributed to N. herbstii . The material examined in the present study demonstrates that far from being the most common species of the genus it is relatively uncommon, in routine samples at least. Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. also believed that the species may well occur around the Iberian Peninsula; however, Moreira et al. (2009a)Moreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285. could not confirm the occurrence of N. herbstii there. Ledoyer (1997)Ledoyer, M. 1997. Leptostracés (Crustacea) de Méditerranée. Marine Life , 7(1-2): 29-38. recorded its presence in the Mediterranean (Corsica and Bonnieu, France). However, Koçak et al. (2011)Koçak, C.; Moreira, J. and Katagan, T. 2011. New Records of the Genus Nebalia Leach, 1814 (Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) from the Mediterranean Coast of Turkey, with a Checklist of the Mediterranean Species of Leptostraca Crustaceana, 84(4): 401-409. suspect that these specimens may refer to a different species as the dimensions of the maxilla 2 in Ledoyer's specimens differ from that typical of the species [in Dahl's (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. description the proximal article of the endopod is longer than the distal article, whereas in Ledoyer's specimen they are subequal in length]. Subsequent to Dahl's (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. revision many of the records that were originally ascribed to Nebalia bipes within the British Isles were ascribed to N. herbstii but these records should be treated with caution and deposited specimens re-examined in the light of the new records submitted for the British Isles. All 16 specimens of N. herbstii from Loch Fyne had epibionts similar to those discussed above for N. kocatasi .

Nebalia borealis Dahl, 1985 Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.

Material examined . North Sea. 1 specimen, Clipper Field, 53°23.071'N 001°47.078'E, 25.9 m, muddy sand, 7.ii.2009 (OUMNH.ZC.2016-01-006, 1 specimen). 1 specimen, Clipper Field, 53°22.121'N 001°46.887'E, 27.1 m, muddy sand, 5.ii.2009. Scotland. 1 specimen, St. Abbs, 56°03.440'N 002°07.270'W, 56 m, 30.vi.1987 [specimen previously cited by O'Reilly et al. (2001)O'Reilly, M.; Hamilton, E. and Heaney, L. 2001. New records of Amphipods and Leptostracans from the Forth Sea Area, with notes on their copepod parasites (Siphonostomatoida: Nicothoidae) Glasgow Naturalist, 23(6): 35-42. as N. herbstii ]. England. 1♂, eastern English Channel, 50°43.0174'N 0°31.0028'W, 14.7 m, muddy sandy gravel and pebbles, 15.vii.2015. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°21.968'N 000°12.759'E, 45 m, sandy gravel, 31.vii.2014. 11 specimens, eastern English Channel, 50°23.835'N 000°19.243'E, 48.1 m, sandy gravel, 31.vii.2014. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°25.786'N 000°18.418'E, 54.1 m, sandy gravel, 7.viii.2014.

British and Irish Distribution . Shetland Islands (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.); North Sea, St. Abbs, Scotland, English Channel (present study) (Fig. 2A).

Distribution beyond the study area . Norway, Sweden (Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.).

Ecology . Clay, muddy sands to sandy gravels and rocky bottoms at depths of 14 m to 350 m.

Remarks . The specimens examined here agree well with Dahl's description of the species. One of the specimens cited under the name N. herbstii by O'Reilly et al. (2001)O'Reilly, M.; Hamilton, E. and Heaney, L. 2001. New records of Amphipods and Leptostracans from the Forth Sea Area, with notes on their copepod parasites (Siphonostomatoida: Nicothoidae) Glasgow Naturalist, 23(6): 35-42., with the caveat that only specimens for 1989 had been confirmed, was re-examined here and found to be N. borealis . This species has a northern distribution and the present records extend the southern range of the species southwards in the British Isles to the central English Channel.

Figure 2
Distribution of Leptostraca in the British Isles: (A) Nebalia borealis Dahl, 1985; (B) Sarsinebalia urgorrii Moreira, Gestoso and Troncoso, 2003; (C) Sarsinebalia typhlops (G.O. Sars, 1870); (D) Nebaliella caboti Clark, 1932 (denoted by blue circles); Nebaliopsis typica G.O. Sars, 1887 (red diamonds).

Genus SarsinebaliaDahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.

Remarks . Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. created the genus Sarsinebalia to accommodate Nebalia typhlops , and based it on four characters: 1) a complicated rostrum with subterminal spine; 2) the features of the eye; 3) lack of a comb-row on the exopod of the first pleopod; and 4) a short exopod of the 2nd maxilla. Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. goes on to state that these features are also present in an undescribed species from the Red Sea [according to Moreira et al.Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209. (2003) this is corrected to north-west Africa in an unpublished manuscript by Dahl] and two further undescribed species from Australia. Moreira et al. (2003) Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209. postulate that the north-west African species could be could be identical to their Sarsinebalia urgorriiMoreira, Gestoso and Troncoso, 2003 Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209.whilst the identity of the Australian species is unknown as descriptions of these taxa had not appeared at the time of Dahl's death. To date, five species have been ascribed to Sarsinebalia: S. typhlops , S. urgorrii , Sarsinebalia cristoboiMoreira, Gestoso and Troncoso, 2003Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209., Sarsinebalia biscayensisLedoyer, 1998Ledoyer, M. 1998. Leptostracés (Crustacea) des côtes de Mauritanie récoltés au cours de la champagne Eumeli 4 en 1992 et Sarsinebalia biscayensis n. sp. de la terrasse de Meriadzek, golfe de Gascogne (Nord-Est Atlantique). Marine Life , 8(1-2): 29-33., and Sarsinebalia kunyensisLedoyer, 2000Ledoyer, M. 2000. Leptostracés (Crustacea) de Nouvelle-Calédonie (mer de Corail, Ouest Pacifique). Marine Life , 10(1-2): 57-68.. According to Mauchline and Gage (1983)Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631. and Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165., specimens recorded from New Jersey, U.S.A. by Hessler and Sanders (1965)Hessler, R.R. and Sanders, H.L. 1965. Bathyal Leptostraca from the Continental Slope of the Northeastern United States Crustaceana, 9(1): 71-74. as Nebalia typhlops occidentalisHessler and Sanders, 1965Hessler, R.R. and Sanders, H.L. 1965. Bathyal Leptostraca from the Continental Slope of the Northeastern United States Crustaceana, 9(1): 71-74. differ in several significant characters and could represent a further species.

Walker-Smith and Poore (2001)Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410. considered Sarsinebalia to be a synonym of Nebalia but only included the type species S. typhlops in their analysis. However, Moreira et al. (2003) Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209. retained Sarsinebalia as valid as some (but not all) of the characters proposed by Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. hold between S. typhlops , S. urgorrii and S. cristoboi . However, their study likewise overlooked S. biscayensis and S. kunyensis . A recent key to worldwide Nebalia species (Song and Min, 2016Song, J.-H. and Min, G. S. 2016. A new species of Nebalia (Malacostraca: Phyllocarida: Leptostraca) from South Korea, with a key to the species of Nebalia Leach, 1814. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom , doi: 10.1017/S0025315415002180
https://doi.org/10.1017/S002531541500218...
) also did not adopt the synonymy of Sarsinebalia suggested by Walker-Smith and Poore (2001)Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410..

Since Dahl's (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. landmark study there have been significant advances in the taxonomy and systematics of the Leptostraca with around 67% of the currently accepted species having been described since this date with further new species continuing to be described (e.g. Koçak and Moreira, 2015Koçak C. and Moreira, J. 2015. A new Nebalia species (Crustacea, Phyllocarida, Leptostraca) from the eastern Mediterranean Sea Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 95(08): 1667-1675.; Song and Min, 2016Song, J.-H. and Min, G. S. 2016. A new species of Nebalia (Malacostraca: Phyllocarida: Leptostraca) from South Korea, with a key to the species of Nebalia Leach, 1814. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom , doi: 10.1017/S0025315415002180
https://doi.org/10.1017/S002531541500218...
). Combined with the phylogenetic studies of Olesen (1999)Olesen, J. 1999. A new speci es of Nebalia (Crustacea, Leptostraca) from Unguja Island (Zanzibar), Tanzania, East Africa, with a phylogenetic analysis of leptostracan genera Journal of Natu ral History, 33(12): 1789-1809. and Walker-Smith and Poore (2001)Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410., there is now a greater, if still not complete, understanding of variation in the traditionally used diagnostic characters across the Leptostraca. Many of Dahl's diagnostic characters for Sarsinebalia no longer stand up to scrutiny and now appear to be more indicative of species- rather than genus-level differences. These are discussed in turn here.

1) Complicated rostrum with subterminal spine. All species of Nebalia have a rostral keel (Walker-Smith and Poore, 2001Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.) so in this respect the rostrum of Sarsinebalia species is no more complex. The subterminal spine is present in Sarsinebalia and the undescribed Nebalia sp. B of Walker-Smith and Poore (2001)Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410. as well as the less closely related genera of the Paranebaliidae. Additionally, S. biscayensis has a reduced spine (see Ledoyer, 1998Ledoyer, M. 1998. Leptostracés (Crustacea) des côtes de Mauritanie récoltés au cours de la champagne Eumeli 4 en 1992 et Sarsinebalia biscayensis n. sp. de la terrasse de Meriadzek, golfe de Gascogne (Nord-Est Atlantique). Marine Life , 8(1-2): 29-33.), and some mature males of S. typhlops are also noted by Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. as having a reduced spine.

2) Features of the eye. Of the five nominal species, only S. typhlops (and possibly the undescribed species of Dahl, 1985Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.) has the 'squarish' eye shape described by Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165.. The eyes of S . urgorrii and S. cristoboi are of a similar but not identical shape, whilst S. biscayensis has long slender eyes (see Ledoyer, 1998Ledoyer, M. 1998. Leptostracés (Crustacea) des côtes de Mauritanie récoltés au cours de la champagne Eumeli 4 en 1992 et Sarsinebalia biscayensis n. sp. de la terrasse de Meriadzek, golfe de Gascogne (Nord-Est Atlantique). Marine Life , 8(1-2): 29-33.) and S. kunyensis appears to have rounded eyes (see Ledoyer, 2000Ledoyer, M. 2000. Leptostracés (Crustacea) de Nouvelle-Calédonie (mer de Corail, Ouest Pacifique). Marine Life , 10(1-2): 57-68.). Eye shape is exceptionally variable in other Nebalia (even as far as being bi-lobed - see Walker-Smith and Poore, 2001Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.) so a 'squarish' eye seems not to be too unusual and certainly within the range of variation covered by other Nebalia . In addition, Hessler (1984)Hessler, R.R. 1984Dahlella caldariensis, new genus, new species: a leptostracan (Crustacea, Malacostraca) from deep-sea hydrothermal vents Journal of Crustac ean Biology, 4(4): 655-664. illustrated significant developmental changes in the shape and armature of the eye of Dahlella caldariensisHessler, 1984Hessler, R.R. 1984Dahlella caldariensis, new genus, new species: a leptostracan (Crustacea, Malacostraca) from deep-sea hydrothermal vents Journal of Crustac ean Biology, 4(4): 655-664.. Pigment is absent in S. biscayensis , S. kunyensis and S. typhlops but present in the S. urgorrii and S. cristoboi (but also seems to fade after long-term storage in alcohol, in S. urgorrii at least). As a general rule within the Crustacea, there is a tendency towards unpigmented eyes in deeper water species which may explain its absence in S. biscayensis , S. kunyensis and S. typhlops which are found deeper than S. urgorrii and S. cristoboi . Ommatidia are absent in S. typhlops and S. biscayensis but present in the other three species (also absent in unrelated SpeonebaliaBowman, Yager and Iliffe, 1985Bowman, T.E.; Yager, J. and Iliffe, T.M. 1985Speonebalia cannoni, n. gen., n. sp., from the Caicos Islands, the first hypogean leptostracan (Nebaliacea: Nebaliidae) Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 98(2): 439-446., NebaliellaThiele, 1904Thiele, J. 1904. Die Leptostraken.-Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der DeutschenTiefsee-Expedition auf dem Dampfer "Valdiva," 1898-1899, 8: 1- a26., and DahlellaHessler, 1984Hessler, R.R. 1984Dahlella caldariensis, new genus, new species: a leptostracan (Crustacea, Malacostraca) from deep-sea hydrothermal vents Journal of Crustac ean Biology, 4(4): 655-664.).

3) Lack of a comb-row on the exopod of the first pleopod. A comb-row is absent in S. typhlops , S. urgorrii and S. cristoboi but present in both S. biscayensis and S. kunyensis . The length of the comb-row appears to be diagnostic (at least partially so) at a species level in Nebalia (see Walker-Smith and Poore, 2001Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.) and the complete absence of a comb-row could just represent the extreme of this variation.

4) A short exopod of the 2nd maxilla. Only S. typhlops and S. biscayensis have an unusually short exopod on maxilla 2, whereas the other species have an exopod longer than the first segment of the endopod. In S. kunyensis and S. biscayensis the division between the two endopod segments is indistinct but the length of the exopod relative to the overall endopod can be used.

Based on this, the only character that is consistent between all 5 species of Sarsinebalia is the presence of a subterminal rostral spine. As already mentioned this spine occurs elsewhere in the Paranebaliidae and in Walker-Smith and Poore's (2001)Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.Nebalia sp. B and so is not unique to Sarsinebalia . A formal reappraisal of Sarsinebalia is outside of the scope of the current study and should await examination of material of the currently included species as it is conceivable that other, as yet un-investigated, characters may unite all or some of the species currently assigned to the genus. Molecular methods may also help resolve the status of the genus. Until such time we continue to use Sarsinebalia here in accordance with Moreira et al.Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209. (2003).

Sarsinebalia urgorrii Moreira, Gestoso and Troncoso, 2003Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209.

Material examined . Ireland. 1♀, Mannin Bay, Co. Galway, 53°28.3919'N 10°5.118'W, 9.9 m, sand, 16.x.2010. 2♂, 37♀ and 8 juveniles, Kingstown Bay, Co. Galway, 53°30.9829'N 10°8.22'W, 9.3 m, gravelly sand, 16.x.2010. 1♀, Ahabeg, Bantry Bay, Co. Cork, under a cage at stocked salmon farm located at 51°39.7302'N 009°45.1727'W, 20-24.5 m, mud interspersed with shelly sand, 29.viii.2013. 16♀, Ahabeg, Bantry Bay, Co. Cork, near edge of stocked salmon farm located at 51°39.7302'N 009°45.1727'W, 20-24.5 m, shelly gravel, 29.viii.2013 (NMINH:2016.1.6, 2♀). 2 specimens, Lough Foyle, Co. Donegal, 55°11.510'N 007°00.765'W, 9.5 m, sand with shell, 29.iii.2012. 3 specimens, Lough Foyle, 55°11.510'N 007°00.765'W, 15.6 m, sand with shell, 26.vi.2013. North Sea. 9 specimens, Osprey Field, 61°19.530'N 001°32.601'E, 159.9 m, muddy sand, 6.xii.2008. 1 specimen, Osprey Field, 61°19.249'N 001°34.643'E, 159.5 m, muddy sand, 7.xii.2008. 2 specimens, Osprey Field, 61°20.318'N 001°31.633'E, 160.1 m, muddy sand, 7.xii.2008. 2 specimens, Osprey Field, 61°19.257'N 001°34.653'E, 158.6 m, muddy sand, 7.xii.2008. 1 specimen, Osprey Field, 61°19.102'N 001°32.295'E, 159.1 m, muddy sand, 6.xii.2008. 1 specimen, Osprey Field, 61°18.626'N 001°30.998'E, 157.6 m, muddy sand, 4.xii.2008. 2 specimens, Dunlin Field, 61°12.819'N 001°30.926'E, 149.09 m, muddy sand, 9.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°12.151'N 001°41.738'E, 145.8 m, muddy sand, 11.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°15.547'N 001°39.227'E, 151.5 m, muddy sand, 11.xi.2009 (OUMNH.ZC.2016-01-012, 1 specimen). 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°16.961'N 001°33.856'E, 153.2 m, muddy sand, 11.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°12.911'N 001°30.772'E, 148.45 m, muddy sand, 9.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°12.908'N 001°30.776'E, 148.39 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 9.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°12.921'N 001°30.438'E, 148.9 m, muddy sand, 9.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°13.140'N 001°30.883'E, 148.4 m, muddy sand, 8.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 61°15.052'N 001°33.887'E, 149.9 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 8.xi.2009. 2 specimens, Dunlin Field, 61°14.780'N 001°33.292'E, 149.1 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 8.xi.2009. 1 specimen, Dunlin Field, 60°46.631'N 001°33.047'E, 141.4 m, muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 1 specimen, Glenlivet Field, 61°04.600'N 002°05.420'W, 435 m. 1 specimen, Staffa Field, 60°44.490'N 001°35.349'E, 135.5 m, muddy sand, 17.ix.2009. 2 specimens, Staffa Field, 60°49.431'N 001°30.370'E, 134.9 m, muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 3 specimens, Staffa Field, 60°47.964'N 001°31.698'E, 138.7 m, muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 1 specimen, Staffa Field, 60°44.405'N 001°34.707'E, 138.6 m, muddy sand, 16.v.2010. 2 specimens, Staffa Field, 60°45.327'N 001°34.281'E, 139.3 m, muddy sand, 17.v.2010. 1 specimen, Staffa Field, 60°47.964'N 001°31.697'E, 138.7 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 20.v.2010 (OUMNH.ZC.2016-01-011, 1 specimen). 1 specimen, Staffa Field, 60°46.631'N 001°33.047'E, 141.4 m, muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 1 specimen, Staffa Field, 60°50.390'N 001°29.613'E, 134.4 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 7 specimens, Staffa Field, 60°50.390'N 001°29.612'E, 134.35 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 1 specimen, Staffa Field, 60°49.431'N 001°30.370'E, 134.9 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 1 specimen, Staffa Field, 60°47.964'N 001°31.698'E, 138.7 m, slightly gravelly muddy sand, 20.v.2010. 7 specimens, Dunbar Field, 60°37.700'N 001°39.200'E, 145 m. 2 specimens, Braemar Field, 58°58.991'N 001°27.840'E, 118 m, sandy mud, 21.xi.2012. 1 specimen, Braemar Field, 58°58.360'N 001°26.961'E, 124 m, MDAC mud and shell, 21.xi.2012. 1 specimen, Goldeneye Field, 57°58.921'N 000°23.452'W, 122 m, muddy sand, 15.i.2010. 1 specimen, Nelson Field, 57°56.500'N 001°36.683'E, 95 m, muddy sand, 12.xii.2013. Scotland. 1 specimen, Bring Head, Hoy, Orkney, 58°53.702'N 003°15.115'W, 23 m, sand, 17.i.2012 (OUMNH.ZC.2016-01-010). 1 specimen, Bring Head, Hoy, Orkney, 58°54.050'N 003°16.191'W, 20 m, sand, 17.i.2012. 1 specimen, Bring Head, Hoy, Orkney, 58°53.702'N 003°15.115'W, 23 m, sand, 17.i.2012. 1 specimen, Bring Head, Hoy, Orkney, 58°53.765'N 003°15.115'W, 21.8 m, sand, 19.ix.2013. 1 specimen, Bring Head, Hoy, Orkney, 58°54.050'N 003°16.191'W, 19 m, sand, 19.ix.2013. 1 specimen, Kirkwall Bay, Orkney, 59°00.864'N 002°57.872'W, 11 m, 25.v.2014. 5 specimens, Kirkwall Bay, Orkney, 59°02.014'N 002°59.722'W, 13 m, 25.v.2014. 1 specimen, Kirkwall Bay, Orkney, 58°59.729'N 002°49.951'W, 19 m, 25.v.2014. 3 specimens, Bell Rock, 56°27.000'N 002°10.000'W, 53 m, 24.iv.1989 [specimen previously cited by O'Reilly et al. (2001)O'Reilly, M.; Hamilton, E. and Heaney, L. 2001. New records of Amphipods and Leptostracans from the Forth Sea Area, with notes on their copepod parasites (Siphonostomatoida: Nicothoidae) Glasgow Naturalist, 23(6): 35-42. as S. typhlops ]. 1 specimen, Girvan Mains, 55°15.780'N 004°51.790'W, 30.viii.2000. England. 1 specimen, Plymouth Sound, 50°20.333'N 004°10.567'W, 6.3 m, coarse sand, 30.iii.2011. 1 specimen, Padstow, Cornwall, 50°34.263'N 004°57.480'W, 11.9 m, sand with shell, 12.iii.2013. 2 specimens, Lizard Peninsula, Cornwall, 50°02.550'N 005°03.998'W, 10.5 m, muddy coarse sand, 13.vii.2014. 1 specimen, north-east Isles of Scilly, 49°56.194'N 006°16.593'W, 18.8 m, fine sand, 26.v.2013. 1 specimen, South West Deeps rMCZ, 48°58.885'N 009°08.731'W, 161 m, sand, 17.v.2013. 1 specimen, South West Deeps rMCZ, 49°08.603'N 008°54.977'W, 154 m, muddy sand, 13.v.2013. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°43.7117'N 0°34.5528'E, 24.5 m, sandy gravel, 7.vi.2015. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°26.046'N 000°48.017'E, 44.1 m, gravelly sand, 1.viii.2014. 1 specimen, eastern English Channel, 50°29.212'N 000°04.533'E, 56.8 m, gravelly sand, 4.viii.2014. 1 specimen, South Falls Disposal Ground, Outer Thames, 51°34.3416'N 1°58.3548'E, 49 m, muddy sand with clay, 2.xi.2014. 1 specimen, Liverpool Bay, 53°28.641'N 003°29.659'W, sandy gravel, 29.x.2014.

British and Irish Distribution. North, west and south-west Ireland (Co. Donegal, Co. Galway and Co. Cork), North Sea, Orkney Islands, Firth of Clyde, English Channel, Cornwall, Isles of Scilly, South West Deeps (Fig. 2B).

Distribution beyond the study area . Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula (Moreira et al., 2003Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209.; 2009aMoreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.). Based on the previously known distribution and the present records it seems likely that this species is also present along the west coast of France and continental southern North Sea coasts but this requires confirmation.

Ecology . Coarse sandy sediments, from very coarse sand to medium sand, at depths of 12.7-20 m, 1.4-3.7% TOM (Moreira et al., 2009aMoreira, J.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Candás, M.; Señarís, M.P. and Urgorri, V. 2009a. Leptostracans (Crustacea: Phyllocarida) from the Ría de Ferrol (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula), with description of a new speci es of Nebalia Leach, 1814 Scie ntia Marina, 73(2): 269-285.). Coarse shelly gravel to mud at depths 9.3-435 m, 9.03-14.73% TOM (present study).

Remarks . Based on the current records, S. urgorrii is the dominant species of Sarsinebalia in shallow British and Irish waters. The pigmentation of the eyes was variable in the present material ranging from dark to orange and occasionally being almost completely absent; when this was the case externally visible ommatidia were still evident. The examined material generally agreed with the description of Moreira et al. (2003) Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209. but in one female from the English Channel six spines were noted on the distolateral border of the sixth pleopod rather than four as stated in the diagnosis provided by Moreira et al. (2003)Moreira, J.; Gestoso, L. and Troncoso, J.S. 2003. Two new species of Sarsinebalia (Crustacea: Leptostraca) from Northeast Atlantic, with comments on the genus. Sarsia , 88(3): 189-209.. All other characters agreed well with S. urgorrii .

Sarsinebalia typhlops (G.O. Sars, 1870Sars, G.O. 1870. Nye Dybvandscrustaceer fra Lofoten. Forhandlinger i Videnskabs-Selskabet i Christiana (1869): 147-174.)

Material examined . None.

British and Irish Distribution . Rockall Trough, 1990-2900 m (Mauchline and Gage, 1983Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631.), west of Ireland (Tattersall, 1905Tattersall, W.M. 1905. On Nebalia typhlops GO SarsReport on the Sea and Inland Fisheries of Ir eland, 1902-1 90 3, 2: 210.) (Fig. 2C).

Distribution beyond the study area . Widespread; Red Sea, Lofoten Is. (Norway), Messina, Bay of Naples (Italy), North America from Davis Strait to New Jersey, Australia (Walker-Smith and Poore, 2001Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.). Records should be examined as it is possible that some may refer to undescribed species.

Remarks . Previous British and Irish records of S. typhlops require confirmation in light of the present study where only S. urgorrii was recorded amongst abundant material from shallow waters (much of which was originally identified as S. typhlops following Mauchline, 1984Mauchline, J. 1984. Euphausiid, Stomatopod and Leptostracan crustaceans: keys and notes for the identification of the species. Synopsis of the British Fauna (New Series)30. London, E.J. Brill & W. Backhuys, 91p.). It is likely that S. typhlops is restricted to deeper waters in the area (Mauchline and Gage, 1983Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631.).

Genus NebaliellaThiele, 1904Thiele, J. 1904. Die Leptostraken.-Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der DeutschenTiefsee-Expedition auf dem Dampfer "Valdiva," 1898-1899, 8: 1- a26.

Nebaliella caboti Clark, 1932Clark, A.E. 1932Nebaliella caboti n. sp., with observations on other Nebaliacea Transactions of the Royal Societ y of Canada, 26(5): 217-235.

Material examined. None.

British and Irish Distribution . Rockall Trough, 1390-2900 m (Mauchline and Gage, 1983Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631.) (Fig. 2D).

Distribution beyond the study area . Cabot Strait, eastern Canada at 378 m (type locality - Clark, 1932Clark, A.E. 1932Nebaliella caboti n. sp., with observations on other Nebaliacea Transactions of the Royal Societ y of Canada, 26(5): 217-235.), off New Jersey, U.S.A., 2085 m (Hessler and Sanders, 1965Hessler, R.R. and Sanders, H.L. 1965. Bathyal Leptostraca from the Continental Slope of the Northeastern United States Crustaceana, 9(1): 71-74.).

Remarks . Although Mauchline and Gage (1983)Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631. referred their specimens to N. caboti they did so with some reservation given the uncertainty surrounding the systematics of Nebaliella at that time and stated that comparative studies should be made of all Nebaliella species to help resolve these issues. Such a study was conducted by Walker-Smith (1998)Walker-Smith, G.K. 1998. A review of Nebaliella (Crustacea: Leptostraca) with the description of a new species from the continental slope of southeastern Australia Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria, 57(1): 39-56. who reviewed Mauchline and Gage's (1983)Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631. record accepting their identification in addition to providing other characters useful for separating N. caboti from its congeners.

Family Nebaliopsididae Hessler, 1984Hessler, R.R. 1984Dahlella caldariensis, new genus, new species: a leptostracan (Crustacea, Malacostraca) from deep-sea hydrothermal vents Journal of Crustac ean Biology, 4(4): 655-664.

Genus Nebaliopsis G.O. Sars, 1887Sars, G.O. 1887. Report on the Phyllocarida collected by H.M.S. 'Challenger' during the years 1873-6. The Voyage of the H.M.S. 'Challenger', 19: 1-38.

Nebaliopsis typica G.O. Sars, 1887Sars, G.O. 1887. Report on the Phyllocarida collected by H.M.S. 'Challenger' during the years 1873-6. The Voyage of the H.M.S. 'Challenger', 19: 1-38.

Material examined. None.

British and Irish Distribution . South-west British Isles (Linder, 1943Linder, F. 1943. Über Nebali opsis typica G.O. Sars, nebst einigen allgemeinen Bemerkungen über die Leptostraken Dana Reports, 4: 1-38.), Rockall Trough (Mauchline and Gage, 1983Mauchline, J. and Gage, J.D. 1983. The Nebaliacea (Crustacea: Leptostraca) of the Rockall Trough Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the Uni ted Kingdom, 63(3): 627-631.) (Fig. 2D).

Distribution beyond the study area . Described from the South Pacific midway between New Zealand and Chile (Sars, 1887Sars, G.O. 1887. Report on the Phyllocarida collected by H.M.S. 'Challenger' during the years 1873-6. The Voyage of the H.M.S. 'Challenger', 19: 1-38.). Considered to be near cosmopolitan between the latitudes 50°N and 50°S (Mauchline, 1984Mauchline, J. 1984. Euphausiid, Stomatopod and Leptostracan crustaceans: keys and notes for the identification of the species. Synopsis of the British Fauna (New Series)30. London, E.J. Brill & W. Backhuys, 91p.). West and south-east coast of South America, near Falkland Is., off coast of Ghana, Ivory Coast, south-west Indian Ocean, South Pacific, Scotia Sea (Walker-Smith and Poore, 2001Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.).

Discussion

Prior to the present study, five species of Leptostraca were recorded from the British Isles. These are Nebalia herbstii , Nebalia borealis , Sarsinebalia typhlops , Nebaliella caboti and Nebaliopsis typica. In light of the present research, the number of leptostracan species recorded in the British Isles is nine, as outlined above. These records provide further evidence to support Dahl's (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. removal of N. bipes from the British species list and demonstrate that, despite the previous works, the leptostracan fauna of the British Isles was poorly known.

Our records indicate that the dominant species in shallow, offshore waters of the British Isles are N. reboredae and S. urgorrii , neither of which has previously been formally reported for the region. Many of the current records are from routine monitoring projects, in coastal and offshore waters and collected using grab samplers, dredges and diver cores. The distributions presented here are therefore influenced to a degree by the sampling methods, sampling intensity, target habitats and the drivers of these surveys. For example, we have few records from intertidal areas (the exception being N. kocatasi as outlined above) and comparatively few from very shallow near-shore locations. It is possible that targeted sampling for leptostracans using other methods such as light traps may yield further records of species new to the area and provide a better understanding of the distribution of each species in the region.

Historically, the distribution and identity of leptostracans in European waters has been problematic, although several recent studies beginning with Dahl (1985)Dahl, E. 1985. Crustacea Leptostraca, principles of taxonomy and a revision of European shelf species. Sarsia , 70(2-3): 135-165. have contributed greatly to our understanding of the group in Europe. In order to help clarify species ranges and consistently identify specimens a key to the currently described Leptostraca of Europe is provided below. Given the highly conservative morphology of leptostracans, it is likely that molecular studies will demonstrate that some of the currently accepted species in fact represent species complexes, particularly for some of the more wide-ranging species. Furthermore, as new species continue to be described and further works are likely to provide insights into variability of character states, this key should be regarded as provisional rather than definitive at this stage and identifications should be carefully compared with original descriptions where possible. Several studies, most notably that of Olesen and Walossek (2000)Olesen, J. and Walossek, D. 2000. Limb ontogeny and trunk segmentati on in Nebalia species (Crustacea, Malacostraca, Leptostraca) Zo omorphology, 120: 47-64., have discussed ontogenetic changes in some taxonomically important characters such as antennae, maxillae and pleopods. Males for some species are unknown or poorly described. The key is therefore based on adult females and using this key for males or immature specimens could result in incorrect identifications. Staining specimens in Methyl Green improves the visibility of certain characters and may aid in the accurate identification of specimens. In particular it makes it possible to discern the relative lengths of the articles of the second maxilla without dissection.

Key to the adult females of leptostracan species from European waters

1. Caudal furcae leaf-like, broadest midway; rostral plate small .......................................................................................................................................................................................... Nebaliopsididae; Nebaliopsis typica G.O. Sars, 1887

1'. Caudal furcae tapering evenly to a point; rostral point well developed ....................................... [Nebaliidae] 2

2. Rostrum with ventral keel longer than rostral flange; thoracopods 2-5 without epipods; eye modified into leaf-like appendage; molar with accessory spine .......................................................... Nebaliella caboti Clark, 1932

2'. Rostrum with keel shorter than rostral flange (Fig. 4A, B); thoracopods 2-5 with epipod that is longer than exopod; eye of different form; molar without accessory spine ................................................................................. 3

3. Rostrum with small subterminal spine (may be difficult to discern) (Fig. 4B) ........................ [Sarsinebalia ] 4

3'. Rostrum lacking subterminal spine (Fig. 4A) ....................................................................................... [Nebalia* [ 7

4. Dorsal denticles of pleonites 6-7 with distally acute denticles; exopod of pleopod 1 with a spine row of about 12 spines with simple apices; antennule peduncle article 4 without spine; subterminal spine of rostrum small .................................................................................................................... Sarsinebalia biscayensis Ledoyer, 1998

4' Dorsal denticles of pleonites 6-7 with distally rounded denticles; exopod of pleopod 1 without spine row; antennule peduncle article 4 with spine; subterminal spine of rostrum well developed (may be reduced in adult males) ........................................................................................................................................................................... 5

5. Eye lacking pigment and externally discernable visual elements; exopod of maxilla 2 shorter than first article of endopod ........................................................................................................ Sarsinebalia typhlops (G.O. Sars, 1870)

5'. Eye provided with pigment and ommatidia (although colour may have faded following preservation in alcohol); exopod of maxilla 2 longer than first article of endopod ........................................................................... 6

6. Supraorbital scale surpassing distal end of eye; antennal flagellum with thin long setae; pleonite 4 posterior border with acute denticles ........................................................................................... S. cristoboi Moreira et al ., 2003

6'. Supraorbital scale not surpassing distal end of eye; antennal flagellum with short spine-like setae; pleonite 4 posterior lateral border with distally rounded to pointed denticles ................... S. urgorrii Moreira et al ., 2003

7. Pleonites 6-7 provided with distally acute denticles (Fig. 3A, D) ....................................................................... 8

7'. Pleonites 6-7 provided with denticles of a different shape (Fig. 3A, C) ...........................................................10

8. Antennular flagellum with more than 10 articles; antennular scale more than twice as long as wide ........... 9

8'. Antennular flagellum with up to 7 articles; antennal scale twice as long as wide ................................................................................................................................................................................. Nebalia troncosoi Moreira et al ., 2003

9. Terminal dorsal spine of peduncle of pleopod 1 reaching nearly to end of spine row; exopod of 2nd maxilla extends past proximal article of endopod ....................................................................... Nebalia borealis Dahl, 1985

9'. Terminal dorsal spine of peduncle of pleopod 1 reaching at most to centre of spine row; exopod of 2nd maxilla barely extends past proximal article of endopod ............................................... Nebalia strausi Risso, 1826

10. Eyes pigmented .......................................................................................................................................................... 11

10'. Eyes lacking pigment ........................................................................................... Nebalia abyssicola Ledoyer, 1997

11. Proximal article of the endopod of 2nd maxilla longer than distal article [ Fig. 4D (a>b) ] ........................ 12

11'. Proximal article of the endopod of 2nd maxilla of equal length to the distal article [ Fig. 4E (a'=b') ]; lateral external armature of the antenna, article 3, consists of 3 thin setae and three spine-like setae (Fig. 5A, shaded); proximal spine-like seta (Fig. 5A, arrowed, shaded) shorter than other two .................................................................................................................................................................. Nebalia kocatasi Moreira et al ., 2007

12. Exopod of 2nd maxilla extends past the proximal article of the endopod (Fig. 4D) ................................... 13

12'. Exopod of 2nd maxilla does not extend past the proximal article of the endopod ... Nebalia clausi Dahl, 1985

13. Antennular flagellum with more than 10 articles; antennule peduncle article 4 with three or more distal thick spines ......................................................................................................................................................................... 14

13'. Antennular flagellum with less than 10 articles; antennule peduncle article 4 with one distal thick spine (Fig. 3B) .............................................................................................................................................................................. 15

14. Anal scale with point lying over mid-line of the scale (Fig. 5B); (endopod of thoracopods 2-7 in prae-ovigerous females extend well past exopod); distal article of mandible palp with parallel margins (Fig. 5E) ................................................................................................................................................... Nebalia herbstii Leach, 1814

14'. Anal scale with point lying closer to medial margin (Fig. 5C); (endopod of thoracopods 2-7 in prae-ovigerous females reaching only level with or just past exopod); distal article of mandible palp with margins diverging (Fig. 5D) ...................................................................................................................... Nebalia bipes (Fabricius, 1780)

15. Pleopod 4 protopod without serrations along posterior border ................................................................................ ............................................ ............................ Nebalia reboredae Moreira and Urgorri, 2009 in Moreira et al., 2009a

15'. Pleopod 4 protopod with 4 serrations along posterior border (as in Fig. 4C); lateral external armature of the antenna, article 3, consists of 3 thin setae and 3 spine-like setae (spine-like setae of equal length) ........................................................................................................................... Nebalia mediterranea Koҫak and Moreira, 2015

* A further species, Nebalia biarticulata Ledoyer, 1997, has been described from the Mediterranean French coast. In the original description of the species, Ledoyer (1997)Ledoyer, M. 1997. Leptostracés (Crustacea) de Méditerranée. Marine Life , 7(1-2): 29-38. stated that all the specimens are presumed to be male, due to the length of the antennae in relation to the body. No additional specimens of this species have been reported upon since its discovery and the female is unknown. It is possible that it represents the male of one of the other species known from the Mediterranean region and that the two have not yet been linked but since no confirmed females are known it is omitted from this key. The species is characterised by possessing a biarticulate pleopod 6. According to the most recent diagnosis of Nebalia (Walker-Smith and Poore, 2001Walker-Smith, G.K. and Poore, G.C. 2001. A phylogeny of the Leptostraca (Crustacea) with keys to families and genera Memoirs of Muse um Victoria, 58(2): 383-410.) this character should exclude N. biarticulata from the genus Nebalia in which the sixth pleopod is uniarticulate. A biarticulate sixth pleopod is otherwise found in Nebaliopsis (Nebaliopsidae), Speonebalia and Nebaliella (both Nebaliidae). A re-examination of this species may prove worthwhile.

Figure 3
(A) Nebalia kocatasi female habitus (position of denticles on posterior margin of pleonite 6 and 7 arrowed); (B) N. reboredae antennule (antennule peduncle article 4 with one thick spine arrowed, setae omitted); (C) N. kocatasi denticles at posterior margin of pleonite 7; (D) N. strausi denticles at posterior margin of pleonite 7. Scale bars: A, 0.5 mm; B-D 0.1 mm.

Figure 4
(A) Nebalia kocatasi rostrum, dorsal view (ventral rostral keel outlined); (B) Sarsinebalia urgorrii rostrum, dorsal view (ventral rostral keel outlined); (C) N. kocatasi pleopod 4 (serrated margin arrowed); (D) N. reboredae maxilla 2 (length of a>b, setae omitted); (E) N. kocatasi maxilla 2 (length of a' = b', setae omitted). Scale bars: A, B, D, E, 0.1 mm; C 0.5 mm.

Figure 5
(A) Nebalia kocatasi female antenna, article 3, external side, lateral view. Lateral spine-like setae shaded, short proximal spine-like seta arrowed (setae of internal side omitted); (B) N. herbstii anal scales; (C) N. bipes anal scales (illustration from Dahl, 1985); (D) N. bipes mandibular palp, distal article arrowed (illustration from Dahl, 1985); (E) N. herstii mandibular palp, distal article arrowed. Scale bars: A, B, D, 0.2 mm; C, 0.1 mm; E, 0.5mm.

Figure 6
Unidentified epibiont detached from the carapace of Nebalia kocatasi sampled from Shetland Isles, 2003 (image courtesy of G. Fernandez-Leborans).

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the following people for providing permission to use their specimens and data: Catherine McManus (Marine Harvest Ireland), Dr Anne-Marie Power, (National University of Ireland, Galway), Dr Andrew Bellamy (Tarmac Marine Ltd and Norwest Sand and Ballast Ltd), Mark Russell (British Marine Aggregate Producers Association), Paul McIlwaine (CEFAS; material from project C6794A funded by the Marine Management Organisation and projects C5787A and C5817 funded by DEFRA), Tim Mackie (DOENI), Ben Green (Natural England), Stuart Anderson (Anderson Marine Surveys), Ben Davies (Grisson Engineering Services Ltd), Farah Chaudry and Rachael Eyley (Gardline Environmental Ltd.), Fairfield Energy, Sheena Warnock (Scottish Sea Farms) and Dr Myles O'Reilly (SEPA). Specimens collected from Natura 2000 sites were funded by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine and overseen by the Marine Institute to collect data in order to facilitate the Appropriate Assessment of Aquaculture and Fisheries activities. Dr Caroline Roche is thanked for help in preparation of the maps and Prof Gregorio Fernandez-Leborans is thanked for permission to reproduce the photograph presented in Fig. 6. Dr Juan Moreira is especially thanked for his assistance with identifications in particular his examination specimens of Nebalia kocatasi from Co. Cork, Co. Kerry, Co. Mayo and Co. Donegal and Nebalia strausi from Co. Cork and Co Mayo. The comments of two anonymous reviewers helped improve the manuscript.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    2016

History

  • Received
    17 Feb 2016
  • Accepted
    15 Mar 2016
Sociedade Brasileira de Carcinologia Instituto de Biociências, UNESP, Campus Botucatu, Rua Professor Doutor Antônio Celso Wagner Zanin, 250 , Botucatu, SP, 18618-689 - Botucatu - SP - Brazil
E-mail: editor.nauplius@gmail.com