Van Syoc, R.J. and A. M. Dekelboum. 2011. Oxynaspididae (Crustacea, Cirripedia): phylogenetics and evolutionary ecology, with description of three new genera and six new species. Zootaxa 3103: 1–32.
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Van Syoc, R. J.; Dekelboum, A. M.
2011
Oxynaspididae (Crustacea, Cirripedia): phylogenetics and evolutionary ecology, with description of three new genera and six new species
A phylogenetic analysis of the Cirripedia family Oxynaspididae yields four monophyletic clades. These are designated as
four genera, Oxynaspis Darwin, 1852, Archoxynaspis gen. nov., Pycnaspis gen. nov. and Minyaspis gen. nov. Five new
species from Astrolabe Reef in Fiji (Oxynaspis perekrestenkoi sp. nov., O. joankovanae sp. nov., Minyaspis amylaneae
sp. nov., M. opreskoi sp. nov. and M. welchi sp. nov.) and one from Palau (Oxynaspis joandianae sp. nov.) are described.
A morphological character dataset and resulting phylogeny supporting the new generic divisions is presented. All but two
of the 24 species previously known and all six of the newly described species are intimately associated with antipatharians.
Pycnaspis connectens was described by Broch (1931) as “fixed to a silicious sponge.” A list of species’ ranges and their
known hosts is presented. The earliest known possible antipatharian in the fossil record is Miocene, much later than the
Eocene appearance of Archoxynaspis eocenica (Withers, 1935). Therefore, the symbiosis of oxynaspidids with antipatharians
may have evolved only since the Miocene. However, given the dubious fossil record of antipatharians (known only
from a single specimen of uncertain affinity from Miocene Italy) the time of the first antipatharian/oxynaspidid symbiosis
is uncertain.