identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03A6817C74278A67A1EFFA31FECBA257.text	03A6817C74278A67A1EFFA31FECBA257.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aristeidae Wood-Mason 1891	<div><p>Family Aristeidae Wood-Mason, 1891</p><p>Rostrum sexually dimorphic in several genera, being elongate in females and juvenile males, short in adult males; usually only 3 dorsal rostral/postrostral spines; lacking ventral spines. Carapace lacking postorbital and pterygostomian spines; antennal and branchiostegal spines always present; postantennal spine rarely present and hepatic spines often lacking; cervical and postcervical sulci sometimes present, most often reaching dorsal midline, or almost absent and visible only laterally. Eye with optic calathus bearing mesial tubercle; ocular scale and styliform projection lacking. Antennule with prosartema reduced to setose boss; flagella unequal, dorsal flagellum short, flattened for most of its length, inserted proximally on third segment; ventral flagellum sexually dimorphic in some genera. Palp of first maxilla consisting of single curved article.</p><p>Exopods present on all maxillipeds, present or absent on pereopods. Thelycum open; sternite XIII with deep concavity, sternite XII with variously shaped shieldlike median protuberance.</p><p>Petasma open; ventral costa usually projecting free for variable fraction of its length, often extending as far as distal margin of lateral lobule Second pleopod of male bearing appendix masculina and appendix interna, lacking distolateral projection. Third abdominal somite sometimes carinate, fourth to sixth somites always carinate. Third through fifth pleopods biramous. Telson apically acute, bearing 3 or 4 pairs of movable lateral spines (modified from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p><p>Remarks: In the Dendrobranchiata gills are greatly used to separate superfamilies and in some families, as in Penaeidae and Aristeidae, they are used to separate genera. The position of gills in Aristeidae has been considered a generic character, and for each species herein studied the position of gills and epipods were figured and analysed (Table 1 and Figs. 3 i, 6i, 9i, 12i, 15i, 18i, 21i, 24i). These structures proved to be important and informative in Aristeidae taxonomy and should be considered in future studies.</p><p>Another question concerning the Aristeidae taxonomy is the determination of the appendix masculina and the appendix interna. Perez Farfante &amp; Kensley (1997) considered that the appendix interna is the one dorsal to the appendix masculina, and that the appendix masculina is the one ventral to the appendix interna. However, as these appendices are parallel to the body axis it is difficult to determine if they are dorsal or ventral in position. The concept of Burkenroad (1936) is clearer, as he considered the posteriormost appendix of the median side of the base of endopod of male second pleopod the appendix interna. In this work we agree with Burkenroad nomenclature, and the appendix masculina can be defined as the anteriormost appendix of the base of endopod, and the appendix interna is the posteriormost one (that is between appendix masculina and endopod).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74278A67A1EFFA31FECBA257	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74268A60A1EFFAB8FAE6A1D9.text	03A6817C74268A60A1EFFAB8FAE6A1D9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aristaeomorpha Wood-Mason 1891	<div><p>Genus Aristaeomorpha Wood-Mason, 1891</p><p>Integument pubescent, with small scattered photophores on ventrum of cephalotorax and abdomen, on antennal scale, on lateral ramus of uropod, and on most other appendages. Rostrum elongate in females and juvenile males, reaching well beyond scaphocerite; short in adult males, not reaching third of antennular peduncle, bearing 3–7 dorsal spines along its entire length, followed by 2 postrostral spines. Carapace, orbital and postantennal spines absent; hepatic spine well developed; postrostral carina reaching about two-thirds of carapace; cervical sulcus faint dorsally; branchiostegal carina sharply anteriorly; hepatic carina well marked, accompanying shallow but well defined sulcus; branchiocardiac carina strong, almost reaching posterior margin of carapace. Eye with cornea well developed, optic calathus bearing minute mesial tubercle mesiodistally. Dorsal antennular flagellum short, flattened for most of its length; ventral flagellum elongate, slender, terete, not modified in male. Scaphocerite with lateral marginal ridge ending in short spine at about three-fourths length of lamella.</p><p>Pereopods lacking exopods; merus and ischium unarmed; fourth and fifth pereopods slender. Thelycum open, with shieldlike median protuberance on sternite XII directed anteroventrally; sternite XIII bearing short rounded median prominence.</p><p>Petasma with lateral lobule roughly trapezoidal, conspicuously surpassing median lobe; ventral costa as long as lateral lobule, attached along almost entire length, with tip turning slightly mesially. First and second abdominal somites dorsally rounded, third to sixth somites dorsally carinate, carina of third somite extending only along posterior two-thirds, almost indistinct, four posterior somites ending in sharp spine. Telson bearing 4 pairs of movable lateral spines in posterior half (modified from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74268A60A1EFFAB8FAE6A1D9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74218A6CA1EFFEFDFDD9A75F.text	03A6817C74218A6CA1EFFEFDFDD9A75F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aristaeomorpha foliacea (Risso 1827) Risso 1827	<div><p>Aristaeomorpha foliacea (Risso, 1827)</p><p>(Figs. 2–4)</p><p>Penaeus foliacea Risso, 1827: 69, pl. 2, fig. 6.</p><p>Aristaeomorpha foliacea - Bouvier, 1908: 53 –56, pl. 11, figs. 1–14; Barnard, 1950: 625; Crosnier &amp; Forest, 1973: 287, fig. 96 a; Crosnier, 1978: 52 –59, figs. 23–24; Kensley et al., 1987: 279 –280; Pérez Farfante, 1988: 6, fig. 6; Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997: 33 –36, figs. 5–6; Dall, 2001: 412, fig. 2.</p><p>Type locality: Off Matuku, Fiji.</p><p>Material examined: St. D0463, 21º48.348' S – 40º02.278' W, 571–623 m, 22/VI/1999, 3 females, cl: 53.1–57.2 mm, 10 males, cl: 33.4–40.0 mm, MNRJ 13775. St. D0464, 21º48.496' S – 40º01.539' W, 536 m, 22/ VI/1999, 1 female, cl: 41.6 mm, 4 males, cl: 34.5–40.0 mm, MNRJ 13776. St. D0502, 19º37.488' S – 38º41.909' W, 714.5 m, 29/VI/1999, 2 females, cl: 55.6–57.3 mm, 3 males, cl: 30.3–36.1 mm, MNRJ 13777. St. E0502, 14º28.385' S – 38º52.395' W to 14º24.813' S – 38º53.006' W, 522 m, 09/VI/2000, 10 females, cl: 17.9–40.6 mm, 7 males, cl: 31.3–38.4 mm, MNRJ 14562. St. E0503, 14º37.834' S – 38º52.029' W to 14º34.565' S – 38º51.672' W, 740 m, 10/VI/2000, 6 females, cl: 35.6–60.8 mm, 2 males, cl: 35.3–37.7 mm, MNRJ 14561. St. E0510, 15º48.503’S – 38º35.265’W to 15º47.383’S – 38º36.154’W, 599m, 12/VI/2000, 47 females, cl: 17.0– 43.8 mm, 20 males, cl: 20.2–35.9 mm, MNRJ 14567. St. E0511, 15º42.675’ S – 38º37.298’ W to 15º44.231’ S – 38º39.196’ W, 251 m, 12/06/2000, 11 females, cl: 22.2–37.6 mm, 7 males, cl: 21.6–27.9 mm, MNRJ 14820. St. E0517, 13º22.173’S – 38º36.566’W to 13º24.968’S – 38º38.277’W, 750 m, 19/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 42.7 mm, 3 males, cl: 32.1–57.2 mm, MNRJ 14564. St. E0518, 13º21.199’S – 38º38.896’W to 13º24.353’S – 38º39.782’W, 518 m, 19/VI/2000, 2 females, cl: 29.6–40.4 mm, 1 male, cl: 34.2 mm, MNRJ 14565. St. E0534, 19º42.162' S – 39º21.608' W to 19º43.828'S – 39º24.583'W, 613 m, 29/VI/1999, 4 females, cl: 43.1–57.4 mm, 1 male, cl: 43.5 mm, MNRJ 14559. St. E0535, 19º58.936' S – 39º38.657' W to 19º56.087' S – 39º35.408' W, 1002 m, 01/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 55.8 mm, MNRJ 14566. St. E0541, 21º13.644' S –40º14. 031' W to 21º10.040' S – 40º13.601' W, 557 m, 4 females, cl: 20.5–53.9 mm, 5 males, cl: 34.7–41.6 mm, MNRJ 14560.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum with 4–12 dorsal spines. Hepatic spine and cervical carina present. Posterior region of abdominal somite 3 and abdominal somites 4–6 carinated, ending in small spines. Thelycum open, with a shield-like mesial protuberance, sternite XIII with a rounded protuberance. Petasma with some small sulci in dorsal and ventral view, divergent tips; distal extremity of ventral costa slightly curved outward. Appendix interna rounded, with some cuspidate setae on distal extremity. Appendix masculina smaller than appendix interna, nearly digitiform, with a sulcus along almost its extension.</p><p>Description: Rostrum with 4–12 dorsal spines, generally smaller than antennular peduncle in males and reaching scaphocerite tip in females; some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 2 a). Adrostral carina well defined; cervical, branchiostegal and branchiocardiac carina present; antennal, branchiostegal and hepatic spines present (Fig. 2 a).</p><p>Posterior region of abdominal somite 3 and abdominal somites 4–6 carinated, ending in small spines; abdominal pleurae setose on margin (Fig. 2 a).</p><p>Antennal, scaphocerite of approximately 4/5 of antennular peduncle (Fig. 2 a–c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 2 d, 2e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 2 f–g, 3a–c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 1.2X of palm; carpus approximately 1.8X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.4X of carpus (Fig. 3 d).</p><p>Second pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5X of palm; carpus approximately 2.2X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.3X of carpus (Fig. 3 e).</p><p>Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.4X of palm; carpus approximately 2.6X of dactyl and of the same size of merus (Fig. 3 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.4X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.8X of carpus; merus approximately 1.4X of carpus (Fig. 3 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod poorly setose, dactyl approximately 0.4X of propodus; propodus and carpus approximately of the same size; merus approximately 1.3X of carpus. Males with a spine on coxa (Fig. 3 h).</p><p>Females with a shield-like mesial protuberance on sternite XII, sternite XIII with a rounded protuberance (Fig. 4 a). Males with a large spine on sternite XII and with a small spine on sternite XIII (Fig. 4 b).</p><p>Petasma with some small sulci in dorsal and ventral view, divergent tips; distal extremity of ventral costa sligthly curved outward (Fig. 4 c–d). Appendix masculina rounded, with some cuspidate setae on distal extremity (Fig. 4 e). Appendix interna smaller than appendix masculina, nearly digitiform, with a sulcus along almost all its extension (Fig. 4 f).</p><p>Distribution: Indian Ocean: off east coast of South Africa; Mozambique; Madagascar; Réunion; Maldives Islands; Sri Lanka; Indonesia. Pacific Ocean: Philippines; Taiwan; Japan; Western Australia; New Caledonia; New Zealand; Wallis and Futuna Islands; Fiji. Eastern Atlantic Ocean: Bay of Biscay to Western Sahara; Azores; Madeira; Canary Islands; Mediterranean. Western Atlantic Ocean: Massachussets to Florida; Gulf of Mexico; Caribbean Sea to Venezuela; Brazil (Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul states) (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001).</p><p>Depth: 175 m – 1300 m (Pérez Farfante, 1988; Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p><p>New records: Brazil—from Bahia to Espirito Santo states, between 251 m and 1002 m.</p><p>Genus Aristaeopsis Wood-Mason, 1891</p><p>Integument glabrous. Rostrum moderately elongate in females and juvenile males, recahing beyond apex of scaphocerite; somewhat shorter in adult males, not reaching third of antennular peduncle segment, bearing two basal spines followed by single postrostral spine. Carapace with antennal and branchiostegal strong carina; orbital, postantennal, and hepatic spines absent. Cervical sulcus ventrally deep, rather weak dorsally, almost reaching dorsal midline; postcervical sulcus absent; postrostral carina reaching posteriorly about threefourths length of carapace; gastro-orbital, hepatic, and branchiocardiac carina strong. Eye with cornea slightly flattened; calathus moderately short, with strong mesial tubercle distally. Dorsal antennular flagellum short, flattened; ventral antennular flagellum elongate, terete, not modified in adult male. Scaphocerite in adult female with blade apically acute-angled, lateral marginal ridge ending in short spine at about four-fifths length; in adult male, lamella of scaphocerite produced distally into elongate slender structure, ovate in crosssection, subequal in length to proximal broad part; in female, lateral ridge falling short of distal margin of lamella.</p><p>Pereopods lacking exopods; merus and ischium of first and second pereopods unarmed. Fourth and fifth pereopods more slender, especially distally, than preceding pereopods. Thelycum open, with cup-like hollow formed by anteriorly acute median protuberance on sternite XII and strongly raised, roughly rectangular, anteriorly rounded median prominence flanked anteriorly by strong rounded lateral flaps on sternite XIII.</p><p>Petasma with lateral lobule reaching as far as median lobe; ventral costa slightly overreaching distal margin of lateral lobule, attached along entire length to adjacent flexible part of lateral lobule; its tip becoming mesially-directed conspicuous hook. First abdominal somite dorsally rounded; second somite with barely discernible rounded middorsal carina in posterior half; third to sixth somites with sharp carina, ending posteriorly in short spine. Telson pointed, with four pairs of small lateral movable spines in posterior half (modified from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74218A6CA1EFFEFDFDD9A75F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C742D8A69A1EFF975FB79A3B7.text	03A6817C742D8A69A1EFF975FB79A3B7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aristaeopsis edwarsiana (Jonhson 1867) Jonhson 1867	<div><p>Aristaeopsis edwarsiana (Jonhson, 1867)</p><p>(Figs. 5–7)</p><p>Penaeus edwarsianus Jonhson, 1867: 897 .</p><p>Plesiopenaeus edwarsianus - Alcock, 1901: 35 –37; Bouvier, 1908: 64 –69, pl. 13, figs 13–17, pl. 14, figs. 1–8; Barnard, 1950: 624; Crosnier &amp; Forest, 1973: 291 –294, figs. 98, 99 a–b; Crosnier, 1978: 86 –92, table 11, figs. 31 a–c, 32 a–c, 33 a–c; Kensley et al., 1987: 281; Pérez Farfante, 1988: 7, fig. 8; D’Incao, 1998: 1512–1513. Aristaeopsis edwarsiana - Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997: 36 –39, figs. 7–8; Dall, 2001: 413 –414, fig. 3.</p><p>Type locality: Off Madeira, Northeast Atlantic Ocean.</p><p>Material examined: St. D0503, 19º39.943’S – 38º38.435’W, 808 m, 29/VI/1999, 5 females, cl: 50.2–81.8 mm, 4 males, cl: 32.8–56.1 mm, MNRJ 13759. St. D0504, 19º42.734' S – 38º36.472' W, 910 m, 29/VI/1999, 7 males, cl: 53.2–60.3 mm, MNRJ 13762. St. D0506, 19º42.716' S – 38º36.497' W, 935 m, 29/VI/1999, 1 female, cl: 78.0 mm, 5 males, cl: 52.9–59.2 mm, MNRJ 13760. St. E0499, 13º23.826' S – 38º37.541' W to 13º20.872' S – 38º35.922' W, 761 m, 08/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 27.7 mm, 1 male, cl: 39.7 mm, MNRJ 14569. St. E0503, 14º37.834' S – 38º52.029' W to 14º34.565' S – 38º51.672' W, 740 m, 10/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 29.8 mm, 1 male, cl: 53.5 mm, MNRJ 14573. St. E0510, 15º48.503’S – 38º35.265’W to 15º47.383’S – 38º36.154’W, 599m, 12/ VI/2000, 3 females, cl: 36.8–49.6 mm, MNRJ 14571. St. E0517, 13º22.173’S – 38º36.566’W to 13º24.968’S – 38º38.277’W, 750 m, 19/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 31.3 mm, MNRJ 14572. St. E0524, 19º43.663’S – 38º39.838’W to 19º42.684’S – 38º44.568’W, 925 m, 27/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 69.1 mm, MNRJ 14578. St. E0534, 19º42.162' S – 39º21.608' W to 19º43.828'S – 39º24.583'W, 613 m, 29/VI/1999, 7 females, cl: 37.6–70.2 mm, 5 males, cl: 34.4–54.4 mm, MNRJ 14575. St. E0541, 21º13.644' S –40º14. 031' W to 21º10.040' S – 40º13.601' W, 557 m, 1 female, cl: 59.3 mm, 1 male, cl: 53.8 mm, MNRJ 14574. St. E0543, 21º23.944’S – 40º11.292’W to 21º28.481’S – 40º09.750’W, 666 m, 05/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 27.7 mm, 1 male, cl: 39.7 mm, MNRJ 14570.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum with 3 dorsal spines. Hepatic spine absent; gastro-orbital carina prominent, almost reaching cervical carina; cervical carina well defined, almost reaching dorsum of carapace. Final quarter of abdominal somite 2 with a dorsal carina that extends to abdominal somites 3–6, somites 3–6 ending in median spines. Thelycum with a large spine on sternite XII, sternite XIII with a semioval marginal setose plate. Males with a lanceolate plate mesially sulcated on sternite XII, sternite XIII with a small spine. Petasma, ventral costa little larger than lateral lobe, with distal extremity forming a hook; lateral lobe approximately of the same size of median lobe. Appendix interna oval, with cuspidate setae on distal extremity and simple setae on surface. Appendix masculina larger and thinner than appendix interna, with simple setae on distal extremity.</p><p>Description: Rostrum sligthly curved upward, with three dorsal spines; some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 5 a). Adrostral and branchiocardiac carina well marked; gastro-orbital carina prominent, almost reaching cervical carina; cervical carina well marked almost reaching dorsum of carapace; antennal, branchiostegal and hepatic carina present, directed to submarginal carina; antennal and branchiostegal spine present; orbital and hepatic spine absent (Fig. 5 a).</p><p>Abdominal somites 1–2 with sulci that extends from dorsum to half of length of pleurae; pleurae with marginal setae; tergum with a median carina from final quarter of abdominal somite 2 to abdominal somites 3–6; abdominal somites 3–6 ending in median spines (Fig. 5 a).</p><p>Antennal scaphocerite approximately 3/2 of antennular peduncle (Fig. 5 a–c). In adult males, the scaphocerite lamella is produced into a long and tapered structure, sub-equal in length to the enlarged part (Fig. 5 c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 5 d, 5e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 5 f–g, 6a–c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 1.6X of palm; carpus approximately 1.5X dactyl; merus approximately 1.3X of carpus (Fig. 6 d).</p><p>Second pereopod dactyl approximately 1.4X of palm; carpus approximately 2.2X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.2X of carpus (Fig. 6 e).</p><p>Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.4X of palm; carpus approximately 2.5X of dactyl and of the same length of merus; males with a small spine on coxa (Fig. 6 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.4X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.8X of carpus; merus approximately 1.1X of carpus; males with a small spine on coxa (Fig. 6 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod dactyl aproximately 0.3X of propodus; propodus and carpus approximately of the same length; merus approximately 1.1X of carpus; males with a spine on coxa (Fig. 6 h).</p><p>Females with a triangular plate on sternite XII, sternite XIII with a semioval plate with marginal setae (Fig. 7 a). Males with a lanceolate plate mesially sulcated on sternite XII, sternite XIII with a small spine (Fig. 7 b).</p><p>Petasma, ventral costa little larger than lateral lobe, with distal extremity forming a hook; lateral lobe approximately of the same size of median lobe (Fig. 7 c–d). Appendix masculina oval, with cuspidate setae on distal extremity and simple setae on surface (Fig. 7 e). Appendix interna larger and thinner than appendix masculina, with simple setae on distal extremity (Fig. 7 f).</p><p>Distribution: Indian Ocean: Bay of Bengal; Andaman Sea; Indonesia; Japan; South China Sea; Australia; Wallis and Futuna Islands. Eastern Atlantic Ocean: Azores; Madeira; Canary Islands; Portugal; Morocco; Western Sahara to South Africa; Madagascar; Arabian Sea. Western Atlantic Ocean: Gulf of Mexico; Caribbean Sea to French Guiana; Bermudas; Brazil (Pará, Amapá and Santa Catarina states) (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001; Silva et al. 2002).</p><p>Depth: 200 m – 1850 m. (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001)</p><p>New records: Brazil—from Bahia to Espirito Santo states, between 599 m and 935 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C742D8A69A1EFF975FB79A3B7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74288A69A1EFFCD7FBD6A609.text	03A6817C74288A69A1EFFCD7FBD6A609.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aristeus Duvernoy 1840	<div><p>Genus Aristeus Duvernoy, 1840</p><p>Integument glabrous or pubescent; photophores present on pereopods. Rostrum elongate in females and juvenile males, reaching well beyond antennular peduncle; short in adult males, not reaching end of antennuar peduncle; bearing two dorsal teeth near base followed by single postrostral tooth. Carapace with antennal and branchiostegal more or less well marked short carina; orbital, postantennal, and hepatic spines absent; postrostral carina variable, reaching as far as midlength of carapace in some species; cervical sulcus indistinct or only ventrolaterally demarked; hepatic sulcus often faint or indistinct; branchiocardiac sulcus well marked; branchiocardiac carina low. Eye with well developed cornea; optic calathus bearing large mesiodistal tubercle. Dorsal antennular flagellum short, flattened for almost of its length; ventral antennular flagellum elongate, slender, terete, with proximal sinuosity in male. Scaphocerite lamella distally broadly rounded, lateral marginal ridge with spine at about distal four-fifths of length.</p><p>Pereopods lacking exopods; first and second pereopods, sometimes third, with movable meral spines; fourth and fifth pereopods slender. Thelycum open, with shieldlike median protuberance on sternite XII; sternite XIII broadly rectangular, slightly hollowed.</p><p>Petasma with broad, distally rounded lateral lobule, slightly to considerably surpassing median lobule; ventral costa unattached to adjacent flexible part for variable fraction of its length, and not produced into hook. First abdominal somite dorsally rounded; second and third somite dorsally rounded or very faint rounded carina; fourth to sixth somites dorsally carinate, carina of fourth somite extending along posterior two-thirds. Telson bearing four pairs of movable spines; apex acute, slender (modified from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p><p>Remarks: The two species of Aristeu s studied herein have their gills and epipods distributed in different ways, as shown in table 1. Aristeus antennatus has an epipod on somite XII and a podobranchia on somite XI, while in Aristeus antillensis these structures are absent in these somites. As this pattern was observed in all specimens examined herein, is clear that this is an intra-specific variation in Aristeus . Thus, carefully examination and description of gills and epipods are recommended for this group.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74288A69A1EFFCD7FBD6A609	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74288A76A1EFF8B8FF31A3EF.text	03A6817C74288A76A1EFF8B8FF31A3EF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aristeus antennatus (Risso 1816) Risso 1816	<div><p>Aristeus antennatus (Risso, 1816)</p><p>(Figs. 8–10)</p><p>Peneus antennatus Risso, 1816: 95, pl. u, fig. 6.</p><p>Aristeus antennatus - Duvernoy, 1841:101–108, pl. IV–V; Bate, 1881: 188; Bouvier, 1908: 71 –75, pl. XI–XII; Crosnier &amp; Forest, 1973: 288, 290, 291, 294, 353, 362; Crosnier, 1978: 71 –74; Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997: 39 –40.</p><p>Type locality: Mediterranean sea, off Nice.</p><p>Material examined: St. E0496, 13º17.580' S – 38º17.599' W to 13º12.030' S – 38º14.873' W, 1717 m, 07/ VI/2000, 3 females, cl: 50.2–55.9 mm, 3 males, cl: 45.8–60.9 mm, MNRJ 14532. St. E0526, 20º06.565' S – 38º40.502' W to 20º03.984''S – 38º36.676''W, 1637 m, 28/VI/2000, 3 females, cl: 39.6–59.7 mm, 3 males, cl: 49.4–53.0 mm, MNRJ 14534. St. E0527, 19º50.736' S – 39º10.817' W, to 19º50.563'S – 39º14.496'W, 1402 m, 29/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 66.7 mm, MNRJ 14557. St. E0537, 20º26.850' S – 39º41.636' W to 20º23.542' S – 39º48.698' W, 1642 m, 08/VII/2000, 3 females, cl: 45.4–56.5 mm, MNRJ 14531. St. E0548, 21º28.611' S – 39º40.303' W, 1799 m, 07/VII/2000, 1 male, cl: 62.0 mm, MNRJ 14529. St. E0549, 21º25.738' S – 39º43.946' W to 21º22.965' S – 39º44.646' W, 1718 m, 07/VII/2000, 2 females, cl: 57.0– 61.5 mm, 2 males, cl: 51.3–61.9 mm, MNRJ 14550. St. E0552, 21º07.493' S –39º46. 423' W to 21º09.541' S – 39º46.079' W, 1694 m, 1 male, cl: 50.5 mm MNRJ 14530.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum curved upward on proximal region and curved downward on distal region, with 3 big proximal teeth, ventral margin with some simple setae. Cervical carina absent; hepatic sulcus present. Abdominal somites 3–6 with dorsal spines, the first one the largest and the last one extremely reduced. Thelycum with a semioval plate on sternite XII and with a spine on sternite XIII. Male sternum with a semioval plate on sternite XII. Petasma with ventral costa smaller than lateral lobe, curved outward, with extremity enlarged, not forming a hook; median lobe smaller than lateral lobe. Appendix interna semioval with cuspidate setae on distal extremity. Appendix masculina filiform, smaller and thinner than appendix interna, with marginal simple setae.</p><p>Description: Rostrum curved upward on proximal region and curved downward on distal region, with 3 big proximal teeth; some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 8 a). Adrostral carina well defined; cervical carina absent; branchiocardiac, branchiostegal, gastro-orbital and submarginal carina present; hepatic sulcus present; antennal and branchiostegal spines present (Fig. 8 a).</p><p>Abdominal somites 1–3 with a depression that extends from the dorsum to half of pleurae; pleurae with marginal setae; tergum with medial carina on somites 3–6; abdominal somites 3–6 with dorsal spines, the first is the largest and the last extremely reduced (Fig. 8 a).</p><p>Antennal scaphocerite approximately 1, 6 X of antennular peduncle (Fig. 3 a–c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 8 d, 8e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 8 f–g, 9a–c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5 X of palm; palm with setae tufts on proximo-ventral region; carpus approximately 1.5 X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.5 X of carpus, with one disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 9 d).</p><p>Second pereopod dactyl approximately 1.3 X of palm; carpus approximately 2 X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.2 X of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 9 e).</p><p>Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.3 X of palm; carpus approximately 2.6 X of dactyl and of the same size of merus; male coxa with a small inner spine (Fig. 9 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.5 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.6 X of carpus; carpus approximately 0.8 X of merus; male coxa with a small inner spine (Fig. 9 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod 5, dactyl approximately 0.5 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.5 X of carpus; carpus approximately 0.8 X of merus; male coxa with an inner spine (Fig. 9 h).</p><p>Females with sternites IX–XI with ventral spines; sternite XII with an oval plate ending in a spine; sternite XIII with a ventral spine (Fig. 10 a). Males with sternite XI with a ventral carina; sternite XII with an oval plate ending in a spine (Fig. 10 b).</p><p>Petasma with ventral costa smaller than lateral lobe, curved outward, with extremity enlarged, not forming a hook; median lobe smaller than lateral lobe (Fig. 10 c–d). Appendix masculina semioval with cuspidate setae on distal extremity (Fig. 10 e). Appendix interna filiform, smaller and thinner than appendix masculina, with marginal simple setae (Fig. 10 f).</p><p>Variation: One male (MNRJ 14532) has one disto-lateral cuspidate setae on merus of third pereopod besides those on first and second pereopods.</p><p>Distribution: Indian Ocean: Mozambique; Zanzibar; Madagascar; Réunion; Maldive Islands. Eastern Atlantic Ocean: from Portugal to Cape Verde Islands and Azores; Mediterranean; Natal; South Africa (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p><p>Depth: 150 m – 1440 m. (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997)</p><p>New records: Western Atlantic Ocean—Brazil, from Bahia to Espirito Santo states, between 1402 m and 1799 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74288A76A1EFF8B8FF31A3EF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74378A72A1EFFCE5FB0AA3B7.text	03A6817C74378A72A1EFFCE5FB0AA3B7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aristeus antillensis A. Milne Edwards & Bouvier 1909	<div><p>Aristeus antillensis A. Milne Edwards &amp; Bouvier, 1909</p><p>(Figs. 11 –13)</p><p>Aristeus antillensis A. Milne Edwards &amp; Bouvier, 1909: 201 –203, pl. I, fig. 8–13; Crosnier &amp; Forest, 1973: 290, 291; 1978: 61; Pérez Farfante, 1988: 6, fig. 7; Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997: 41.</p><p>Type locality: Nevis Island, Antilles.</p><p>Material examined: St. E0499, 13º23.826' S – 38º37.541' W to 13º20.872' S – 38º35.922' W, 761 m, 08/VI/ 2000, 6 females, cl: 42.2–54.2 mm, 5 males, cl: 27.0– 28.5 mm, MNRJ 14538. St. E0502, 14º28.385' S – 38º52.395' W to 14º24.813' S – 38º53.006' W, 522 m, 09/VI/2000, 13 females, cl: 41.2–50.0 mm, 5 males, cl: 27.9–29.5 mm, MNRJ 14555. St. E0503, 14º37.834' S – 38º52.029' W to 14º34.565' S – 38º 51.672' W, 740 m, 10/VI/2000, 19 females, cl: 40.7–52.4 mm, 9 males, cl: 27.2–29.7 mm, MNRJ 14552. St. E0522, 13º30.495' S – 38º38.977' W to 13º29.472'S – 38º37.943'W, 1144 m, 21/VI/2000, 4 females, cl: 33.1–42.6 mm, MNRJ 14535. St. E0534, 19º42.162' S – 39º21.608' W to 19º43.828'S – 39º24.583'W, 613 m, 29/VI/1999, 6 females, cl: 37.7–53.7 mm, 1 male, cl: 27.9 mm, MNRJ 14537. St. E0541, 21º13.644' S –40º14. 031' W to 21º10.040' S – 40º13.601' W, 557 m, 7 females, cl: 39.8–48.3 mm MNRJ 14551. St. E0498, 13º08.243' S – 38º24.766' W, to 13º08.058'S – 38º24.582'W, 623 m, 08/VI/2000, 9 females, cl: 39.0– 48.8 mm, 3 males, cl: 27.5–27.7 mm, MNRJ 14536.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum curved upward with 3 proximal large teeth. Cervical carina reduced; hepatic spine absent. Abdominal somites 3–6 with a dorsal carina with small dorsal spines. Thelycum with a mesial shieldlike protuberance on sternite XII and sternite XIII with a rounded protuberance. Male sternum with a large spine on sternite XII. Petasma with distal extremity somewhat rounded; ventral costa smaller than lateral lobe, sligthly curved inward, not forming a hook. Appendix interna sub-triangular. Appendix masculina triangular, setose on inner margin, smaller and thinner than appendix interna.</p><p>Description: Rostrum curved upward with 3 proximal large teeth; some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 11 a). Adrostral carina well defined; branchiocardiac carina extends for almost total length of carapace; cervical carina reduced; Branchiostegal and submarginal carina present; antennal and branchiostegal spines present (Fig. 11 a).</p><p>Abdominal somites 1–3 with a depression that extends from the dorsum to the middle of pleurae; pleurae with marginal setae; tergum with a dorsal carina on abdominal somites 3–6; abdominal somites 3–6 ending in small spines (Fig. 11 a).</p><p>Antennal scaphocerite approximately 1.7 X of antenular peduncle (Fig. 11 a–c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 11 d, 11e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 11 f–g, 12a–c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5 X of palm; carpus of approximately the same length of dactyl, with 13 photophores; merus approximately 1.5 X of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 12 d).</p><p>Aristeus antillensis A. Milne Edwards &amp; Bouvier, 1909 . Female, cl: 37.7 mm, MNRJ 14537, a) Sternum (numbers showing the eleventh and thirteenth sternites). Male, cl: 27.0 mm, MNRJ 14538, b) Sternum (numbers showing the eleventh and thirteenth sternites); c) Left petasma, anterior; d) Left petasma, posterior; e) Right appendix interna; f) Right appendix interna and appendix masculina; g) Left uropod; h) Telson.</p><p>Second pereopod dactyl approximately 1.4 X of palm; carpus approximately 1.8 X of dactyl, with nine photophores; merus approximately 1.5 X of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 12 e). Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.4 X of palm; carpus approximately 1.5 X of dactyl and of the same length of merus (Fig. 12 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.6 X of carpus; carpus approximately of the same length of merus (Fig. 12 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.6 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.4 X of carpus; merus approximately 1.4 X of carpus; male coxa with an inner spine (Fig. 12 h).</p><p>Females with sternites VIII–X with ventral spines; sternite XII with a shield-like plate; sternite XIII with a rounded protuberance (Fig. 13a). Males with sternites IX–XI with ventral spines; sternite XII with a large spine; sternite XIII with a truncate spine (Fig. 13b).</p><p>Petasma with distal extremity rounded; ventral costa smaller than lateral lobe, sligthly curved inward, not forming a hook (Fig. 13c–d). Appendix masculina sub-triangular (Fig. 13e–f). Appendix interna triangular, setose on inner margin, smaller and thinner than appendix masculina (Fig. 13f).</p><p>Variations: One male (MNRJ 14581) has 2 distal truncate small spines besides those rostral ones. One female (MNRJ 14594) has a disto-lateral cuspidate setae on merus of third pereopod, this seta is equal to those present on merus of first and second pereopods.</p><p>Distribution: Western Atlantic Ocean: Delaware to Florida; Gulf of Mexico; Caribbean Sea to French Guiana; Brazil (Maranhão and Amapá states) (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Silva et al., 2002).</p><p>Depth: 200–750 m, occasionally to 1100 m (Pérez Farfante, 1988).</p><p>New records: Brazil—from Bahia to Espirito Santo states, between 522 m and 1144 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74378A72A1EFFCE5FB0AA3B7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74338A72A1EFFCCDFBD9A7C9.text	03A6817C74338A72A1EFFCCDFBD9A7C9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Hemipenaeus Bate 1881	<div><p>Genus Hemipenaeus Bate, 1881</p><p>Integument glabrous. Rostrum either moderately elongate in females and short in males, or short in both sexes, bearing 2, occasionally 3 basal dorsal teeth, followed by single postrostral tooth. Carapace with branchiostegal spine continuous with sharp carina; orbital, postantennal, and hepatic spines absent; postrostral carina reaching to midlength or almost to posterior margin of carapace; cervical sulcus either almost reaching middorsal line, or only demarked ventrally, if it all; postcervical sulcus present or absent; hepatic sulcus strong; branchiostegal carina well marked; branchiocardiac carina and sulcus strong. Eye with cornea well developed, somewhat dorsoventrally flattened; calathus with strong tubercle at about midpoint of mesial margin. Dorsal antennular flagellum short, flattened for most of its length; ventral flagellum elongate, slender terete, not modified in mature male. Scaphocerite with apex of blade rounded, lateral marginal ridge ending in spine at about distal fourth of length of lamella.</p><p>First to fifth pereopods each with reduced exopod; meri of pereopods lacking cuspidate setae; fourth a fifth pereopods very slender. Thelycum open, with broad anteriorly acute median protuberance on sternite XII; sternite XIII broad, short, roughly rectangular</p><p>Petasma with distal margin of lateral lobule oblique, mesially reaching as far as median lobule; ventral costa free distally for about half or one-third of its length. First and second abdominal somites dorsally rounded, third to sixth somites dorsally carinate, third somite armed with spiniform process arising from posterior third of carina; sixth somite with small middorsal spine on posterior margin. Telson bearing 4 pairs of small movable lateral spines in about posterior half; apex acute (modified from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p><p>Remarks: Specimens of Hemipenaeus carpenteri examined herein, have the distal margin of lateral lobe of petasma exceeding the median lobe. It is different from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley (1997), where the distal margin of dorso-lateral lobe of petasma reaches as far as ventro-median lobe.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74338A72A1EFFCCDFBD9A7C9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74338A7CA1EFF8F8FB0AA6B7.text	03A6817C74338A7CA1EFF8F8FB0AA6B7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Hemipenaeus carpenteri Wood-Mason 1891	<div><p>Hemipenaeus carpenteri Wood-Mason, 1891</p><p>(Figs. 14–16)</p><p>Hemipenaeus carpenteri Wood-Mason, 1891: 189; Crosnier, 1978: 76 –80, fig. 27c–d, 28a–b, 29a; Gore, 1985: 122 –124; Crosnier, 1994: 369, fig. 5; Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997: 46; Dall, 2001: 418, fig. 6. Aristaeus (Hemipenaeus) Carpenteri - Alcock, 1901: 32 –33.</p><p>Type locality: Bay of Bengal.</p><p>Material examined: St. E0509, 15º47.725’ S – 38º 21.973’ W to 15º46.378’S – 38º24.839’W, 2076 m, 1 male, cl: 26.6 mm, MNRJ 14511. St. E0526, 20º06.565' S – 38º40.502' W to 20º 03.984' S – 38º36.676' W, 1637 m, 28/VI/2000, 1 male, cl: 12.9 mm, MNRJ 14509. St. E0528, 19º45.258' S – 39º03.003' W to 19º47.581' S – 38º59.827' W, 1237 m, 29/VI/2000, 4 females, cl: 21.3–35.0 mm, 1 male, cl: 22.9 mm, MNRJ 14528. St. E0537, 20º26.850' S – 39º41.636' W to 20º23.542' S – 39º48.698' W, 1642 m, 08/VII/2000, 1 male, cl: 23.5 mm, MNRJ 14527. St. E0538, 20º27.667' S – 39º38.101' W to 20º32.771' S – 39º37.650' W, 1680 m, 02/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 38.3 mm, MNRJ 14585. St. E0544, 21º24.306' S – 40º02.847' W to 21º20.953' S – 40º02.847' W, 1159 m, 05/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 23.3 mm, MNRJ 14583.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum short, with 3 dorsal spines. Gastrorbital carina present. Cervical carina well marked, reaching the dorsum of carapace. Abdominal somite 3 with a large dorsal spine. Abdominal somites 4–6 with a dorsal carina. Female sternum with a triangular plate on sternite XII. Male sternum with a triangular plate on sternite XII. Petasma with distal extremity rounded; ventral costa with extremity enlarged and not curved; distal margin of lateral lobe oblique, of the same size or larger than median lobe. Appendix interna rounded, with cuspidate setae on distal extremity. Appendix masculina digitiform, larger, but thinner than appendix interna.</p><p>Description: Rostrum short, not exceeding cornea, with 3 dorsal spines; some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 14 a). Cervical carina well marked; branchiocardiac, branchiostegal, gastro-orbital and submarginal carina present; antennal and branchiostegal spines present (Fig. 14 a).</p><p>Abdominal somite 3 with a large spine, curved downward; abdominal somite 6 with a small terminal spine; abdominal somites 4–6 with a dorsal carina; abdominal pleurae with marginal setae (Fig. 14 a).</p><p>Antennal scaphocerite of approximately 1.7 X of antennular peduncle (Fig. 14 a-c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 14 d, 14e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 14 f–g, 15a–c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 1.3 X of palm; carpus approximately of the same length of dactyl; merus approximately 1.7 X of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 15 d).</p><p>Second pereopod dactyl approximately 1.4 X of palm; carpus approximately of the same length of dactyl; merus approximately 1.4 X of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 15 e).</p><p>Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.2 X of palm; carpus approximately 1.1 X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.4 X of carpus (Fig. 15 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.6 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.4 X of carpus; carpus approximately of the same length of merus (Fig. 15 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.4 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.4 X of carpus; carpus approximately 1.1 X of merus; male coxa with an inner spine (Fig. 15 h).</p><p>Female sternum with a ventral carina on sternites IX–XI and XIII, and a triangular plate on sternite XII (Fig. 15 a). Male sternum with a ventral carina on sternites IX–XI, and a triangular plate on sternite XII (Fig. 15 b).</p><p>Petasma with distal extremity rounded; ventral costa with extremity enlarged and not curved; distal margin of lateral lobe oblique, of the same size or larger than median lobe (Fig. 15 c–d). Appendix masculina rounded, with cuspidate setae on distal extremity (Fig. 15 e–f). Appendix interna digitiform, bigger, but thinner than than appendix masculina (Fig. 15 e–f).</p><p>Variation: One female (MNRJ 14528) has only 2 dorsal rostral spines.</p><p>Distribution: Indian Ocean: Madagascar; Réunion; Arabian Sea; Bay of Bengal. Pacific Ocean: Japan; Wallis and Futuna Islands; Western and Northeastern Australia; off Gulf of Panama; Galapagos Islands. Western Atlantic Ocean: off Bahamas; Gulf of Mexico; Caribbean Sea (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001).</p><p>Depth: 900 m – 3900 m. (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001)</p><p>New records: Brazil, from Bahia to Espirito Santo states, between 1159 m and 2076 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74338A7CA1EFF8F8FB0AA6B7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C743F8A7FA1EFF8A9FBB9A23F.text	03A6817C743F8A7FA1EFF8A9FBB9A23F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Hepomadus Bate 1881	<div><p>Genus Hepomadus Bate, 1881</p><p>Integument glabrous. Rostral length in juvenile females and apparently, in all males, not exceeding 0.7 times that of carapace, in larger females length increasing to as much as 1.25 carapace length, reaching beyond distal end of antennular peduncle by half its length, bearing 2 dorsal teeth near base, followed by single postrostral tooth. Carapace with postrostral carina almost reaching posterior margin; hepatic spine present; orbital, and postantennal spines absent; cervical sulcus well marked, reaching middorsal line; postcervical sulcus faint; branchiostegal carina anteriorly sharp, posteriorly weak; hepatic sulcus distinct; hepatic sulcus distinct; branchiocardiac carina strong, accompanying sulcus deep. Eye with cornea well developed; calathus with proximal tubercle on mesial margin. Dorsal antennular flagellum short, flattened for most of its length; ventral flagellum elongate, slender terete, not modified in mature male. Scaphocerite blade distally rounded, rigid lateral margin with tooth at distal 5/6 of length.</p><p>First to fifth pereopods each with exopod reduced or absent; merus of first and second pereopods with cuspidate setae; fourth and fifth pereopods slender. Thelycum open, with large roughly lanceolate median protuberance on sternite XII; sternite XIII subrectangular, weakly convex.</p><p>Petasma with median lobule distally flexed ventraly; lateral lobule reaching or barely surpassing median lobule; about distal half of ventral costa free from adjacent flexible part of lateral lobule, its tip curving laterally, forming a hook. First and second abdominal somites dorsally rounded; third to sixth somites dorsally carinate, third somite carinate in posterior two-thirds, ending posteriorly in spine. Telson with 4 pairs of lateral movable spines; apex slender acute (modified from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C743F8A7FA1EFF8A9FBB9A23F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C743E8A44A1EFFC55FB7BA0FF.text	03A6817C743E8A44A1EFFC55FB7BA0FF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Hepomadus tener Smith 1884	<div><p>Hepomadus tener Smith, 1884</p><p>(Figs. 17–19)</p><p>Hepomadus tener Smith, 1884: 409, pl. 9, figs. 7–8; 1887; Bouvier, 1908: 57, pl. 1, fig. 5, pl. 13, figs. 1–12; Burkenroad, 1936: 86 –89; Pérez Farfante, 1973: 442, figs. 1–8; 1994: 369; Dall, 2001: 419 –420, fig. 7.</p><p>Type locality: NW Atlantic, off eastern USA.</p><p>Material examined: St. D0504, 19º42.734' S – 38º36.472' W, 910 m, 29/VI/1999, 10 females, cl: 25.9– 45.7 mm, 10 males, cl: 34.2–39.7 mm, MNRJ 14100. St. D0506, 19º42.716' S – 38º36.497' W, 935 m, 29/VI/ 1999, 4 females, cl: 35.8–40.1mm, 4 males, cl: 24.4–37.5 mm, MNRJ 14099. St. E0505, 14º36.606' S – 38º49.345' W to 14º39.662' S – 38º50.154' W, 1089 m, 10/VI/2000, 2 females, cl: 33.3–35. 2 mm, 4 males, cl: 31.4–40.6 mm, MNRJ 14598. St. E0506, 14º36.579’S – 38º49.544’W to 14º 39, 605' S–38º 50. 134' W, 1067 m, 10/VI/2000, 4 females, cl: 32.5–39.8 mm, 11 males, cl: 17.6–37.8 mm, MNRJ 14600. St. E0507, 15º08.595' S – 38º40.638' W to 15º07.158' S – 38º40.542' W, 1026 m, 11/VI/2000, 5 females, cl: 26.1–38.9 mm, 4 males, cl: 27.0– 36.3 mm, MNRJ 14595. St. E0512, 15º50.532' S – 38º02.274' W to 15º50.599' S – 38º02.507' W, 1043 m, 13/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 33.4 mm, 2 males, cl: 32.8–40.7 mm, MNRJ 14599. St. E0520, 13º21.837' S – 38º16.683' W to 13º26.455' S – 38º13.836' W, 2137 m, 20/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 38.4 mm, MNRJ 14594. St. E0522, 13º30.495' S – 38º38.977' W to 13º29.472' S – 38º37.943' W, 1144 m, 21/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 44.5 mm, MNRJ 14592. St. E0523, 19º42.569' S – 38º32.030' W to 19º42.685' S – 38º36.961' W, 922 m, 27/ VI/2000, 5 females, cl: 35.9–40.3 mm, 5 males, cl: 31.4–37.1 mm, MNRJ 14596. St. E0525, 20º08.145' S – 38º38.081' W to 20º07.308' S – 38º42.906' W, 1639 m, 28/VI/2000, 2 males, cl: 30.9–38.0 mm, MNRJ 14579. St. E0526, 20º06.565' S – 38º40.502' W to 20º03.984' S – 38º36.676' W, 1637 m, 28/VI/2000, 2 males, cl: 32.4– 39.5 mm, MNRJ 14584. St. E0527, 19º50.736' S – 39º10.817' W to 19º50.563' S – 39º14.496' W, 1402 m, 29/VI/ 2000, 1 female, cl: 21.3 mm, 3 males, cl: 23.6–41.2 mm, MNRJ 14589. St. E0528, 19º45.258' S – 39º03.003' W to 19º47.581' S – 38º59.827' W, 1237 m, 29/VI/2000, 3 females, cl: 35.4–50.0 mm, 3 males, cl: 21.9–40.9 mm, MNRJ 14602. St. E0519, 13º19.994' S – 38º19.654' W to 13º22.615' S – 38º21.960' W, 1730 m, 1 male, cl: 43.7 mm, MNRJ 14581. St. E0535, 19º58.936' S – 39º38.657' W to 19º56.087' S – 39º35.408' W, 1002 m, 01/VII/ 2000, 29 females, cl: 26.4–44.1 mm, 26 males, cl: 25.8–37.8 mm, MNRJ 14593. St. E0536, 20º24.008' S – 39º46.217' W to 20º27.001' S –39º44. 843' W, 1293 m, 02/VII/2000, 10 females, cl: 24.0–39.0 mm, 8 males, cl: 25.0– 40.3 mm, MNRJ 14583. St. E0537, 20º26.850' S – 39º41.636' W to 20º23.542' S – 39º38.943' W, 1545 m, 02/VII/2000, 1 male, cl: 22.0 mm, MNRJ 14580. St. E0538, 20º27.667' S – 39º38.101' W to 20º32.771' S – 39º37.650' W, 1680 m, 02/VII/2000, 2 females, cl: 25.9–40.4 mm, 1 male, cl: 31.5 mm, MNRJ 14585. St. E0540, 21º12.293' S – 38º39.838' W to 19º42.684' S – 38º44.568' W, 925 m, 27/VI/2000, 11 females, cl: 27.2– 40.4 mm, 3 males, cl: 31.9–36.2 mm, MNRJ 14601. St. E0544, 21º24.306' S – 40º02.847' W to 21º20.953' S – 40º02.847' W, 1159 m, 05/VII/2000, 10 females, cl: 22.3–55.7 mm, 5 males, cl: 33.9–39.1 mm, MNRJ 14583. St. E0547, 21º46.569' S – 39º53.364' W to 21º44.949' S – 39º55.117' W, 1105 m, 06/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 40.2 mm, MNRJ 14597. St. E0548, 21º28.611' S – 39º40.303' W to 21º25.523' S – 39º40.443' W, 1799 m, 07/VII/ 2000, 2 females, cl: 34.6–35.9 mm, MNRJ 14582. St. E0550, 21º26.324' S – 39º49.113' W to 21º28. 583' S– 39º47.176' W, 1598 m, 07/VII/2000, 1 male, cl: 42.8 mm, MNRJ 14590. St. E0551, 21º07.780' S – 39º49.106' W to 21º.04.783' S– 39º48.698' W, 1642 m, 08/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 19.4 mm, MNRJ 14591. St. E0552, 21º07.493' S – 39º46.423' W to 21º09.541' S – 39º46.079' W, 1694 m, 08/VII/2000, 2 females, cl: 33.5–44.7mm, MNRJ 14587.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum curved sligthly upward, with 3 dorsal teeth. Cervical carina ending in an hepatic spine. Abdominal somite 3 with a large dorsal spine, somites 4–6 with small spines. Females with sternites IX–XI with ventral spines, sternite XII with an oval plate, and sternite XIII with sulcus. Males with an oval plate on sternite XII and a tubercle on sternite XIII. Petasma with distal extremity rounded, ventral costa with distal extremity curved outward, forming a hook. Appendix interna with distal extremity rounded. Appendix masculina triangular, larger and thinner than appendix interna.</p><p>Description: Rostrum curved sligthly upward, with 3 dorsal spines; some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 17 a). Females with rostrum larger and more curved than males, with distal extremity sligthly curved downward; on the average, rostrum of females approximately 0.9 X of carapace, while in males this ratio is approximately 0.5 X. Adrostral carina well marked; branchiocardiac carina extending from proximal region of carapace to its middle; cervical carina ending in an hepatic spine. Branchiostegal, gastro-orbital, and submarginal carina present; antennal and branchiostegal spines present (Fig 17 a).</p><p>Abdominal somites 1–3 with a depression that extends from dorsum to middle of pleurae. Pleurae with marginal setae; tergum with a median carina on somites 3–6. Abdominal somite 3 with a large dorsal spine, somites 4–6 with small spines. (Fig. 17 a).</p><p>Antennal scaphocerite sligthly longer than antennular peduncle (Fig. 17 a–c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 17 d, 17e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 17 f–g, 18a–c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 2 X of palm; carpus approximately 2 X of dactyl; merus of approxiamtely the same size of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 18 d).</p><p>Second pereopod merus of approximately the same size of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 18 e).</p><p>Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5 X of palm; carpus approximately 2.2 X of dactyl, and approximately 1.2 X of merus (Fig. 18 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.5 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.7 X of carpus; carpus approximately 0.7 X of merus (Fig. 18 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod carpus approximately 0.7 X of merus; males coxa with a lateral inner spine (Fig. 18 h).</p><p>Females with ventral spines on sternites IX–XI, sternite XII with an oval plate, and sternite XIII with sulcus (Fig. 19 a). Males with an oval plate on sternite XII and a tubercle on sternite XIII (Fig. 19 b).</p><p>Petasma with distal extremity rounded, ventral costa with distal extremity curved outward, forming a hook (Fig. 19 c–d). Appendix masculina with distal extremity rounded (Fig. 18 e). Appendix interna triangular, larger and thinner than appendix masculina (Fig. 19 e–f).</p><p>Variations: One male (MNRJ 14581) has the rostrum with 2 truncate spines, besides the three well developed proximal spines (Fig. 17 a).</p><p>Two specimens, one female (MNRJ 14594) and one male (MNRJ 14595), have a cuspidate setae on merus of third pereopod, equal to those of merus of first and second pereopods.</p><p>Distribution: Indian Ocean: Zanzibar; Madagascar; Maldive Islands; Bay of Bengal; northwest of Australia. Pacific Ocean: Philippines; Japan; Tuamotu Islands; Wallis and Futuna Islands; Hawaii. Eastern Atlantic Ocean: off Azores; Madeira; Canary Islands; Cape Verde. Western Atlantic Ocean: Gulf of Mexico; Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, Paraná and Santa Catarina states) (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; D’Incao, 1998; Dall, 2001).</p><p>Depth: 765—5400 m. (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; D'Incao, 1998; Dall, 2001).</p><p>New records: Brazil — from Bahia to Espírito Santo states, between 910 and 2137 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C743E8A44A1EFFC55FB7BA0FF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74058A44A1EFFD95FC0DA451.text	03A6817C74058A44A1EFFD95FC0DA451.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Plesiopenaeus Bate 1881	<div><p>Genus Plesiopenaeus Bate, 1881</p><p>Integument glabrous. Rostrum elongate in adult females, short in adult males, bearing 2 basal dorsal teeth, followed by single postrostral tooth. Carapace, orbital, postantennal and hepatic spines absent. Cervical sulcus either almost reaching middorsal line, or only demarked laterally; gastro-orbital, antennal, hepatic and branchiocardiac carinae well marked; postrostral carina reaching at least to midlength of carapace. Eye with cornea slightly flattened; calathus moderately elongate, with strong tubercle at about midlength of mesial margin. Dorsal antennular flagellum flattened for most of its length; ventral antennular flagellum elongate, slender, terete, not modified in adult male. Scaphocerite with lateral marginal ridge ending in short spine at about distal five-sixths length of lamella.</p><p>First to fifth pereopods each with rudimentary exopod; first pereopod, or first and second pereopod with distal cuspidate setae. Fourth and fifth pereopods more slender than preceding ones.</p><p>Petasma with distal margin of lateral lobule oblique, mesially reaching as far as medium lobe; ventral costa free distally, its rounded or subacute apical part directed laterally. Thelycum open, with shield-like protuberance on sternite XII anteriorly acute; sternite XIII roughly rectangular. First and second abdominal somites dorsally rounded; posterior half of third abdominal somite and fourth to sixth somites dorsally carinate. Telson with four pairs of movable lateral spines in posterior half; apex acute (modified from Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997).</p><p>Remarks: The position of gills and epipods is the same in the two species of the genus examined herein, so, different from what was observed for Aristeus as discussed earlier.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74058A44A1EFFD95FC0DA451	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74058A40A1EFFA60FB67A6EF.text	03A6817C74058A40A1EFFA60FB67A6EF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Plesiopenaeus armatus (Bate 1881) Bate 1881	<div><p>Plesiopenaeus armatus (Bate, 1881)</p><p>(Figs. 20–22)</p><p>Aristaeus armatus Bate, 1881: 188; 1888: 312–317, pl. 45–46, figs. 1–2.</p><p>Aristaeus (Aristaeopsis) armatus - Alcock, 1901: 41.</p><p>Plesiopenaeus armatus - Crosnier &amp; Forest, 1973: 294 –296, fig. 99, c–d; Crosnier, 1978: 92 –94, figs. 31 d-e, 32 d–f, 33 b; Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997: 50 –52, figs. 19–20; Dall, 2001: 421 –422, fig. 9.</p><p>Type locality: Not determined.</p><p>Material examined: St.E0520, 13º21.837' S – 38º16.683' W to 13º26.455' S – 38º13.836' W, 2137 m, 20/ VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 38.6 mm, 1 male, cl: 54.6 mm, MNRJ 14576. St. E0525, 20º08.145' S – 38º38.081' W to 20º07.308' S – 38º42.906' W, 1639 m, 28/VI/2000, 1 male, cl: 54.1mm, MNRJ 19523. St. E0548, 21º28,611’S – 39º40,303’W to 21º25,523’S – 39º40,443’W, 1799 m, 1 juvenile male, cl: 22,0 mm, MNRJ 14510. St. E0552, 21º07.493' S – 39º46.423' W to 21º09.541' S – 39º46.079' W, 1694 m, 08/VII/2000, 1 male, cl: 58.2 mm, MNRJ 19519.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum sligthly curved upward, with 3 dorsal spines. Cervical carina reaches the middle of carapace. Females with a semioval plate on sternite XII, sternites XI and XIII each with a median carina. Males with a small triangular plate on sternite XII, sternite XI with a median carina, and sternite XIII with a median carina ending in a spine. Abdominal pleurae with small terminal spines. Abdominal somites 3–6 with a median dorsal carina, and with dorsal spines. Petasma with ventral costa approximately of the same size of lateral lobe, with distal extremity curved, but not forming a hook; lateral lobe almost reaches median lobe. Appendix interna semioval with marginal cuspidate setae and with simple setae on base. Appendix masculina of the same length and thinner than appendix interna, with cuspidate setae on inner margin.</p><p>Description: Rostrum slightly curved upward, with 3 dorsal spines, with some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 20 a). Adrostral and branchiocardiac carina well defined; cervical carina reaches the middle of carapace; antennal, antero-lateral, branchiostegal and gastro-orbital carina present; hepatic carina absent; antennal and branchiostegal spines present (Fig. 20 a).</p><p>Abdominal somites 1–2 with a depression that extends from dorsum to the middle of pleurae; pleurae with marginal setae and small terminal spines; abdominal somites 3–6 with a median dorsal carina, and with dorsal spines (Fig. 20 a).</p><p>Antennal scaphocerite approximately 1.3 X of antennular peduncle (Fig. 20 a–c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 20 d, 20e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 20 f-g, 21a-c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 1.6 X of palm; carpus approximately 1.4 X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.5 X of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 21 d).</p><p>Second pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5 X of palm; carpus approximately 2 X of dactyl; merus approximately 1.2 X of carpus, with a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 21 e).</p><p>Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5 X of palm; carpus approximately 2.5 X of dactyl, and of the same size of merus; males with a small spine on coxa (Fig. 21 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.5 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.6 X of carpus; merus approximately 1.4 X of carpus; males with a small spine on coxa (Fig. 21 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.5 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.6 X of carpus; merus approximately 1.4 X of carpus; males with a spine on coxa (Fig. 21 h).</p><p>Females with a semioval plate on sternite XII, sternites XI and XIII each with a median carina (Fig. 22 a). Males with a small triangular plate on sternite XII, sternite XI with a median carina, and sternite XIII with a median carina ending in a spine (Fig. 22 b).</p><p>Petasma with ventral costa approximately of the same size of ventro-lateral lobe, with distal extremity curved, but not forming a hook; lateral lobe almost reaches median lobe (Fig. 22 c–d). Appendix masculina semioval with marginal cuspidate setae and with simple setae on base (Fig. 22 e–f). Appendix interna of the same length and thinner than appendix masculina, with cuspidate setae on inner margin (Fig. 22 e)</p><p>Juvenile male: One juvenile male (cc: 22,0 mm, MNRJ 14510) was found among specimens examined herein. Being a juvenile specimen, its sexual characters are poorly defined, although it is possible to affirm that it is a male for the presence of appendix masculina. Despite sexual characters are very important to separate species of Aristeidae, others characters as carapace and abdominal spines, presence of rudimentary exopods on pereopods, and presence of disto-lateral cuspidate setae on first and second pereopods, were used to affirm that this specimen is P. a r m a t u s.</p><p>Distribution: Indian Ocean: Zanzibar; Madagascar; Maldive Islands; Bay of Bengal. Pacific Ocean: Philippines; Japan; Tuamotu Islands; Wallis and Futuna Islands; northeast of Australia; Hawaii. Eastern Atlantic Ocean: off Azores; Madeira; Canary Islands; Cape Verde. Western Atlantic Ocean: Gulf of Mexico (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001).</p><p>Depth: 752–5413 m. (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001)</p><p>New records: Brazil—from Bahia to Espírito Santo states, between 1639 e 2137 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74058A40A1EFFA60FB67A6EF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
03A6817C74008A4DA1EFFF4DFB67A0C7.text	03A6817C74008A4DA1EFFF4DFB67A0C7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Plesiopenaeus coruscans (Wood-Mason 1891) Wood-Mason 1891	<div><p>Plesiopenaeus coruscans (Wood-Mason, 1891)</p><p>(Figs. 23–25)</p><p>Aristeus coruscans Wood-Mason in Wood-Mason &amp; Alcock, 1891:280, fig. 6. Aristaeus (Plesiopenaeus) coruscans - Alcock, 1901: 37 –38.</p><p>Plesiopenaeus coruscans - Burkenroad, 1936: 95 –100; Crosnier, 1978: 86 –96, figs. 31 f–g, 32 c–f; Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997: 52; Dall, 2001: 422.</p><p>Type locality: Bay of Bengal.</p><p>Material examined: St. E0496, 13º17.580' S – 38º17.599' W to 13º12.030' S – 38º14.873' W, 1717 m, 07/ VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 65.4 mm, MNRJ 14524. St. E0519, 13º19.944' S – 38º19.654' W to 13º22.615' S – 38º21.960' W, 1730 m, 20/VI/2000, 2 females, cl: 22.7–26.8 mm, 1 male, cl: 54. 9 mm, MNRJ 14577. St. E0525, 20º08.145' S – 38º38.081' W to 20º07.308' S – 38º42.906' W, 1639 m, 28/VI/2000, 4 females, cl: 59.0– 74.6 mm, MNRJ 14525. St. E0526, 20º06.565' S – 38º40.502' W to 20º03.984' S – 38º36.676' W, 1637 m, 28/VI/ 2000, 3 females, cl: 54.9–75.6 mm, 3 males, cl: 62.2–69.3 mm, MNRJ 14515. St. E0527, 19º50.736' S – 39º10.817' W to 19º50.563' S – 39º14.496' W, 1402 m, 29/VI/2000, 2 females, cl: 77.7–90.5 mm, 2 males, cl: 64.8–65.2 mm, MNRJ 14521. St. E0528, 19º45.258’ S – 39º03.003’ W to 19º47.581’ S – 38º59.827’ W, 1237 m, 29/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 99.0 mm. MNRJ 14514. St. E0536, 20º24.008' S – 39º46.217' W to 20º27.001' S – 39º44.843' W, 1293 m, 02/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 88.1 mm, 1 male, cc: 70.6 mm, MNRJ 14513. St. E0538, 20º27.667' S – 39º38.101' W to 20º32.771' S – 39º37.650' W, 1680 m, 02/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 78.3 mm, MNRJ 14516. St. E0540, 21º12.293' S – 38º39.838' W to 19º42.684' S – 38º44.568' W, 925 m, 27/VI/2000, 1 female, cl: 89.3 mm, MNRJ 14520. St. E0544, 21º24.306' S – 40º02.847' W to 21º20.953' S – 40º02.847' W, 1159 m, 05/VII/2000, 2 females, cl: 77.1–86.1 mm, 2 males, cl: 60.6–60.8 mm, MNRJ 14519. St. E0549, 21º25.738' S – 39º43.946' W to 21º22.965' S – 39º44.646' W, 1718 m, 07/VII/2000, 1 male, cl: 62.2 mm, MNRJ 14522. St. E0550, 21º26.324’ S – 39º49.113’ W to 21º28.583’ S – 39º47.176’ W, 1598 m, 07/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 72.2 mm, MNRJ 14523. St. E0551, 21º.07.780' S– 39º49.106' W to 21º04.783' S – 39º48.698' W, 1642 m, 08/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 83.8 mm, 1 male, cl: 71.3 mm, MNRJ 14526. St. E0552, 21º07.493' S – 39º46.423' W to 21º09.541' S – 39º46.079' W, 1694 m, 08/VII/2000, 1 female, cl: 81.8 mm, MNRJ 14518.</p><p>Diagnosis: Rostrum curved sligthly upward, with 3 dorsal spines; gastro-orbital carina reaching cervical carina and orbital margin. Females with an oval plate on sternite XII. Males with ventral spines on sternites IX–XI, sternite XII with an oval plate, and sternite XIII with a tubercle. Abdominal somites 4–6 with a dorsal carina and ending in spines. Petasma with distal extremity slightly rounded; ventral costa smaller than median lobe, sligthly curved inward, not forming a hook. Appendix interna oval, with a small carina. Appendix masculina triangular, smaller and thinner than appendix interna.</p><p>Description: Rostrum curved sligthly upward, with 3 dorsal spines, with some simple setae on ventral region of rostrum and in front of rostrum spines (Fig. 23 a). Adrostral carina well defined; branchiocardiac carina extends for almost total length of carapace; antennal, branchiostegal, cervical and submarginal carina and post-cervical sulcus present; gastro-orbital carina reaching cervical carina and orbital margin; antennal and branchiostegal spines present (Fig. 23 a).</p><p>Abdominal somites 1–3 with a depression that extends from dorsum to middle of pleurae; pleurae with marginal setae; abdominal somites 4–6 with a dorsal carina and ending in spines (Fig. 23 a).</p><p>Antenna l scaphocerite approximately 1.5 X of antennular peduncle (Fig. 23 a–c).</p><p>Right and left mandibles with incisor and molar processes distinct; palp present (Fig. 23 d, 23e).</p><p>Maxillae, maxillipeds as for the family (Figs. 23 f–g, 24a–c).</p><p>First pereopod dactyl approximately 1.6 X of palm; carpus approximately 2 X of dactyl; merus approximately 0.7 X of carpus, with or without a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 24 d).</p><p>Second pereopod dactyl approximately 1.4 X of palm; carpus approximately 3.5 X of dactyl; merus approximately 0.5 X of carpus, without a disto-lateral cuspidate setae (Fig. 24 e).</p><p>Third pereopod dactyl approximately 1.2 X of palm; carpus approximately 4.4 X of dactyl; merus approximately 0.5 X of carpus (Fig. 24 f).</p><p>Fourth pereopod dactyl approximately 1.5 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.6 X of carpus; carpus approximately of the same size of merus (Fig. 24 g).</p><p>Fifth pereopod dactyl approximately 0.6 X of propodus; propodus approximately 0.4 X of carpus; merus approximately 1.4 X of carpus; males with an inner spine on coxa (Fig. 24 h).</p><p>Females with an oval plate on sternite XII (Fig. 25 a). Males with ventral spines on sternites IX–XI, sterniteXII with an oval plate, and sternite XIII with a tubercle (Fig. 25 b).</p><p>Petasma with distal extremity slightly rounded; ventral costa smaller than median lobe, sligthly curved inward, not forming a hook (Fig. 25 c–d). Appendix masculina oval, with a small carina (Fig. 25 e–f). Appendix interna triangular, smaller and thinner than appendix masculina (Fig. 25 f).</p><p>Distribution: Indian Ocean: Northeast of Australia. Eastern Atlantic Ocean: Madagascar; Arabian Sea; Bay of Bengal; Andaman Islands. Western Atlantic Ocean: Gulf of Mexico; Bahamas (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997; Dall, 2001).</p><p>Depth: 900–2367 m. (Pérez Farfante &amp; Kensley, 1997, Dall, 2001)</p><p>New records: Brazil, from Bahia to Espírito Santo states, between 925 and 1730 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6817C74008A4DA1EFFF4DFB67A0C7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Tavares, Carolina R.;Serejo, Cristiana S.	Tavares, Carolina R., Serejo, Cristiana S. (2007): Taxonomy of Aristeidae (Dendrobranchiata: Penaeoidea) from the central coast of Brazil, collected by the Revizee program, between 19 º and 22 ºS. Zootaxa 1585: 1-44, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.178428
