Atlas of Atlantic Ostracods

Taxon details

Conchoecetta acuminata Claus, 1890

Order:
MYODOCOPA
Suborder:
Halocypridina
Family:
Halocyprididae
Subfamily:
Conchoecinae
Size range (females):
2.8-3.6 mm
Size range (males):
2.0-2.5 mm
Depth:
epi-/mesopelagic

Notes

405 records

This is a frequently reported species that occurs in all oceans, but it is seldom taken in abundance. The majority of records are from latitudes <40°; the few records that are from higher latitudes are from regions where main ocean currents are flowing polewards (e.g. in the North Atlantic Drift). There is an interesting gap in the North Atlantic records associated with the region of the Sargasso Sea oligotrophic gyre, where is replaced by its congener C. giesbrechti; so its range may prove to be limited by very low productivity. It is a highly characteristic species with extended rostra, an acutely angled posterior dorsal corner to the carapace, a broadly spread right asymmetrical gland, and is very slim in ventral aspect. Such an instantly recognizable species is seldom examined in detail during routine analyses of samples, and so we suspect that there may be unrecognized cryptic species. Poulsen’s size data (p.62) show tantalizing inter-ocean differences in carapace length. Despite Poulsen’s assertion that this species regularly occurs at depths >500m, most data associated with precise bathymetry (see the bathymetric profiles) show that the species is a predominantly shallow mesopelagic (c.f. Deevey 1968). The Dana samples that Poulsen (1973) analyzed were collected using nets whose fishing depths were estimated from the metres of wire paid out; this method can be wildly inaccurate, especially in regions where there are fast near surface currents (e.g. along equatorial latitudes and in regions of eastern boundary currents). It is also one of the few species whose early juvenile instars can be reliably determined since they have lateral extensions to the rostra that can be seen in ventral aspect. The shape of these extensions is quite distinct from those of the co-generic species giesbrechti.Living specimens are translucent and only very palely tinted with yellow and orange pigments below the rostral incisure and the bases of the limbs.

Bermuda n Mean mm s.d. Range mm
Female 56 3.39 0.087 2.88-3.60
Male 40 2.41 0.078 2.24-2.52
A-1 35 2.23 0.050 1.94-2.36
A-2 38 1.29 0.043 1.20-1.36
A-3 31 0.77 0.043 0.64-0.86
Equator n Mean s.d. Range mm
Female 34 3.04 0.100 2.80-3.32
Male 67 2.17 0.067 2.00-2.32
A-1 66 1.91 0.098 1.70-2.08
A-2 55 1.15 0.038 1.06-1.24
A-3 46 0.71 0.026 0.64-0.76
NEA n Mean mm s.d. Range mm
Female 34 3.28 0.144 3.00-3.56
Male 17 2.31 0.072 2.16-2.52
A-1 53 2.04 0.083 1.90-2.22
A-2 42 1.21 0.050 1.10-1.32
A-3 15 0.73 0.027 0.70-0.80

Map

Distribution map for Conchoecetta  acuminata SST key

Bathymetry

bathymetry data for Conchoecetta  acuminata

Drawings

Drawings of Conchoecetta  acuminata

Outline

Outline of Conchoecetta  acuminata