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Thymopides

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Subphylum
  
Crustacea

Order
  
Decapoda

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Class
  
Malacostraca

Family
  
Nephropidae

Similar
  
Acanthacaris, Nephropsis, Cape lobster, Thaumastocheles, Metanephrops

Thymopides is a genus of deep-water lobsters, comprising the two species Thymopides grobovi and Thymopides laurentae.

Contents

Distribution

Two species are included in the genus Thymopides.

  • Thymopides grobovi is found around Heard Island and the Kerguelen Archipelago in the southern Indian Ocean at depths of 525–1,220 metres (1,722–4,003 ft).
  • Thymopides laurentae is only known from a single hydrothermal vent on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at a depth of 3,480 m (11,420 ft) (23°22.94′N 44°56.09′W).
  • Description

    Thymopides differs from related genera such as Homarus, Homarinus and Nephrops in having the first pair of pereiopods of similar size and shape, rather than one "crusher" and one "cutter" claw. It differs from others, such as Metanephrops and Eunephrops by the lack of a carina behind the antennal spine, by the smaller size of some spines and by the smaller, unpigmented eyes.

    Taxonomy

    The genus was first described by R. N. Burukovsky and B. S. Averin in 1976 under the name Bellator, in a paper in the Russian Journal of Zoology (Зоологический Журнал, Zoologicheskij Zhurnal). After Lipke Holthuis informed the authors that a genus already existed called Bellator, they published a replacement name in a paper in the journal Crustaceana. That new name was Thymopides, referring to the close resemblance between the new genus and the genus Thymops. The original genus name, Bellator derived from the Latin word bellator, meaning "warrior".

    In 2003, a second species was described, T. laurentae, commemorating Michèle de Saint Laurent.

    References

    Thymopides Wikipedia