Thaumeledone

Thaumeledone is a genus of octopuses in the family Octopodidae found in deep waters in the Southern Hemisphere.

Thaumeledone
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Order: Octopoda
Family: Megaleledonidae
Genus: Thaumeledone
Robson, 1930
Type species
Eledone brevis
Hoyle, 1885
Species

See text

Characteristics

Members of this genus are found in deep waters in the Southern Hemisphere. They are small, squat-bodied, benthic octopuses with arms united by a web. A single row of suckers occurs on the arms. Most species have a deep purple pigmentation on the oral surface of the web. One arm in the male is modified into a hectocotylus. This has a large calamus at the end, giving it a club-like appearance.[1]

Species

These species are accepted by the World Register of Marine Species:[2]

  • Thaumeledone brevis (Hoyle, 1885) - southwest Atlantic Ocean[3]
  • Thaumeledone gunteri Robson, 1930 - Southern Ocean around South Georgia[3]
  • Thaumeledone marshalli O'Shea, 1999 - New Zealand and the southwest Pacific Ocean
  • Thaumeledone peninsulae Allcock, Collins, Piatkowski & Vecchione, 2004 - Southern Ocean, Antarctic Peninsula[3]
  • Thaumeledone rotunda (Hoyle, 1885) - Southern Ocean and circumpolar (This name is considered invalid by the World Register of Marine Species, which prefers Bentheledone rotunda.)[3]
  • Thaumeledone zeiss O'Shea, 1999 - New Zealand and the southwest Pacific Ocean

References

  1. Strugnell, J. M.; M. A. Collins; A. L. Allcock (2008). "Molecular evolutionary relationships of the octopodid genus Thaumeledone (Cephalopoda: Octopodidae) from the Southern Ocean". Antarctic Science. 20 (3): 245โ€“51. doi:10.1017/s0954102008001132. S2CID 86288452.
  2. Thaumeledone Robson, 1930 World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2011-10-07.
  3. Allcock, A. L.; M.A. Collinsb; U. Piatkowskic; M. Vecchioned (2004). "Thaumeledone and other deep water octopodids from the Southern Ocean" (PDF). Deep-Sea Research Part II. Elsevier. 51 (14โ€“16): 1883โ€“1901. doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2004.07.019.
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