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Family ATYIDAE De Haan, 1849


Compiler and date details

May 2012 - Peter Davie, Queensland Museum, Brisbane

 

Introduction

Australian atyid shrimps are all small in size, being less than 35 mm in total length with the exception of Australatya striolata which reaches 60 mm total length. Many are exclusively found in freshwater although a few have larval development requiring marine influence and others are occasionally found in brackish water as adults. Typically they feed by scraping food particles off rocks and plants using the brush-like setae on the tips of the claws of their first and second legs, but at least one species, Pycnisia raptor, is believed to be a predator.

Perhaps the most influential work on Australian atyids was published by Riek (1953), although a number of other important papers have followed. Chace (1983) reviewed the Atya-like shrimps of the Indo-west Pacific region and was able to recognise the Australian Riffle Shrimp, as a separate endemic genus Australatya. New species of Caridina were described by Short (1993) and Choy & Marshall (1997). Williams (1964), Holthuis (1960, 1986) and Bruce (1992) described an interesting and relatively diverse fauna of cave-dwelling shrimps (Parisia, Pycneus, Pycnisia and Stygiocaris) and it seems likely that more will become known as speleologists explore more remote northern cave systems.

Holthuis (1986) divided the Atyidae into four subfamilies: Atyinae de Haan, 1849 (including Australatya and Caridina), Caridellinae Holthuis, 1986 (Caridinides, Parisia, Pycneus, Pycnisia), Paratyinae Holthuis, 1986 (Paratya), and Typhlatyinae Holthuis, 1986 (Stygiocaris). Only genera occurring in Australia are included here. Keys to all genera in each subfamily were provided by Holthuis (1993).

 

Diagnosis

Rostrum, if present, inflexibly attached to rest of carapace. Carapace without longitudinal lateral ridges or suture, and without cardiac notch in posterior margin. Eyes neither unusually long nor concealed beneath carapace. Antennule with two flagella, neither with accessory branch. Mandible with palp, with subtruncate molar process not distinctly separated from incisor process. Second maxilla with endite well developed, scaphognathite with proximal lobe tapering, bearing series of long setae, and extending far into branchial chamber. First maxilliped with exopod terminating in lash, not in broad, partially detached lobe. Caridean lobe not acutely produced, not overreaching distally produced endite. Second maxilliped with exopod, endopod 4-segmented, not terminating in two segments attached side-by-side to preceding segment, terminal segment attached to slender, sickle-shaped extension of preceding segment. Third maxilliped 5-segmented, slender, pereiopod-like. Pereiopods usually with strap-like epipods (mastigobranchs) on at least three anterior pairs, epipods without naked appendix extending vertically into branchial chamber; two anterior pairs of pereiopods similar, with fingers of chela usually terminating in tuft of setae; second pereiopod with carpus undivided. (After Chace 1997).

 

General References

Bruce, A.J. 1992. Pycnisia raptor, a new genus and species of predatory troglobic shrimp (Crustacea: Decapoda: Atyidae) from Northern Australia. Invertebrate Taxonomy 6: 553-566

Chace, F.A., Jr 1983. The Atya-like Shrimps of the Indo-Pacific Region (Decapoda: Atyidae). Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology No. 384: 1-54

Chace, F.A., Jr 1997. The Caridean Shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda) of the Albatross Philippine Expedition, 1907–1910, Part 7: Families Atyidae, Eugonatonotidae, Rhynchocinetidae, Bathypalaemonellidae, Processidae, and Hippolytidae. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology No. 587: i-v, 1-106

Choy, S. & Marshall, J. 1997. Two new species of freshwater atyid shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda: Atyidae) from northern Queensland and the distributional ecology of the Caridina typus species-group in Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 42(1): 25-36

Holthuis, L.B. 1960. Two new species of atyid shrimps from subterranean water of north-western Australia (Decapoda: Natantia). Crustaceana 1(1): 47-57

Holthuis, L.B. 1986. A new genus and species of subterranean shrimp from Western Australia (Crustacea: Decapoda: Atyidae). Zoologische Mededelingen (Leiden) 60(7): 103-111

Holthuis, L.B. 1993. The Recent Genera of the Caridean and Stenopodidean Shrimps (Crustacea, Decapoda). Alblasserdam : Ridderprint Offsetdrukkerij B.V. 328 pp.

Riek, E.F. 1953. The Australian freshwater prawns of the family Atyidae. Records of the Australian Museum 23: 111-121

Short, J.W. 1993. Caridina zebra, a new species of freshwater atyid shrimp (Crustacea: Decapoda) from northeastern Queensland rainforest. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 34(1): 61-67

Williams, W.D. 1964. Subterranean freshwater prawns (Crustacea: Decapoda: Atyidae) in Australia. Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 15(1): 93-106

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
22-Jul-2013 22-Jul-2013 MODIFIED
10-May-2012 10-May-2012 MODIFIED
12-Feb-2010 (import)