The unknown marine asellote isopod crustaceans of New Zealand
Kelly Merrin
New Zealand’s waters, especially the deep sea, remain one of the world’s reserves of yet-to-be discovered biodiversity.
A new species of Joeropsis (Joeropsididae) taken from coralline turf algae collected from Island Bay, Wellington. (Photo: K. Merrin)
It has been said that more is known about outer space than the depths of our oceans. So it’s not surprising that the huge diversity of deep-ocean habitats may not be appreciated as much as, for example, the Amazon rainforest. Recent research voyages have uncovered many fish and invertebrate species new to science. It is anyone’s guess how many thousands of species are still waiting to be discovered. This article covers just one group of crustaceans – the asellote isopods. Initial studies suggest that there is remarkable diversity in this group in the deep seas around New Zealand.
Asellotes: deep-sea specialists
Asollotes make up 18% of New Zealand’s isopod fauna (top) and 33% of the world fauna (bottom). (Click for more detail)
The suborder Asellota is a large group of aquatic isopods. The group has 29 known families and over 1800 species worldwide, in habitats ranging from freshwater to marine, and from tropical to polar waters.
Although asellotes are predominately deep-sea, 13 families have shallow-water representatives. Many species are common on rocky shores, living, for example, in coralline red algal turf (patches of low-growing red seaweed) in the intertidal zone. However, it is in the deep sea, particularly at depths over 500 metres, where these animals come into their own. Most of the isopods here are asellotes. Some individuals from the genus Storthyngura (family Munnopsididae) have even been found at the phenomenal depth of 8430 metres in the Kurile–Kamchatka Trench in the north-west Pacific. This is not only one of the deepest known habitats for isopods, but also for Crustacea as a whole. New Zealand’s deepest trench, the Kermadec Trench, is home to 12 species of isopod, all asellotes, inhabiting depths between 4410 and 7000 metres.
Asellotes are detritivores and, for many deep-sea representatives, this is all we know about their general biology.
Asellote isopods in New Zealand
What we know about asellote taxonomy is largely due to a few scientists who have worked on this group over the past 200 years. The earliest inroads into the description of the asellote fauna of New Zealand were made by Charles Chilton in 1884, when he published his description of Iathrippa longicauda from Cook Strait. About half of the known species have been described by just two people. Torben Wolff, from Denmark, studied specimens collected during the round-the-world voyage of the Galathea in 1950–52. British zoologist Roger Lincoln described the New Zealand Haploniscidae in 1985.
Several studies have indicated that the south-west corner of the Pacific Ocean is one of the richest locations on the planet for marine biodiversity. Studies of isopod diversity from the south-eastern Australian continental slope revealed 359 species from 36 families. Over two-thirds of these were asellotes and only 10% of the material could be identified to known species. There are no reasons to think that New Zealand’s isopod fauna would not be as rich.
Globally, asellotes make up a third of all currently known aquatic isopods (see pie charts, lower left), but in New Zealand, the proportion is only 18% (45 species). It is probable that the proportions are the same everywhere, implying that many undiscovered asellote species live in New Zealand waters.
Some scientists believe there could be over 400,000 species of marine isopods worldwide, considering the high rates of change seen in areas such as the North Pacific. Applying the one-third proportion referred to above suggests that over 130,000 of these would be asellotes – that is a lot of new species in addition to the 1800 already known!
One example of the diversity potential of asellotes in New Zealand is in the sub-family Ilyarachninae (Munnopsididae). Currently there is just one known representative from New Zealand, Ilyarachna kermadecensis Wolff (1962) from the Kermadec Trench. Research on specimens from the shelves of NIWA’s biological collections has revealed 13 species collected from the EEZ, and initial examination suggests that most of these are new to science. If this 13-fold increase in diversity applied to all 45 of New Zealand’s known asellote species, that would mean potentially over 500 species awaiting discovery.
New Zealand’s isopods show a high level of endemism and many families show Gondwana connections. A greater understanding of fauna such as asellote isopods will not only increase our knowledge of New Zealand’s unique biodiversity but will also give us further insight into the biogeographical history of our area.
Teachers: this article can be used for NCEA Achievement Standards in Biology (2.5, 2.6), Science (2.3). See other curriculum connections at www.niwa.co.nz/pubs/wa/resources
