identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
069DFB130DFC515E8972A1767130E483.text	069DFB130DFC515E8972A1767130E483.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stephos concavus Moon & Soh & Cho 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Stephos concavus sp. nov. Figures 6, 7, 8 </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype ♀ (NIBRIV0000293109) dissected on two glass slides collected by D. H. Cho, 9 May 2012.</p>
            <p>Type locality.</p>
            <p>Near the bottom (ca. 4 m depth), Wimi port, Jeju Island (approximately 33°16'13"N, 126°39'43"E), Korea.</p>
            <p>Description of female.</p>
            <p> Body (Fig. 6A, B) robust, length 0.93 mm. Prosome 5-segmented; cephalosome and first pedigerous somites completely separated; fourth and fifth pedigerous somites incompletely fused (Fig. 6A), posterior corners of prosome slightly asymmetric. Rostrum represented by a rounded knob. Prosome-urosome ratio 2.25:1. Urosome 4-segmented, comprising genital double-somite, two free abdominal somites, and anal somite; length ratio of genital double-somite, first free abdominal somite, second free abdominal somite, and anal somite as 43.0: 18.9:18.1:9.4:10.7 = 100. Genital double-somite (Fig. 6C-E) slightly asymmetric, with protruding lobe on the anterior to medial part of both sides and with a row of spinules in lateral view (Fig. 6C, D); common operculum located ventromedially slightly round (Fig. 6E) and with spermatophore and coupler in dorsal view (Fig. 6C). First and second abdominal somites (Fig. 6C), with transverse hyaline frill dorsally and ventrally. Anal somite shortest. Caudal rami with six setae, symmetric, 1.75 times longer than wide (49  × 28  μm ); caudal setae II-VII present (seta I lacking); seta II spiniform, seta III ca. half the length of seta V, seta V longer (right longer than left) than seta IV, both plumose; dorsal seta VII short, plumose. </p>
            <p>Antennule (Fig. 7A) symmetric, extending beyond distal area of genital double-somite; 24-segmented, apparently ancestral, segments I-II, III-IV, X-XI, and XXVII-XXVIII are fused. Segmentation and setation pattern as follows (ancestral segment number-setae+aesthetasc): I-II-3+2ae, III-IV-4+3ae, V-2+ae, VI-2, VII-2+ae, VIII2+ae, IX-2, X-XI-4+ae, XII-1, XIII-1, XIV-2+ae, XV-1, XVI-2+ae, XVII-1, XVIII-1, XIX-1, XX-1, XXI-2+ae, XXII-1, XXIII-1+ae, XXIV-1+1+ae, XXV-1+1, XXVI-1+1, XXVII-XXVIII-5+ae. Ancestral segments I-XIV and XVI-XXV with row of spinules on posterior surface.</p>
            <p>Antenna (Fig. 7B) biramous; coxa and basis separate, coxa with one and basis with two setae; endopod 2-segmented, proximal segment with two setae, compound distal segment bilobed with eight and seven plumose setae subterminally and terminally, respectively, outer margin ornamented with a small serrated process subdistally on medial margin; tiny spinule adjacent to serrated process; exopod 7-segmented, with intersegmental articulation between segments 2 and 3 not completely expressed, with setal formula of 1, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 3.</p>
            <p>Mandible (Fig. 7C): well-developed coxal gnathobase, with a straight row of moderately incised teeth and patched spinules on the anterior and posterior corners. Mandibular palp biramous; basis with four setae on inner margin. Exopod 5-segmented, with setal formula of 1, 1, 1, 1, 2; endopod 2-segmented, proximal with 4 setae and distal segments with 10 setae.</p>
            <p>Maxillule (Fig. 8A): praecoxal arthrite bearing nine stout marginal spines and four elements on posterior surface, rows of tiny spinules on the posterior surface. Coxal epipodite with nine setae; coxal endite with three stiff setae. Basis with cluster of denticles on the anterior surface; proximal basal endite with four setae; distal basal endite indistinct, with five setae; no trace of basal exite. Exopod with eleven marginal setae; with row of setules along the distal portion of the medial margin. Endopod not articulated to basis, indistinctly 3-segmented, setal formula 4, 4, 7.</p>
            <p>Maxilla (Fig. 8B): apparently 6-segmented, comprising coalesced praecoxa and coxa, allobasis, and 3-segmented endopod. Armature of praecoxal and coxal endites 5, 3, 3, 3, respectively. Basal endite with four setae, one stouter than the rest; endopodal endite with one seta on tip. Free endopod setal formula 1, 1, 3, respectively. Integument of praecoxa ornamented with a patch of spinules on the posterior margin. Praecoxal and coxal endites with a cluster of long spinules subdistally on the lateral surface; distal coxal endite with an additional row of spinules proximally on the medial surface.</p>
            <p>Maxilliped (Fig. 8C): syncoxa robust, with setal formula 1, 2, 2, 3 and an oblique row of tiny spinules on the anterior distal part; basis with three setae and patched setules on the mediolateral margin; endopod 6-segmented, with setal formula 2, 4, 4, 3, 3+1, 4.</p>
            <p> Legs 1-4 (Fig. 8D-G) progressively larger towards the posterior, each comprising coxa, basis, and 3-segmented exopod; endopod of leg 1 (Fig. 8D) 1-segmented, that of leg 2 (Fig. 8E) 2-segmented; endopods of leg 3 (Fig. 8F) and P4 (Fig. 8G) 3-segmented. Armature formula of legs 1-4 as follows in  S. jejuensis sp. nov. </p>
            <p>Leg 1 (Fig. 8D) biramous, with long curved inner setae on the basis, and endopod with lobe on the outer margin, bearing a minute spinous process and a row of minute spinules on the dorsal surface.</p>
            <p>Leg 2 (Fig. 8E) biramous, endopod 2-segmented; coxa and basis unarmed; second endopodal segments with a row of spinules on medial and distal edges, with pointed process on the distolateral corner; exopod 3-segmented, with a row of spinules on the medio to distal margins of the distal exopodal segment.</p>
            <p>Legs 3 (Fig. 8F) and 4 (Fig. 8G) biramous, with 3-segmented rami: coxa and basis unarmed; second and distal endopodal segments with a row of spinules on the distal edges, with a pointed process on each distolateral corner; exopod with row of spinules on the medio to distal margins of the distal exopodal segment, except for a row of spinules on the posterior surface of leg 4 basis.</p>
            <p> Leg 5 (Fig. 6F) symmetric, uniramous, 3-segmented with a proximal segment fused to intercoxal sclerite; basis separated, 2.53 times longer than wide (38  × 15  μm ) and unarmed. Distal segment constricted slightly at ca. mid-length with five large spinules and a large seta medially and with two rows of teeth on both lateral each sides as figured. </p>
            <p>Male. Not collected.</p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The new species  Stephos concavus sp. nov. is easily recognized by its four diagnostic features in the female: the genital double-somite with a protruding lobe on the anterior to medial part of both lateral sides; the presence of seven large rows of spinules on the left side of the genital double-somite; the basis of leg 5 is separated, 2.53 times longer than wide; and the presence of large spinules mediodistally on distal segment of leg 5. </p>
            <p> The new species closely resembles  S. cryptospinosus (Zagami et al. 2000), but it differs in the following features in the female: the body length is 0.93 mm (vs. 0.86 mm in  S. cryptospinosus ); the presence of seven spinules on the left side of the genital double-somite (vs. absence in  S. cryptospinosus ); the antennule extends beyond the distal end of the genital double-somite (vs. beyond the posterior margin of the prosome in  S. cryptospinosus ); the presence of large spinules on the mediodistal margin of leg 5 distal segment (vs. absence in  S. cryptospinosus ); and the terminal segment with teeth on both sides and large spinules mediodistally on both fifth legs (vs. absence in  S. cryptospinosus ). </p>
            <p> Stephos concavus differs from another congener  S. longipes (Giesbrecht, 1902) in the following features of the female: the genital double-somite with protruding lobe on the anterior to medial part of both sides (vs. triangular lobe on the medial part of both sides in  S. longipes ); the presence of a row of spinules on the left side of the genital double-somite (vs. absence in  S. longipes ); the absence of a row of minute spinules on the dorsodistal surface of the genital double-somite (vs. presence in  S. longipes ); the leg 5 distal segment is tapering and stout (vs. tapering and not stout in  S. longipes ); and the teeth on the outer margin of both sides (vs. finely serrated fringe on the outer margin in  S. longipes ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/069DFB130DFC515E8972A1767130E483	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Moon, Seong Yong;Soh, Ho Young;Cho, Dae Hyun	Moon, Seong Yong, Soh, Ho Young, Cho, Dae Hyun (2020): Three new species of the genus Stephos Scott, 1892 (Crustacea, Copepoda, Calanoida, Stephidae) from Jeju Island, Korea. ZooKeys 944: 1-30, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.944.49361, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.944.49361
886448FD601657EAB716F8492C50BCBE.text	886448FD601657EAB716F8492C50BCBE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stephos fortipes Moon & Soh & Cho 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Stephos fortipes sp. nov. Figures 9, 10, 11 </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype ♀ (NIBRIV0000293110) dissected on a glass slide collected by D. H. Cho, 9 May 2012.</p>
            <p>Type locality.</p>
            <p>Near the bottom (ca. 4 m depth), Wimi port, Jeju Island (approximately 33°16'13"N, 126°39'43"E), Korea.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The specific name  fortipes is the combination of Latin words fortis (strong) and pes (leg), alluding to the strong feature of the female fifth leg. </p>
            <p>Description of female.</p>
            <p> Body (Fig. 9A, B) robust, length 1.12 mm. Prosome five-segmented; cephalosome and first pedigerous somites completely separated; fourth and fifth pedigerous somites incompletely fused (Fig. 9A), posterior corners of prosome slightly asymmetric. Rostrum represented by a rounded knob. Prosome-urosome ratio 2.45:1. Urosome 4-segmented, comprising a genital double-somite, two free abdominal somites, and anal somite; length ratio of genital double-somite, first free abdominal somite, second free abdominal somite, and anal somite as 39.1: 18.7: 17.1:15.1:10.0 = 100. Genital double-somite (Fig. 9C, E) slightly asymmetric with a differing groups of minute spinules on each side, anterior to mid-length; on the left side is a group of minute spinules that tend to be obscured by detritus and difficult to observe, patches and rows of fine spinules on the right side; genital double-somite not produced ventrally, operculum slightly round, with rows of spinules on the ventral surface. First and second abdominal somites (Fig. 9C), with transverse hyaline frill dorsally and ventrally. Anal somite shortest. Caudal rami (Fig. 9F), with six setae, symmetric, 1.19 times longer than wide (56  × 47  μm ), with minute spinules on the dorsal surface; caudal setae II to VII present (seta I lacking); seta II spiniform, seta III ca. half the length of seta V, seta V longer (right longer than left) than seta IV, both plumose; dorsal seta VII short, plumose. </p>
            <p>Antennule (Fig. 10A) symmetric, extending near to distal area of genital double-somite; 24-segmented, apparently ancestral, segments I-II, III-IV, X-XI, and XXVII-XXVIII are fused. Segmentation and setation pattern as follows (ancestral segment number-setae+aesthetasc): I-II-3+ae, III-IV-4+3ae, V-2+ae, VI-2, VII-2+ae, VIII2+ae, IX-2, X-XI-4+ae, XII-1, XIII-1, XIV-2+ae, XV-1, XVI-2+ae, XVII-1, XVIII-1, XIX-1, XX-1, XXI-1+ae, XXII-1, XXIII-1, XXIV-1+1, XXV-1+1, XXVI-1+1, XXVII-XXVIII-5+ae. Ancestral segments I-XIV and XVI-XXV with a row of spinules on the posterior surface.</p>
            <p>Antenna (Fig. 10B) biramous; coxa and basis separate, coxa with one and basis with two setae; endopod 2-segmented, proximal segment with two setae, compound distal segment bilobed with eight and seven plumose setae subterminally and terminally, respectively, outer margin ornamented with a small serrated process subdistally on the medial margin; tiny spinule adjacent to the serrated process; exopod 7-segmented, with intersegmental articulation between segments 2 and 3 not completely expressed, with setal formula of 1, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 3.</p>
            <p>Mandible (Fig. 10C): well-developed coxal gnathobase, with a straight row of moderately incised teeth, ornamented with spinule rows on the medioventral part. Mandibular palp biramous; basis with four setae on inner margin. Exopod 5-segmented, with setal formula of 1, 1, 1, 1, 2; endopod 2-segmented, proximal with four setae and distal segments with ten setae.</p>
            <p>Maxillule (Fig. 10D): praecoxa and coxa incompletely fused; praecoxal arthrite with ten marginal spines plus four stiff setae on posterior surface, rows of tiny spinules on posterior surface. Coxal epipodite with nine setae; coxal endite with three stiff setae. Basis with cluster of denticles on the anterior surface; proximal basal endite with four setae; distal basal endite indistinct, with five setae; no trace of basal exite. Exopod with eleven marginal setae. A row of setules along the distal portion of the medial margin. Endopod not articulated to basis, indistinctly 3-segmented, setal formula 4, 4, 7.</p>
            <p>Maxilla (Fig. 10E): apparently 6-segmented, comprising coalesced praecoxa and coxa, allobasis, and 3-segmented endopod. Armature of praecoxal and coxal endites 5,3,3,3, respectively. Basal endite with four setae, one stouter than the rest; endopodal endite with one seta on tip. Free endopod setal formula 1, 1, 3, respectively. Integument of praecoxa ornamented with patch of spinules on the posterior margin. Praecoxal and coxal endites with a cluster of long spinules subdistally on the lateral surface; distal coxal endite with an additional row of spinules proximally on the medial surface.</p>
            <p>Maxilliped (Fig. 10F): syncoxa robust, with setal formula 1, 2, 2, 3 and an oblique row of tiny spinules on the posterior distal part; basis with three setae and a row of setules on the mediolateral margin; endopod six-segmented, with setal formula 2, 4, 4, 3, 3+1, 4.</p>
            <p> Legs 1-4 (Fig. 11A-D), progressively larger towards posterior, each comprising coxa, basis, and 3-segmented exopod; endopod of leg 1 (Fig. 11A) 1-segmented, that of leg 2 (Fig. 11B) 2-segmented; endopods of leg 3 (Fig. 11C) and P4 (Fig. 11D) 3-segmented. Armature formula of legs 1-4 as in  S. jejuensis sp. nov. </p>
            <p>Leg 1 (Fig. 11A) biramous, coxa with hairs and spinules on the inner and posterior surfaces; basis with a row of spinules on the inner distal corner and long, curved inner setae, and endopod with a lobe on the outer margin, bearing a minute spinous process; second and distal exopodal segments with patched minute spinules; second and terminal exopodal segment with a row of spinules on the posterior margin.</p>
            <p>Leg 2 (Fig. 11B) biramous, endopod 2-segmented; coxa with hairs on the inner margin, row of spinules on the posterior surface; basis unarmed; each first and second endopodal with row of spinules on the medial and distal edge, with pointed process on distolateral corner; exopod 3-segmented, with a row of spinules on the medio to distal margins of distal exopodal segment.</p>
            <p>Legs 3 (Fig. 11C) and 4 (Fig. 11D) biramous, with 3-segmented rami: coxa with hairs on the inner margin and a row of spinules on the anterior surface; first to distal endopodal segments with a row of spinules on distal edges, with pointed process on each distolateral corner; exopod with a row of spinules on the medio to distal margins of distal exopodal segment.</p>
            <p> Leg 5 (Fig. 11E) symmetric, uniramous, 3-segmented with proximal segment fused to intercoxal sclerite; basis separated from the single, tapering terminal segment. Second segment (basis) 1.38 times longer than wide (44  × 32  μm ), with an anteromedial patch of minute spinules on the anterior surface. Distal segment constricted slightly at ca. mid-length with seven large spinules and inner stout spine and with two rows of denticles along the tapering portion </p>
            <p>Male. Not collected.</p>
            <p>Variations.</p>
            <p> Within this new species, there was a  minor variation in the number of spinules on the genital double-somite and on the surfaces of legs 1-4 in the female. </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The new species closely resembles its congeners  S. angulatus Bradford-Grieve, 1999,  S. hastatus , and  S. pacificus Ohtsuka &amp; Hiromi, 1987; however, it differs in the following characteristics in the female: the antennule extends to the end of the genital double-somite (vs. first abdominal segment end in  S. angulatus , and fifth pedigerous end in  S. hastatus and  S. pacificus ); the operculum is slightly round (vs. triangular in three species); and the stout and present large row of spinules on the terminal tapering part of leg 5 (vs. not stout and absent in three species). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/886448FD601657EAB716F8492C50BCBE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Moon, Seong Yong;Soh, Ho Young;Cho, Dae Hyun	Moon, Seong Yong, Soh, Ho Young, Cho, Dae Hyun (2020): Three new species of the genus Stephos Scott, 1892 (Crustacea, Copepoda, Calanoida, Stephidae) from Jeju Island, Korea. ZooKeys 944: 1-30, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.944.49361, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.944.49361
9CAAB50A1D81593BAFFC6528673FE433.text	9CAAB50A1D81593BAFFC6528673FE433.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stephos jejuensis Moon & Soh & Cho 2020	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Stephos jejuensis sp. nov. Figures 2, 3, 4, 5 </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype ♀ (NIBRIV0000840220), allotype ♂ (NIBRIV0000840219) undissected in 70% ethanol, 11 November 2012. Dissected paratypes ♀ (NIBRIV0000840221), ♂ (NIBRIV0000840222) mounted on two glass slides, 11 November 2011. All specimens collected by D. H. Cho.</p>
            <p>Type locality.</p>
            <p>Near the bottom (ca. 5 m depth), Pyoseon port, Jeju Island (33°19'32"N, 126°50'42"E), Korea.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The specific name of the new species  jejuensis refers to the type locality. </p>
            <p>Description of female.</p>
            <p> Body (Fig. 2A, B) robust, length 0.92 mm (mean 0.91  ± 0.03, N = 3). Prosome 5-segmented; cephalosome and first pedigerous somites completely separated; fourth and fifth pedigerous somites incompletely fused (Fig. 2A, B), posterior corners of fifth pedigerous somite slightly asymmetric. Rostrum represented by a rounded knob. Prosome-urosome ratio 2.61:1. Urosome 4-segmented, comprising genital double-somite, two free abdominal somites, and anal somite; length ratio of genital double-somite, first free abdominal somite, second free abdominal somite, and anal somite as 48.2: 14.2: 12.6:11.7:13.4 = 100. Genital double-somite (Fig. 2C, E) asymmetric, with protruding lobe on the anterior to posterior of the left side and a projecting lobe to distal margin, with minute spinules patched in lateral view (Fig. 2D); on the right anterior side is a swollen, common operculum bumpy-shaped ventromedially and with ear lobe on the ventrolateral margin. First and second abdominal somites with transverse hyaline frill dorsally and ventrally. Anal somite short. Caudal rami (Fig. 2F), with six setae, symmetric, 1.45 times longer than wide (44  × 31  μm ); caudal setae II-VII present (seta I lacking); seta II spiniform, seta III ca. half the length of seta V, seta V longer (right longer than left) than seta IV, both plumose; dorsal seta VII short, plumose. </p>
            <p>Antennule (Fig. 3A) symmetric, extending beyond the distal area of genital double-somite; 24-segmented, apparently ancestral. Segments I-II, III-IV, X-XI, and XXVII-XXVIII are fused. Segmentation and setation pattern as follows (ancestral segment number-setae+aesthetasc): I-II-3+2ae, III-IV-4+3ae, V-2+ae, VI-2, VII-2+ae, VIII2+ae, IX-2, X-XI-4+ae, XII-1, XIII-1, XIV-2+ae, XV-1, XVI-2+ae, XVII-1, XVIII-1, XIX-1, XX-1, XXI-1+ae, XXII-1, XXIII-1+ae, XXIV-1+1, XXV-1+1, XXVI-1+1, XXVII-XXVIII-5+ae. Ancestral segments I to XIV and XVI to XXV with a row of spinules on the posterior surface.</p>
            <p>Antenna (Fig. 3B) biramous; coxa and basis separate, coxa with one and basis with two setae; endopod 2-segmented, proximal segment with two setae, compound distal segment bilobed with eight and seven plumose setae subterminally and terminally, respectively, outer margin ornamented with small serrated process subdistally on the medial margin; tiny spinule adjacent to serrated process; exopod 7-segmented, with intersegmental articulation between segments 2 and 3 not completely expressed, with setal formula of 1, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 3.</p>
            <p>Mandible (Fig. 3C): well-developed coxal gnathobase, with a straight row of moderately incised teeth. Mandibular palp biramous; basis with four setae on the inner margin. Exopod 5-segmented, with setal formula of 1, 1, 1, 1, 2; endopod 2-segmented, proximal with four setae and distal segments with ten setae.</p>
            <p>Maxillule (Fig. 3D): praecoxal arthrite bearing nine stout marginal spines and four elements on posterior surface, rows of tiny spinules on the posterior surface. Coxal epipodite with nine setae; coxal endite with three stiff setae. Basis with cluster of denticles on the anterior surface; proximal basal endite with four setae; distal basal endite indistinct, with five setae; no trace of basal exite. Exopod with eleven marginal setae and a row of setules along the distal portion of the medial margin. Endopod not articulated to basis, indistinctly 3-segmented, setal formula 4, 4, 7.</p>
            <p>Maxilla (Fig. 3E): apparently 6-segmented, comprising coalesced praecoxa and coxa, allobasis and 3-segmented endopod. Armature of praecoxal and coxal endites 5,3,3,3. Basal endite with four setae, one stouter than the rest; endopodal endite with one seta on tip. Free endopod setal formula 1, 1, 3 respectively. Integument of praecoxa ornamented with patch of spinules on the posterior margin. Praecoxal and coxal endites with cluster of long spinules subdistally on the lateral surface; distal coxal endite with additional row of spinules proximally on the medial surface.</p>
            <p>Maxilliped (Fig. 4A): syncoxa robust, with setal formula 1, 2, 2, 3 and oblique row of tiny spinules on the posterior distal part; basis with three setae and a row of setules on the mediolateral margin; endopod 6-segmented, with setal formula 2, 4, 4, 3, 3+1, 4.</p>
            <p>Legs 1-4 (Fig. 4B-E) progressively larger toward the posterior, each comprising coxa, basis, and 3-segmented exopod; endopod of leg 1 (Fig. 4B) 1-segmented, that of leg 2 (Fig. 4C) 2-segmented; endopods of P3 (Fig. 4D) and leg 4 (Fig. 4E) 3-segmented. Armature formula of legs 1-4 as follows (Roman numerals indicate spines, Arabic numeral indicates setae):</p>
            <p>Leg 1 (Fig. 4B) biramous, with long curved inner setae on the basis, and endopod with lobe on the outer margin, bearing a minute spinous process and a row of minute spinules on the anterior surface.</p>
            <p>Leg 2 (Fig. 4C) biramous, endopod 2-segmented; coxa and basis unarmed; second endopodal segments with a row of spinules on the medial and distal edges, with a pointed process on the distolateral corner; exopod 3-segmented, with a row of spinules on the medio to distal margins of the distal exopodal segment.</p>
            <p>Legs 3 (Fig. 4D) and 4 (Fig. 4E) biramous, with 3-segmented rami: coxa and basis unarmed; second and distal endopodal segments with a row of spinules on the distal edges, with a pointed process on each of the distolateral corners; exopod with a row of spinules on the medial to distal margins of the distal exopodal segment.</p>
            <p> Leg 5 (Fig. 4F) symmetric, uniramous, 3-segmented with a proximal segment fused to intercoxal sclerite; basis separated, 2.27 times longer than wide (41  × 18  μm ), widening distally with minute spinules on the anterior corner and an acute inner process, and unarmed. Distal segment with a transverse row of spinules across near the middle part and an outer seta medially. </p>
            <p>Description of male.</p>
            <p>Body (Fig. 5A, B) robust, length 0.93 mm. Prosome 5-segmented; cephalosome and first pedigerous somites completely separated; fourth and fifth pedigerous somites incompletely fused (Fig. 5A). Rostrum same as in female. Prosome-urosome ratio 2.18:1. Urosome 5-segmented, comprising genital somite, three free abdominal somites, and anal somite; length ratio of genital somite, first to fourth free abdominal somites, and anal somite as 27.5: 19.2: 16.3: 14.5: 10.9: 11.5 = 100. Genital somite with asymmetric and protruding lobe on the left side. First to third abdominal somites with transverse hyaline frill dorsally and ventrally. Anal somite shortest. Caudal rami similar to those of the female.</p>
            <p>Antennule (Fig. 5C) symmetric, extending beyond the distal area of the genital double-somite; 24-segmented, apparently ancestral; segments I-II, III-IV, X-XI, and XXVII-XXVIII are fused. Segmentation and setation pattern as follows (ancestral segment number-setae+aesthetasc): I-II-3+2ea, III-IV-4+3ae, V-2+ae, VI-2, VII-2+ae, VIII2+ae, IX-2, X-XI-4+ae, XII-1, XIII-1, XIV-2+ae, XV-1, XVI-2+ae, XVII-1, XVIII-1, XIX-1, XX-1, XXI-1+ae, XXII-1, XXIII-1+ae, XXIV-1+1, XXV-1+1, XXVI-1+1, XXVII-XXVIII-5+ae. Ancestral segments I-XIV and XVI-XXV with row of spinules on the posterior surface.</p>
            <p>Antenna, mandible, maxillule, maxilla, maxilliped and legs 1-4 similar to those of the female.</p>
            <p>Leg 5 (Fig. 5D-F), strongly asymmetric, slender on both sides, developed as a grasping organ on the left. Right leg 4-segmented; coxa and basis are short, unarmed, but thickened proximally; terminal segment comprising a single longer process (see arrowed in Fig. 5F), outwardly directed, curved medially, and acute at its tip. Left leg 5-segmented (see Fig. 5E); proximal segment ca. as long as right proximal segment; second segment with rounded outgrowth on medial margin; third segment elongated, unarmed; fourth segment narrow, shorter than third segment; terminal segment complex, with 5 terminal (long) and 5 subterminal (short) lamella spines.</p>
            <p>Variations.</p>
            <p> Within this new species, there was a  minor variation in the number of spinules on the genital double-somite and on the surfaces of legs 1-4 in both sexes. </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The genital double-somite in most species of  Stephos has been found to be symmetric and/or slightly asymmetric in shape. The feature of an asymmetric genital somite in  S. jejuensis sp. nov. is shared with five of its congeners,  S. lamellatus Sars, 1902;  S. tsuyazakiensis Tanaka, 1966;  S. exumensis Fosshagen, 1970;  S. kurilensis Kos, 1972; and  S. robustus Ohtsuka &amp; Hiromi, 1987. Of these,  S. jejuensis has a projecting lobe on the distal margin in the lateral side of the genital double-somite; however, the other five species do not have this feature.  Stephos jejuensis has been group IV. </p>
            <p> In addition,  S. jejuensis expresses by two diagnostic features: the fifth pedigerous somite is slightly asymmetric; and a projecting lobe in the lateral side of the genital double-somite. These features are shared by only one other species:  S. jejuensis can be distinguished from  S. maculosus (Bradford-Grieve 1999) by the following features in the female: the body length is 0.92 mm (vs. 0.62 mm in  S. maculosus ); dorsally the left side of the genital double-somite has anterior and posterior protruding lobes (vs. without protruding lobe in  S. maculosus ); the antennule extends beyond the distal area of the genital double-somite (vs. not beyond the distal area in  S. maculosus ); and the distal segment is less than four times longer than the second segment of leg 5 (vs. more than four times in  S. maculosus ). In the male: the body length is 0.93 mm (vs. 0.54 mm in  S. maculosus ); the antennule extends beyond the distal area of the genital double-somite (vs. beyond the anterior margin of the caudal rami in  S. maculosus ); on the leg 5 fourth segment of the male is narrow (vs. with an finger-like lobe on the medial expansion in  S. maculosus ); and the leg 5 terminal segment complex consists of five terminal (long) and five subterminal (short) lamella spines (vs. not complex, only with three lamella spines in in  S. maculosus ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9CAAB50A1D81593BAFFC6528673FE433	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Moon, Seong Yong;Soh, Ho Young;Cho, Dae Hyun	Moon, Seong Yong, Soh, Ho Young, Cho, Dae Hyun (2020): Three new species of the genus Stephos Scott, 1892 (Crustacea, Copepoda, Calanoida, Stephidae) from Jeju Island, Korea. ZooKeys 944: 1-30, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.944.49361, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.944.49361
