Abstract

A new cumacean genus and species, Speleocuma guanche gen et sp. nov., belonging to the subfamily Mancocumatinae Watling 1977, is described from marine lava caves of Tenerife, Canary Islands. This genus differs from others in the subfamily in having two pairs of pleopods in males and exopods on first to third pereopods, but not on fourth pereopod, in both sexes. Correlation between phylogenetic relationships of the new genus and the geological history of the Canarian archipelago points to a probable origin of this endemism: the subfamily Mancocumatinae show a disjunct distribution on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, a pattern which has been associated with fauna of Tethyan origin. It is suggested that present day genera of the subfamily evolved from a common shallow water ancestor living in the late Mesozoic (c. 120 Myr BP), when the opening of the Atlantic Ocean had begun. It survived in shallow waters off the west African coast before the emergence of the Canary Islands from the sea floor. Later on, between the late Cretaceous and the Mio-Pliocene, it was able to colonize crevicular habitats of the eastern Canary Islands through continental or land bridges. Finally, their numbers increased to occupy more recent biotops like flooded lava tube caves as well as westward islands such as Tenerife.

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