Zoology - Theses

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    The Australian freshwater malacostraca and their epizoic fauna
    Kane, John Richard ( 1964)
    Because of their disjunctive distribution, the Parastacidae (Crustacea, Decapoda) and the Phreatoicoidea (Crustacea, Isopoda) have long been of considerable zoogeographic interest. The Phreatoicoidea are known from South Africa, India, Australia and New Zealand; the Parastacidae from Madagascar, New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand and South America. Of potentially great value, then, is a study of the epizoic fauna found closely associated with these fresh-water crustacea, and in some cases, sharing the disjunctive distribution. When new species of the peritrichous ciliate Lagenophrys were discovered on the cuticle of those crustacea, the opportunity was taken to initiate an investigation into zoogeographical implication of the distribution of a host-epizooid complex. The hosts were of established interest. Lagenophrys was of presumed interest because of low vagility during its dispersal phase, and because of the apparently high specificity of northern hemisphere members of the genus. In this thesis attention has been concentrated on the peritrichous epizooids. Although ideally a study should ultimately analyse the whole complex, the difficulties involved in such disparate taxonomies allowed of brief notes only on the other groups. Observations of the genus Temnocephala are included in the systematic section below but the other groups will be merely mentioned. Half the thesis is devoted to problems directly concerning the Parastacidae. For maximum value from the data on the epizoic fauna, precise determinations of host species were essential. In the course of investigation, it became clear that a review of Parastacidae systematics would be a prerequisite. (It will be seen that the Parastacidae form the most important group of hosts for the peritrichs investigated.) This situation arose partly from the lack of facilities at present obtaining in Australia for identification of the Parastacidae, and partly from ambiguities in the currently accepted systematics. These problems are posted in the section on Parastacidae, and their influence on problems of specificity is discussed in the final section.