Three juvenile instars (A-3, A-2, A-1) of Deeveya spiralis from caves in Cottage Pond, North Caicos Island, and Conch Bar Cave, Conch Bar, Middle Caicos Island, are described and illustrated. The ontogeny of the species is compared with that of Deeveya bransoni Kornicker & Palmer, 1987. The changes that take place during the ontogeny of members of the genus are described.
Kornicker & Iliffe (1985:476) described Deeveya spiralis from an anchialine cave “The Hole,” Providenciales Island, Turks and Caicos Islands, Bahamas. That collection contained two adult females. The present collection from Cottage Pond, North Caicos Island, and Conch Bar Cave, Middle Caicos Island, contained one adult female and four juvenile instars. The latter included an A-1, A-2, and A-3 instar, which are described herein. Deeveya spiralis is the type species for the genus Deeveya, which is the type for the subfamily Deeveyinae. That subfamily also contains the genus Spelaeoecia Angel & Iliffe, 1987, which has been collected elsewhere in the Bahamas, as well as in Bermuda, Cuba, and Yucatan, Mexico. Species of Deeveya are known only from anchialine caves and a few ocean blue holes in the Bahamas.
Biological collections from anchialine caves in the Caicos Islands have yielded especially interesting discoveries, including a number of new higher taxa. In addition to description of the new ostracode subfamily Deeveyinae by Kornicker & Iliffe (1985), a new copepod superfamily Fosshagenioidea (Suárez-Morales & Iliffe 1996), a new remipede family Micropacteridae (Koenemann et al. 2007); three new remipede genera Lasionectes (Yager & Schram, 1986), Godzillius (Schram et al., 1986), and Kaloketos (Koenemann et al., 2004); two new copepod genera Erebonectoides (Fosshagen & Iliffe, 1994) and Caiconectes (Fosshagen & Iliffe, 2007); a new shrimp genus Agostocaris (Hart & Manning, 1986); a new genus of nebaliacean Speonebalia (Bowman et al., 1995); and a new polychaete genus Pelagomacellicephala (Pettibone, 1985) have been described from this locality.
Disposition of Specimens
Specimens are deposited in the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, and have been assigned USNM catalog numbers.
Description of Collecting Localities
The Caicos Islands consist of a group of small islands comprising South Caicos, East Caicos, Middle Caicos, North Caicos, Providenciales, West Caicos, and numerous small cays along the northern edge of Caicos Bank (Fig. 1). They are a geographical and geological southward extension of the Bahamas archipelago.
Cottage Pond is a submerged sinkhole located 4 km inland from the coast on North Caicos Island (Fig. 1). The pond consists of a 50 m diameter, nearly circular, pool in a shallow, rock-rimmed depression. Tidal amplitude in the pond is approximately 50 cm. The pond water is somewhat murky, seasonally limiting underwater visibility at the surface to about 1–3 m. Near the center of the pond at about 20 m depth, a 12 m long vertical crack opens into a 70 m diameter collapse chamber reaching water depths of 80 m (Fig. 2). At 15–20 m depth, several tree stumps in growth position with roots intact indicate periods of lower sea level. Directly below the crack is a conical debris mound beginning at 40 m depth and extending to the bottom of the chamber. Several large logs and boulders are located on the lower slope of the debris mound. Submerged stalactites and flowstone, evidence of prior subaerial exposure, are present to at least 45 m depth. A Hydrolab Datasonde 3 was used to obtain a water-quality profile from the cave (Fig. 3). Surface water in the pond in June 2003 was slightly brackish (2.9‰), relatively warm (30.7°C), saturated with dissolved oxygen (7.5 mg/l) and slightly basic (pH 7.77). A halocline began at 8 m depth and stabilized at 30‰ salinity by 24 m depth. At this point, the temperature had decreased substantially to 24.13°C, DO to 0.42 mg/l and pH to 6.59. In the deeper waters below the halocline, the salinity remained nearly constant while DO and temperature continued to decline and pH increased slightly. At the deepest depth monitored with the Hydrolab (64.4 m), salinity was 30.6‰, temperature 22.35°C, DO 0.18 mg/l and pH 6.63. In addition to Deeveya spiralis, other stygobitic animals collected from salt water below the halocline in Cottage Pond consist of the remipedes Godzillius robustus, Lasionectes entrichoma and Kaloketos pilosus (Koenemann et al., 2004); a leptostracan, probably Speonebalia cannoni; a new species of cirolanid isopod, Bahalana caicosana (Botosaneanu & Iliffe, 2003); the agostocarid shrimp Agostocaris williamsi; and copepods including the epacteriscids Caiconectes antiquus and Azygonectes plumosus, a diaptomid, probably a Mastigodiaptomus species, and a tiny ridgewayiid (Fosshagen & Iliffe 2007).
Conch Bar Cave on Middle Caicos Island is one of the larger caves in the Bahamian archipelago, with more than 2 miles (3.3 km) of surveyed passage (Gregor 1981, Richards 2000) (Fig. 1). The cave consists of interconnected passages and domes developed on four horizontal levels. The uppermost level is made up of discontinuous relict cave passages at 12–16 m above present sea level. The main level is the most extensive part of the cave with rock floor at 2–6 m above sea level. The next level consists of partially flooded rooms with rock bottom down to 2 m below sea level, while the lowest section of the cave is completely submerged with water depths to 15 m. Although there is no direct connection with the sea, water levels in the cave vary tidally by about 80 cm. Water in the cave is brackish at the surface and fully marine at depth. Animals collected from the cave include the hippolytid shrimp Barbouria cubensis, the polynoid polychaete Pelagomacellicephala iliffei, the mysid Stygiomysis clarkei, cirolanid isopods, and the calanoid copepods Fosshagenia ferrarii, Erebonectoides macrochaetus, Caiconectes antiquus and Bofuriella spinosa. The cave is also inhabited by four species of bats from the family Phyllostomidae, including the big-eared bat Macrotus waterhousii, Cuban fruit-eating bat Brachyphylla nana, buffy flower bat Erophylla sezekorni, and Leach's long-tongued bat Monophyllus redmani (Darwin Initiative 2002). The bat population in Conch Bar Cave numbers approximately 1000–1500 individuals, with many bats roosting directly over pools in the cave, such that their guano likely provides an important food resource for aquatic fauna.
The Hole on Providenciales Island (Fig. 1) was described in Kornicker & Iliffe (1985:477–478). Animals collected in the cave included a nebaliacean Speonebalia cannoni, and a crab Sesarma miersii.
Order Halocyprida Dana, 1853
Suborder Halocypridina Dana, 1853
Superfamily Halocypridoidea Dana, 1853
Family Deeveyidae Kornicker & Iliffe, 1985
Subfamily Deeveyinae Kornicker & Iliffe, 1985
Deeveya Kornicker & Iliffe, 1985
Type Species
Deeveya spiralis Kornicker & Iliffe, 1985.
Deeveya spiralis Kornicker & Iliffe, 1985
Figs. 4–Figure 5Figure 6Figure 7Figure 8Figure 9Figure 10Figure 11Figure 12Figure 1314
Deeveya spiralis Kornicker & Iliffe, 1985:477, figs. 1–12.—Kornicker & Palmer, 1987:619, fig. 6.—Kornicker et al., 1990:37, figs. 22a, 23a, 30.—Kornicker et al., 2007:56, tab. 10, 11.
Material Examined
Sta 03-016, 9 Jun 2003, Cottage Pond, North Caicos Island, 25–46 m depth: USNM 1111743, complete specimen in alcohol, length 2.62 mm, height 1.84 mm (probably A-1 instar but could be adult; specimen not opened in order to have whole specimen in museum collection); USNM 1111773, A-2 instar on slides and in alcohol. Sta 03-019, 9 Jun 2003, Cottage Pond, North Caicos Island, 25–30 m depth: USNM 1111777, adult female with body removed from carapace, in alcohol; USNM 1111779, A-1 male on slide and in alcohol. Sta 03-022, 9 Jun 2003, Conch Bar Cave, Conch Bar, Middle Caicos Island, 0.5–15 m depth: USNM 1111780, A-3 instar on slide and in alcohol. Specimens collected from water column with vials and plankton net.
Distribution
Caicos Islands (Fig. 1)
The Hole (21°47′N, 72°1′W), Providenciales Island, 7 m depth; Cottage Pond (21°56′N, 72°00′W), North Caicos Island, 25–46 m depth; Conch Bar Cave (21°49′N, 71°49′W), Conch Bar, Middle Caicos Island, 0–15 m depth. Known depth range 7–46 m.
Description of A-3 Instar (sex Unknown) (Figs. 4–Figure 5Figure 67a–C)
Carapace oval in lateral view with slightly concave anterior margin and projecting glandular process on posterior corner of dorsal margin of right valve (Fig. 4C, D).
Ornamentation (Fig. 4b)
In outside view with transmitted light, clear ovals visible lateral to reticulations; ovals located at intersections of underlying reticulations. Similar to ornamentation of adult female valves illustrated in Kornicker & Iliffe (1985:figs. 3–6).
First Antenna (Figs. 4e, F, 6g)
Elongate with 8 articles. Article 1 with distal lateral spines. Article 2 with spines and spinous dorsal bristle near midlength. Article 3 with spines and ventral bristle. Article 4 short, with terminal dorsal bristle. Article 5 short, with short terminal ventral bristle. Article 6 short, bare. Article 7 with short dorsal a-bristle and 2 ventral bristles (short b-bristle, long c-bristle with widely separated short marginal spines). Article 8 with long e-bristle with widely separated short marginal spines and shorter filament-like d-, f-, and g-bristles. Article 2 may be aberrant in having indistinct broad bristle-like terminal branch. Left limb of USNM 1111780 without bristle on fourth article.
Second Antenna (Fig. 4g–I)
Protopod with distal medial spines near endopod. Endopod with 3 articles: article 1 with dorsal bristle; article 2 with long filament-like f-bristle and much longer g-bristle with distal widely separated minute marginal spines; minute lateral triangular process on margin just dorsal to f-bristle; article 3 with long filamentous h-, i-, and j-bristles (j-bristle missing on right limb of USNM 1111780, possibly broken off). Exopod with 9 articles: article 1 divided subterminally by weak medial suture, with 1 short terminal bristle; articles 2 to 8 with long bristle with natatory hairs; article 9 with 3 bristles (1 short, 1 medium, 1 long).
Mandible (Fig. 5a–C)
Coxa endite with proximal and distal sets of teeth separated by space; proximal set with 4 stout cusps; numerous spines anterior and posterior to cusps and between cusps, and 1 indistinct small spinous bristle posterior to cusps. Stout rounded tooth between proximal and distal sets of teeth, with 2 spinous bristles adjacent to tooth. Distal set of teeth comprising 2 flat teeth, each with 4 or 5 cusps; 2 broad sclerotized flat bristles lateral to distal set of teeth; 1 small lateral bristle adjacent to bases of the sclerotized flat bristles. Basis with 4 proximal bristles (1 plumose dorsal, 1 long slender lateral near endopod and with minute marginal spines, and 2 plumose medial bristles (1 long, 1 shorter) on small node). Basis endite: anterior margin with single distal bristle; posterior margin with proximal hairs, 1 short bristle proximal to 1 short tubular bristle; lateral side with 4 slender bristles forming row, 1 stouter and longer bristle distal bristle forming spiral, and 1 short stout tooth just proximal to distal end of endite; ventral edge of endite with 6 terminal cusps (posterior cusp smaller than others). Endopod with 3 articles. Article 1 with 1 spinous distal dorsal bristle. Article 2 with 2 spinous dorsal terminal bristles (1 claw-like with distal rings), and 1 spinous terminal ventral bristle. Article 3 with dorsal (anterior) and medial hairs, 3 medial terminal spinous bristles forming row, and 3 stout spinous terminal bristles [dorsal (anterior) of these with base slightly medial; middle bristle longest and with slightly recurved tip].
Maxilla (fourth Limb) (fig. 5d–I)
Endite I with 2 proximal and 8 terminal bristles (2 tubular); endite II with 2 proximal and about 6 terminal (1 or 2 tubular) bristles; endite III with 1 proximal and about 5 terminal (about 2 tubular) bristles. Coxa with stout spinous dorsal bristle. Basis with 2 terminal bristles (1 dorsal, 1 ventral). Endopod: first article with 3 anterior and 3 distal posterior bristles; second article with long hairs along anterior margin, 2 stout pectinate terminal claws, and 4 terminal bristles.
Fifth Limb (Fig. 6a)
Epipod: dorsal group with 4 long bristles; middle group with 6 long bristles; ventral group with 5 bristles (4 long, 1 short). Precoxa and coxa with 18 bristles and 1 small spinous medial ventral process. Basis with 6 bristles. Exopod represented by 2 bristles (1 long bare, 1 shorter plumose). Endopod: first article with 3 bristles (2 ventral, 1 dorsal); second article with 2 long and 2 short bristles.
Sixth Limb (Fig. 6b–D)
Tip of limb extends well past tip of fifth limb. Epipod (Fig. 6C, D): dorsal group with 6 or 7 bristles; middle group with 6 bristles; ventral group with 5 bristles. Precoxa and coxa with 5 ventral bristles. Basis with 5 bristles. Exopod with 4 long bristles (Fig. 6B). Endopod: first and second articles fused, with 2 bristles (1 dorsal, 1 ventral) on second article; third article with 2 long claw-like bristles and 1 short slender bristle.
Furca (Fig. 6f)
Each lamella with 5 claws followed by small node. Lamellae followed by unpaired bristle. Small glandular process between claws 1 and 2. Apron anterior to furca.
Description of A-2 Instar (sex Unknown) (Fig. 7d–I)
Carapace oval in lateral view with slightly concave anterior margin and projecting glandular process on posterior corner of dorsal margin of right valve (Fig. 7D). Bifurcate bristles along anterior and ventral margins.
Ornamentation (Fig. 7e)
In outside view with transmitted light, clear ovals visible lateral to reticulations; ovals located at intersections of underlying reticulations. Similar to ornamentation of adult female valves illustrated in Kornicker & Iliffe (1985:figs. 3–6).
First Antenna (Fig. 7f)
Elongate, with 8 articles. Article 1 with distal lateral spines. Article 2 with spines and spinous dorsal bristle near midlength. Article 3 with spines and ventral bristle. Article 4 short with terminal dorsal bristle. Article 5 short with long terminal ventral bristle. Article 6 short, bare. Article 7 with short dorsal a-bristle and 2 long b- and c-bristles (latter with short widely separated marginal spines). Article 8 with long e-bristle with widely separated short marginal spines and shorter filament-like d-, f-, and g-bristles with few minute spines.
Second Antenna (Fig. 7g–I)
Protopod with distal spines near endopod. Endopod with 3 articles: article 1 with 2 dorsal bristles; article 2 with long filament-like f-bristle and much longer g-bristle with distal widely separated minute marginal spines; minute lateral triangular process on margin just dorsal to f-bristle; article 3 with long filamentous h-, i-, and j-bristles. Exopod with 9 articles: article 1 divided subterminally by weak medial suture, with 1 short terminal bristle; articles 2 to 8 with long bristle with natatory hairs; article 9 with 4 bristles (1 short, 1 medium, 2 long).
Mandible (Fig. 8a–D)
Coxa endite with proximal and distal sets of teeth separated by space; proximal set with 4 stout cusps; numerous spines anterior and posterior to cusps and between cusps, and 1 indistinct small spinous bristle posterior to cusps. Stout rounded tooth between proximal and distal sets of teeth, with 2 spinous bristles adjacent to tooth. Distal set of teeth comprising 2 flat teeth; each with 5 or 6 cusps; 2 broad sclerotized flat bristles lateral to distal set of teeth; 1 small lateral bristle adjacent to bases of the sclerotized flat bristles. Basis with 4 proximal bristles (1 plumose dorsal, 1 long slender lateral near endopod and with minute marginal spines, and 2 plumose bristles on small medial node). Basis endite: anterior margin with single distal bristle; posterior margin with proximal hairs, 1 short bristle proximal to 1 short tubular bristle; lateral side with 4 proximal slender bristles, 2 stouter and longer entwined, spiral, distal bristles (bristles cross each other 3 times; anterior bristle longer and stouter), and 1 short stout tooth just proximal to distal end of endite; ventral edge of endite with 6 terminal cusps (posterior cusp smaller than others). Endopod with 3 articles. Article 1 with 3 distal bristles (1 ventral, 1 dorsal, 1 medial). Article 2 with 4 spinous distal bristles (1 ventral, 3 dorsal, including 1 claw-like bristle with distal rings). Article 3 with dorsal (anterior) and medial hairs, 4 medial terminal spinous bristles forming row, and 3 stout spinous terminal bristles (dorsal (anterior) of these with base slightly medial; middle bristle longest and with slightly recurved tip).
Maxilla (fourth Limb) (Fig. 8e–G)
Endite I with 2 proximal and 9 terminal bristles (3 tubular); endite II with 2 proximal and 8 terminal (3 tubular) bristles; endite III with 1 proximal and 6 terminal (about 2 tubular) bristles. Coxa with stout spinous dorsal bristle. Basis with 2 terminal bristles (1 dorsal, 1 ventral). Endopod: first article with 3 anterior bristles and 4 distal posterior bristles; second article with long hairs along anterior margin, 2 stout pectinate terminal claws, and 4 terminal bristles.
Fifth Limb (Fig. 9a)
Epipod: dorsal group with 4 long bristles; middle group with 6 long bristles; ventral group with 5 bristles (4 long, 1 short). Precoxa and coxa with 22 bristles and 1 small spinous medial ventral process. Basis with 8 bristles. Exopod represented by 2 bristles (1 long bare, 1 shorter plumose). Endopod: first article with 4 bristles (3 ventral, 1 dorsal); second article with 2 long and 2 shorter bristles.
Sixth Limb (Fig. 9b, C)
Tip of limb extends well past tip of fifth limb. Epipod (Fig. 9C): dorsal group with 7 bristles; middle group with 6 bristles; ventral group with 5 bristles. Precoxa and coxa with 6 ventral bristles. Basis with 6 bristles. Exopod with 4 long bristles. Endopod: first article with 2 ventral bristles; second article with 2 bristles (1 ventral, 1 dorsal); 3rd article with 2 long claw-like bristles and 2 slender bristles.
Furca (Fig. 9d)
Each lamella with 6 claws followed by small node. Lamellae followed by unpaired bristle. Small glandular process between claws 1 and 2. Apron anterior to furca.
Description of A-1 Male (Figs. 10c–H, 14a–E)
Carapace oval in lateral view with slightly concave anterior margin and projecting glandular process on posterior corner of dorsal margin of right valve (Fig. 10C). Few bifurcate bristles along anterior and ventral margins.
Ornamentation
In outside view with transmitted light clear ovals visible lateral to reticulations; ovals located at intersections of underlying reticulations. Similar to ornamentation of adult female valves illustrated in Kornicker & Iliffe (1985:figs. 3–6).
First Antenna (Fig. 10e, F)
Elongate with 8 articles. Article 1 with distal lateral spines. Article 2 with spines and spinous dorsal bristle near midlength. Article 3 with spines and ventral bristle. Article 4 short with terminal dorsal bristle. Article 5 short with long terminal ventral bristle. Article 6 short, bare, separated from fifth article by indistinct suture. Article 7 with short dorsal a-bristle and long b- and c-bristles with short widely separated marginal spines (b-bristle missing on both limbs of USNM 1111779, but loose bristle present on slide). Article 8 with long e-bristle with widely separated short marginal spines and shorter filament-like d-, f-, and g-bristles with few minute spines.
Second Antenna (Figs. 10g, H, 11a, B)
Protopod with distal lateral spines near endopod and dorsal margin. Endopod with 3 articles: article 1 with 2 dorsal bristles; article 2 with long filament-like f-bristle and much longer g-bristle with widely separated minute marginal distal spines; minute lateral triangular process near f-bristle (triangular process with base on suture proximal to bases of f- and g-bristles); article 3 with long filamentous h-, i-, and j-bristles and small medial bristle near dorsal margin. Exopod with 9 articles: article 1 divided subterminally by weak medial suture, with 1 short medial terminal bristle and 2 or 3 mi medial bristles with bases proximal to terminal bristle; articles 2 with long bristle with proximal ventral spines and distal natatory hairs; articles 3 to 8 with long bristle with natatory hairs; article 9 with 4 bristles (1 short bare, 1 medium with ventral spines, 2 long bare). [Suture proximal to bases of f- and g-bristles of endopod suggests that bristles may be on third rather than second article. See Skogsberg (1920:580, 581) for discussion of numbering articles of endopod.]
Mandible (Figs. 11c–G, 12a)
Coxa endite with proximal and distal sets of teeth separated by space; proximal set with 4 stout cusps; numerous spines anterior and posterior to cusps and between cusps, and 1 indistinct small spinous bristle posterior to cusps. Two teeth between proximal and distal sets of teeth, with 2 spinous bristles adjacent to teeth. Distal set of teeth comprising 2 flat teeth; each with 5 or 6 cusps; 2 broad sclerotized flat bristles lateral to distal set of teeth; 1 small lateral bristle adjacent to bases of the sclerotized flat bristles. Basis with 4 proximal bristles [1 long plumose dorsal, 1 long slender lateral near endopod and with minute marginal spines, and 2 bristles (1 long plumose, 1 short with indistinct short spines)]. Basis endite: anterior margin with single distal bristle; posterior margin with proximal hairs, 1 short bristle proximal to 1 short tubular bristle; lateral side with 4 proximal slender bristles, 2 stouter and longer entwined, spiral, distal bristles (bristles cross each other 3 times; anterior bristle longer and stouter), and 1 short stout lateral tooth just proximal to distal end of endite; ventral edge of endite with 6 terminal cusps (posterior cusp smaller than others). Endopod with 3 articles. Article 1 with 6 distal bristles (1 ventral, 1 dorsal, 4 medial). Article 2 with 4 spinous distal bristles [1 ventral, 3 dorsal (1 claw-like with distal rings)]. Article 3 with dorsal (anterior) and medial hairs, 5 medial terminal spinous bristles forming row, and 3 stout spinous terminal bristles [dorsal (anterior) of these with base slightly medial; middle bristle longest; both bristles with slightly recurved tip].
Maxilla (fourth Limb) (Fig. 12b–D)
Endite I with 2 proximal and about 10 terminal bristles (3 tubular); endite II with 2 proximal and about 9 terminal (3 tubular) bristles; endite III with 1 proximal bristle (terminal bristles obscured). Coxa with stout spinous dorsal bristle. Basis with 2 terminal bristles (1 dorsal, 1 ventral). Endopod: first article with 3 anterior bristles, 4 distal posterior bristles, and 3 medial bristles; second article with long hairs along anterior margin, 2 stout pectinate terminal claws, and 5 terminal bristles.
Fifth Limb (Fig. 12e, F)
Epipod fragmented, with bristles forming 3 groups. Precoxa and coxa with 24 bristles and 1 small spinous medial ventral process. Basis with 10 bristles. Exopod represented by 2 bristles (1 long bare, 1 shorter plumose). Endopod: first article with 4 bristles (3 ventral, 1 dorsal); second article with 2 long and 3 shorter bristles.
Sixth Limb (Fig. 13a–C)
Tip of limb extends well past tip of fifth limb. Epipod (Fig. 13C): dorsal group with 7 bristles (dorsal bristle shorter); middle group with 6 bristles; ventral group with 5 bristles. Precoxa and coxa with 7 ventral bristles. Basis with 6 bristles. Exopod with 4 long bristles. Endopod: first article with 4 ventral bristles; second article with 3 bristles (2 ventral, 1 dorsal) (Fig. 13A); third article with 2 long claw-like bristles and 2 slender bristles (Fig. 13B).
Furca (Fig. 13d, E)
Each lamella with 7 claws. Lamellae followed by unpaired bristle. Small glandular process between claws 1 and 2. Apron anterior to furca (Fig. 13E).
Copulatory Organ (Fig. 13e, F)
Comprising 2 elongate processes; posterior smaller process with 3 terminal teeth.
Gut Content
Anterior end of gut near esophagus with animal fragments, some with sclerotized teeth (Fig. 14E).
Supplementary Description of Adult Female (Fig. 14f, G)
Genitalia (Fig. 14g)
Left side of body posterior to sixth limb with 2 bristles adjacent to brown oval.
Ontogenetic Development
Deeveya spiralis was known previously from only the adult female (Kornicker & Iliffe 1985). The present collection contained in addition to an adult female, an A-1 male and 3 instars (A-3, A-2, and an A-1 male). The sexes of the A-2 and A-3 instars are not known. Kornicker et al. (2007:58) described the A-5 to A-1 instars and adults of D. bransoni. The total numbers of bristles on appendages of D. bransoni and D. spiralis are compared in Table 1. Although the numbers of bristles on like appendages differ slightly for the two species, the addition of bristles and claws on appendages is tentatively interpreted to be sufficiently similar to collectively use the data to briefly describe some changes that take place during the ontogeny of the genus.
Table 1
Comparison of carapace lengths and number of bristles and claws on limbs of Deeveya spiralis Kornicker & Iliffe, 1985, and D. bransoni Kornicker & Palmer, 1987. Sex not determined for some instars; morphometrics of both sexes (if known) of instars combined. (ab = absent, B = bristles, F = female, M = male, P = present, — = specimens at particular stage unknown, ? = number of bristles uncertain.) Data on D. bransoni from Kornicker et al. (2007: Table 9).
First Antenna
The third and fourth segments are fused, and the fifth article is without a bristle on the A-5 and A-4 instars. The seventh article of the A-5 instar is without a b- and c-bristle, and the seventh article of the A-4 instar is without a b-bristle. The bristle on the fifth article of the A-3 instar is short and does not reach past the eighth article.
Second Antenna
Endopod: Instars A-5 to A-3 with only 1 bristle on the first article. Exopod: Instars A-5 to A-3 with fewer than 4 bristles on the ninth article.
Mandible
The basis of later stages (A-2 to adult) bears 2 long entwined lateral bristles. Both bristles are absent on the A-5 instar, and only 1 bristle is present on the A-4 and A-3 instars.
Acknowledgments
We wish to thank Texas A&M University graduate student Darcy Gibbons for sorting and photographing collected material. Special appreciation is extended to John Garvin, James Hurley, and Mark Parrish of the Caicos Caves Project, who coordinated our trip and greatly assisted with the diving and associated logistics. This research was supported by grants from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Caribbean Marine Research Center and the National Science Foundation (DEB-0315903) to T. Iliffe. Megan Bluhm inked the penciled drawings of carapaces and appendages. Molly Kelly Ryan prepared the illustrations for publication and Lana Ong cataloged the specimens. We appreciate the suggestions of associate editor Janet W. Reid and the reviewers, Mark Warne and Dan Danielopol.