Abstract
It is the intention of this thesis to bring together the
existing scattered data concerning the Amphipoda of southern
Africa, to add records from unidentified collections and to
present the whole in a form that will provide a firm basis
for future work in this field.
The collections examined are principally those of the University
of Cape Town, the South African Museum and the National
Institute for Water Research. These collections are together
much larger than any previously reported from southern Africa
(in excess of 90 000 specimens from several thousand stations).
Findings are presented in a series of five regional papers.
Each paper includes brief descriptions of principal collecting
areas and their faunas and an analysis of species collected.
Station data, references and distributions are provided for
all species, while a short diagnosis is given with the first
reference to each species .
A total of 299 gammaridean and capre11id species is recognised.
One family (Temnoph1iidae), four genera (Chaka, Cunicus, Dikwa,
Janice) and 39 species are described as new to scie~ce; while
21 others are recorded from southern Africa for the first time.
Nine existing species are relegated as synonyms.
Following the five regional taxonomic papers a synoptic guide
to the benthic amphipods of the region is provided. This is
intended to provide the non-specialist with a means of identifying
his own material. A brief guide to methods of collection,
storage and examination is provided and is followed by comprehensive
fully illustrated keys to the families, genera and
species of gammaridean and capre11id Amphipoda recorded from
Africa south of 20·S, 0-100Om.
The figures cover virtually all species.inc1uding many never
before illustrated and will. hopefully reduce the need for
exhaustive knowledge of morphological. nomenclature, or of
extensive reference facilities, before identifications can be
made.
An appendix provides reference to more detailed descriptions
of each species, gives their distributions world-wide and
within southern Africa, and lists common synonyms.
A concluding chapter discusses modes of dispersal of amphipods
and possible origins of t he southern African fauna. The
region can apparently be divided into tropical, subtropical
and temperate provinces, the first two dominantly populated
by species of tropical ori gins and the third rich in endemic
forms. This pattern is paralleled in other groups such as
the polychaeta. It is concluded that although southern Africa
is rich in endemic species and genera it is not a centre for
the evolution of major taxa but rather an evolutionary outpost
where immigrant forms have evolved under reduced pressure.
GRIFFITHS, C (2021). The Gammaridean And Caprellid Amphipoda Of Southern Africa.. Afribary. Retrieved from https://afribary.com/works/the-gammaridean-and-caprellid-amphipoda-of-southern-africa-1
GRIFFITHS, C.L. "The Gammaridean And Caprellid Amphipoda Of Southern Africa." Afribary. Afribary, 15 May. 2021, https://afribary.com/works/the-gammaridean-and-caprellid-amphipoda-of-southern-africa-1. Accessed 26 Dec. 2024.
GRIFFITHS, C.L. . "The Gammaridean And Caprellid Amphipoda Of Southern Africa.". Afribary, Afribary, 15 May. 2021. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. < https://afribary.com/works/the-gammaridean-and-caprellid-amphipoda-of-southern-africa-1 >.
GRIFFITHS, C.L. . "The Gammaridean And Caprellid Amphipoda Of Southern Africa." Afribary (2021). Accessed December 26, 2024. https://afribary.com/works/the-gammaridean-and-caprellid-amphipoda-of-southern-africa-1