Chiltonia Explained

Chiltonia is a genus of amphipod crustaceans endemic to New Zealand. Four species are known, three of which live in fresh waters. They were first discovered by Charles Chilton in 1898 and the genus Chiltonia was erected the following year by T. R. R. Stebbing in Chilton's honour.

Chiltonia mihiwaka

C. mihiwaka was the first of the species of Chiltonia to be described, when Charles Chilton named it in 1898 as a species in the genus Hyalella. Subsequent taxonomic splits have restricted the name to the populations in the Southland and Otago regions in New Zealand's South Island.[1] Chilton's original material was collected on Mihiwaka, a hill near Port Chalmers, Otago. Adults are approximately 5mm long, 1.25mm wide and 2mm deep.[2]

Chiltonia enderbyensis

C. enderbyensis was named by Hurley in 1954 for the populations of Chiltonia living on New Zealand's subantarctic islands, namely Enderby Island (one of the Auckland Islands) and Campbell Island.[1] Males are approximately 8mm long, 1.75mm wide and 1.5mm deep, while females are 6mm7mm long, 1.5mm wide and 1.5mm deep.[2]

Chiltonia rivertonensis

C. rivertonensis was also named by Hurley in 1954, for a population living in small streams near Riverton, Southland.[1] In November 2018 the Department of Conservation classified C. rivertonensis as "Nationally Critical" under the New Zealand Threat Classification System.[3] The species was judged as meeting the criteria for Nationally Critical threat status as a result of it occupying only in one location, the total area of which is less than 1 hectare. It is considered as being "Data Poor" and "Range Restricted" under that system.

Chiltonia minuta

C. minuta was the last of the four species to be described, and its affinities remain unclear. Whereas all the other species occur in fresh water, C. minuta was collected under kelp on a beach on Campbell Island.[1]

Australia

Two species from Australia, C. subtenuis and C. australis were described by Sayce in 1901 and 1902, respectively. Both are now considered to belong to the related genus Austrochiltonia.[4]

Notes and References

  1. . 31 . 2 . 2001 . The freshwater Amphipoda (Crustacea) of New Zealand: a review . Graham D. Fenwick . 341–363 . 10.1080/03014223.2001.9517658 . 2001JRSNZ..31..341F . 84444015 . 2010-04-14 . 2010-05-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100525042845/http://www.royalsociety.org.nz/Site/publish/Journals/jrsnz/2001/25.aspx . dead .
  2. D. E. Hurley . 1954 . Studies on the New Zealand Amphipodan Fauna. No. 2. The Family Talitridae: The Fresh-Water Genus Chiltonia Stebbing . . 81 . 4 . 563–577 .
  3. Grainger. N.. Harding. J.. Drinan. T.. Collier. K.. Smith. B.. Death. R.. Makan. T.. Rolfe. J.. November 2018. Conservation status of New Zealand freshwater invertebrates, 2018. New Zealand Threat Classification Series. 28. 1–29. Department of Conservation.
  4. Rachael A. King . 2009 . Redescription of the freshwater amphipod Austrochiltonia australis (Sayce) (Crustacea: Amphipoda, Chiltoniidae) . . 66 . 85–93 . 10.24199/j.mmv.2009.66.11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121025053743/http://museumvictoria.com.au/pages/12645/085-093_mmv66_king_austrochiltoniaaustralis_f.pdf . dead . October 25, 2012 .