Cancer barffi Curtiss, 1938

Ng, Peter K. L., Eldredge, Lucius G. & Evenhuis, Neal L., 2011, The names of decapod and stomatopod Crustacea from Tahiti, French Polynesia, established by Anthony Curtiss in 1938 and 1944, Zootaxa 3099, pp. 43-56 : 46

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.206896

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4485196

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D87A2-7033-2C07-FF5E-FDB7CD14FAFE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cancer barffi Curtiss, 1938
status

 

Cancer barffi Curtiss, 1938 [tiáneé]

Scyllarus antarcticus Lund, 1793: 22 View in CoL .

Cancer barffi Curtiss, 1938: 164 .

The detailed description of this crayfish strongly indicates that it is the common reef slipper or mitten lobster Parribacus antarcticus ( Lund, 1793) (Scyllaridae) View in CoL . Holthuis (1985: 74) was the first to report Cancer barffi as a synonym of P. antarcticus View in CoL , although he did not explain why, and this synonymy has been followed by later workers (e.g., Holthuis 1991; Poupin 1996; Chan 1998; Davie 2002). Three other species of Parribacus View in CoL actually occur in French Polynesia: P. holthuisi Forest, 1964 View in CoL , P. scarlatinus Holthuis, 1960 View in CoL , and P. perlatus Holthuis, 1967 View in CoL , but Curtiss’s (1938: 163–164) observations that the “outer antennae have each four joints; the fourth, or final joint has eight spines at its tip, and some pale orange hairs ….. abdomen has bumps on the middle of the upper side of the second, third and fourth sections. The fourth section has its bump less noticeable, but those on the second and third sections stick out more ….. The body is variegated above, black and pale greenish; except for the fins at the end of the tail, which are pale orange; these fins are pale orange on their underside too, but the rest of the body is, on the under side, variegated with pale orange, pale greenish, and whitish”, indicate that C. barffi is probably P. antarcticus View in CoL . The armature of the fourth antennal segment is important in separating the species, with P. antarcticus View in CoL , P. scarlatinus View in CoL and P. perlatus View in CoL having six lateral teeth while P. holthuisi View in CoL only has five such teeth ( Chan 1998). However, Curtiss obviously counted all the teeth around the antennal segment so this character is not helpful here. His observation of the median “bumps” on the abdomen is important as he observes that it is relatively high on the second and third somites. These median carinae are high in P. antarcticus View in CoL but low in the other species ( Chan 1998). In addition, the other species are red to orange in life, with P. antarcticus View in CoL being the only green and black species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Cancridae

Genus

Cancer

Loc

Cancer barffi Curtiss, 1938

Ng, Peter K. L., Eldredge, Lucius G. & Evenhuis, Neal L. 2011
2011
Loc

Scyllarus antarcticus

Curtiss 1938: 164
Lund 1793: 22
1793
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