Chinommatia littoralis ( Tesch, 1918 )

Ng, Peter K. L. & Rahayu, Dwi Listyo, 2017, Rediscovery of Chinommatia littoralis (Tesch, 1918) (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Chasmocarcinidae) from Tanimbar Island, Indonesia, Zootaxa 4294 (4), pp. 494-500 : 495-500

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4294.4.9

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:245811D8-CB87-458D-ADCC-725995C23148

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6495998

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C7BB6A-FF8A-FFDA-FF19-FBE206D08F40

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Chinommatia littoralis ( Tesch, 1918 )
status

 

Chinommatia littoralis ( Tesch, 1918) View in CoL

( Figs. 1–4 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 )

Hephthopelta littoralis Tesch, 1918: 233 View in CoL , pl. 9, fig. 3 [type localilty: Indonesia]. — Serène 1968: 92 [in list]. — Ng et al. 2008: 76 [in list].

Chinommatia littoralis View in CoL —Ng & Castro 2016: 70, figs. 15A; 25E; 32C; 43H.

Not Hephthopelta View in CoL littoralis— Chen 1998: 298, fig. 22 [Nansha Islands, South China Sea] [= Chinommatia cavimanus (Rathbun, 1914) ]

Not Hephthopelta littoralis View in CoL — Zarenkov, 1972: 238, figs. 1–4 [ Vietnam] [= Chinommatia cavimanus (Rathbun, 1914) ]

Material examined. Holotype: female (4.9 × 3.5 mm) (NNM-ZMA), Indonesia, north coast of Ceram , Waru Bay, Siboga Expedition, stn 174, 18 m, July 1899 . Others : 1 male (6.1 × 4.6 mm), 1 female (6.4 × 4.5 mm) ( ZRC 2017.0119 View Materials ), Tanimbar Island, Maluku, Indonesia, trawl, 20 m, coll. D.L. Rahayu, October 1994 .

Comparative material. See Ng & Castro (2016) for material of other Chinommatia species and Notopelta mortenseni (Serène, 1964) .

Diagnosis. Carapace subtrapezoidal, lateral margins gently convex, converging posteriorly; maximum width to length ratio 1.3 in male, 1.4 in females ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 B, 2); dorsal surface with fine irregular punctae, with short tomentum in life, otherwise without long setae ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 A, B, 2); frontal margin with shallow but visible median cleft ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 B, 2C, D); anterolateral margins arcuate, subcristate, granular, with some granules sharp, without distinct lobes or teeth ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 B, 2C, D); sub-branchial region not visible in dorsal view for females ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 B, 2D) but distinct in male ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C). Eye peduncle relatively long, mobile, dorsal margin almost straight, with small rounded granules ( Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 C, D, 3A, B). Epistome with semicircular median lobe, lateral margins semicircular ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A). Third maxilliped merus subovate, anteroexternal angle not expanded; ischium rectangular, longer than merus ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 F). Ambulatory legs with meri relatively short, margins lined with long setae, outer surfaces with low tomentum ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 A, B, 2A, B). Fingers of major, minor chela subcircular in cross-section, laterally flattened, blade-like ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 G, H); inner proximal part of cutting margin of dactylus of major male chela with gently curved cutting tooth ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 G); inner distal margin of cheliped carpus with short, slightly curved tooth ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A, B); inner margin of merus with small tubercles, not spinate ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A, B). Male, female thoracic sternum relatively transversely narrow ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 D, I). Male pleon with telson linguiform ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 D). Vulva large, without operculum ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 J). G1 relatively stout, distal half relatively more slender, distal part with numerous short, stout spines, distal opening relatively large ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A, B). G2 long, more than three-quarters length of G1, basal segment elongated, distal segment short ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 C).

Remarks. The holotype female (4.9 × 3.5 mm, NNM-ZMA) from Ceram is in poor condition, with almost all its pereopods detached, some of which are missing ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). The specimen is very delicate and no attempt was made to scrape off the setae or tomentum on the carapace. Nevertheless, it shows enough characters to identify the present material from Tanimbar Island with confidence.

Ng & Castro (2016: 70) treated Zarenkov’s (1972: 238, fig. 4) record of “ Hephthopelta littoralis ” as valid, although they commented that “his specimen is depicted with teeth on the cheliped meri rather than tubercles” (Ng & Castro (2016: 70). Comparisons with our fresh material and reappraising his figures leads us to the conclusion that his material from Vietnam almost certainly belongs to Chinommatia cavimanus s. str. instead. His figures of the third maxilliped ( Zarenkov, 1972: fig. 4IIImxp; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 32A); inner margin of the merus of the cheliped lined with sharp spines ( Zarenkov, 1972: fig. 4Iple, 4Ipde; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 42J); lateral view of the chela with the inner surface characteristically inflated ( Zarenkov, 1972: fig. 4Ipde; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 44A, B); male pleon shape ( Zarenkov, 1972: fig. 4Abd; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 53A, B); and G1 ( Zarenkov, 1972: fig. 4Ipl; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 75A–C) agree with what has been described and figured for Chinommatia cavimanus s. str. by Ng & Castro (2016). The G2 figured by Zarenkov (1972: fig. 4IIpl) is superficially similar to that by Ng & Castro (2016: fig. 75) for Chinommatia cavimanus s. str. but the distal segment appears to be relatively longer. The depth where Zarenkov’s specimens were collected (10–72 m) is shallower than what has been reported for the species by Ng & Castro (2016: 65). Most of the characters discussed above may also apply to C. bicuspida Ng & Castro, 2016 , but this species is known so far only from further south in Papua New Guinea and Fiji. Chen (1998: 298, fig. 22) identified specimens from the South China Sea as “ Hephthopelta littoralis ”, probably following Zarenkov (1972), but Ng & Castro (2016: 64) referred them to Chinommatia cavimanus s. str. after examining photographs of the material. As such, what has been recorded as “ Hephthopelta littoralis ” in the list of Chinese taxa by Jiang (2008: 770) should also be referred to Chinommatia cavimanus s. str.

Ng & Castro (2016: 72) separated Notopelta Ng & Castro, 2016 , from Chinommatia by the former possessing a submarginal granular crest along the anterolateral margin, a relatively wide carapace and proportionately wider male thoracic sternum, stout and dorsoventrally flattened (reniform) eyestalks, and the adult male major cheliped with a prominent ischial projection. Chinommatia littoralis is superficially close to Notopelta mortenseni , and the present specimens of Chinommatia littoralis challenge several of the diagnostic characters used to define Notopelta . The carapace of Chinommatia littoralis is relatively wider than most Chinommatia species; the width to length ratio of the male is 1.3 while those of the two females are 1.4. These proportions approach that of Notopelta mortenseni (width to length ratio 1.4). The granular anterolateral margin of female Chinommatia littoralis is marginal, with the sub-branchial region not visible in dorsal view ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 D). In the male, however, the carapace is proportionately broader and part of the sub-branchial region is visible in dorsal view, and the anterolateral margin this appears to submarginal in position ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C), similar to that observed in Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 15G–I). The eye peduncle of Chinommatia littoralis is relatively stout and partly dorsoventrally compressed (Fig. 15H) like that of Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 15H), but it does not have the median part distinctly constricted and not reniform. The G1 and G2 of Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 76F–H) are very similar to those of Chinommatia littoralis . The distal half of the G1 of Chinommatia littoralis , however, is relatively stouter ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A, B) than that of Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 76F–H). Most Chinommatia species have relatively long G2s (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 75D, H, M), but proportionately, they are all shorter than those of Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 76I). Unlike other Chinommatia species, the G2 of Chinommatia littoralis is proportionately longer ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 C), similar to the condition in Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 76I). Like Chinommatia littoralis , the fingers of both major and minor chelae of Notopelta mortenseni are laterally flattened and blade-like ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 G, H; Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 45A, B).

Significantly at the generic level, the male of Chinommatia littoralis (6.1 × 4.6 mm), although similar in size or larger than those of Notopelta mortenseni examined by Ng & Castro (2016), does not possess a long ischial projection on the ischium of the adult male major cheliped ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A), a diagnostic character for Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 42L). In addition, the male and female thoracic sternum is relatively narrower transversely in Chinommatia littoralis ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 D, I) compared to the condition in Notopelta mortenseni (cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: figs. 53F, 87F, G).

Specimens of Chinommatia littoralis can also be separated from Notopelta mortenseni in having a distinct shallow median cleft on the frontal margin ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 B, 2C, D) (almost entire in Notopelta mortenseni ; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 15G–I); dorsal margin of the ocular peduncle lined with small granules ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C, D) (smooth in Notopelta mortenseni ; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 15H); the anteroexternal angle of the merus of the third maxilliped is not expanded at all ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 F) (slightly expanded in Notopelta mortenseni ; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 32F); the ambulatory meri are relatively shorter ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 A, B, 2A, B) (conspicuously longer in Notopelta mortenseni ; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 15G, I); the female telson is slightly narrower ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 I) (slightly wider in Notopelta mortenseni ; cf. Ng & Castro, 2016: fig. 87F).

With regards to the structures of the ocular peduncle and ischium of the major male cheliped, and to a lesser degree the proportions of the anterior male and female thoracic sternums, Chinommatia littoralis differs markedly from Notopelta mortenseni . In contrast, the structures of the anterolateral margin, G1 and G2 are closer to those seen in Notopelta mortenseni . As such, Chinommatia littoralis seems to be possess some character states which are intermediate between what Chinomattia and Notopelta . The two genera are kept distinct for the time being.

Distribution. Now known for certain only from the Indonesian Moluccas, from Ceram and now Tanimbar Island. Depth: 18– 20 m.

ZRC

Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Chasmocarcinidae

Genus

Chinommatia

Loc

Chinommatia littoralis ( Tesch, 1918 )

Ng, Peter K. L. & Rahayu, Dwi Listyo 2017
2017
Loc

Chinommatia littoralis

Castro 2016: 70
2016
Loc

Hephthopelta

Chen 1998: 298
1998
Loc

Hephthopelta littoralis

Zarenkov 1972: 238
1972
Loc

Hephthopelta littoralis

Serene 1968: 92
Tesch 1918: 233
1918
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