Cryptodromia pileifera Alcock, 1901

Mclay, Colin L. & Ng, Peter K. L., 2005, On a collection of Dromiidae and Dynomenidae from the Philippines, with description of a new species of Hirsutodynomene McLay, 1999 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura), Zootaxa 1029 (1), pp. 1-30 : 9-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1029.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:205D9254-4468-4799-B8A3-256A694DE423

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CA7358-5A3C-A15D-4240-F905FB34D013

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-07-01 02:48:15, last updated by Plazi 2023-11-03 03:08:16)

scientific name

Cryptodromia pileifera Alcock, 1901
status

 

Cryptodromia pileifera Alcock, 1901 View in CoL ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 )

Dromia (Cryptodromia) tuberculata var. pileifera Alcock, 1900: 141 View in CoL .

Cryptodromia tuberculata var. pileifera View in CoL — Ihle 1913: 36, 20 (list).— Buitendijk 1939: 225.— Buitendijk 1950: 60.— Daniel & Premkumar 1968: 240.

Cryptodromia pileifera View in CoL .— Alcock 1901: 49, pl. 2: fig. 7.— Tan & Ng, 1988: 88.— Tan et al. 1986:

111.—McLay 2001: 828 (key).

Cryptodromia tuberculata View in CoL .— McLay 1993: 198.— Lim et al. 1994: 126 [not Cryptodromia tuberculata Stimpson, 1858 View in CoL ].

Material. 1 male, 6.6 x 5.8 mm, station D8, Santiago, Panglao , Bohol, Philippines, 9°0.034'N 123°0.049'E, substrate sandy bottom, seagrass, rubble and coral slabs, coll. PANGLAO Expedition 2004, 9 Jun 2004, ZRC GoogleMaps ; 1 ovigerous female, 6.3 x 5.6 mm, station M8, Doljo , north coast, Panglao, Bohol, Philippines, 9°0.035'N 123°0.044'E, rocky flat with seagrass, rocks and mangroves, coll. PANGLAO Expedition 2004, 2 Jun 2004, NMCR GoogleMaps .

Remarks. A useful character that can be used to identify this species when live or freshly preserved is the presence of a pink band running medially across the outer surface of the cheliped fingers. Even in preserved material some vestige of the bands usually remains visible. This band is absent on C. tuberculata .

The ovigerous female was carrying 11 newly hatched curled up and apparently freshly hatched zoeae (diameter ca. 1.05 mm). Tan et al. (1986) reported that C. pileifera had a very abbreviated larval development, with the first zoea being lecithotrophic and metamorphosing into the megalopa in a short time. This study was conducted in the laboratory (based on a Singapore female) and on the basis of the present Philippine female, this species may actually hold the newly hatched first zoeae for a longer period than had previously been assumed. In any case, the first zoeae reported by Tan et al. (1986) were slow moving and hardly swam.

Daniel & Premkumar (1968) reported a study of the use of sponges for camouflage by C. pileifera collected in the intertidal of Great Nicobar Island. Crabs separated from their sponge caps in small bowls recovered themselves with the same caps within two hours. In another experiment in which the crabs were deprived of their caps and supplied with live sponges, they “broke off” pieces and carried them with the last pair of legs. When the crabs were provided with simple ascidians, empty bivalve shells and encrusting sponges they only donned pieces of sponge. The authors argue that the crabs take advantage of the “disagreeable taste and odour as well as the bristly spiculation” of the sponges that are seldom eaten by other animals and, in return, the sponges benefited by being “carried from place to place and also obtain small particles of food scattered about by the crabs”. They found that the largest males and females measured 10.5 x 8.5 mm, which is similar to those we have examined from Singapore and nearby areas. All the specimens we have examined or observed in life from Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, however, use colonial tunicates instead as a cover, not sponges. The crabs live among rocky substrates with the tunicates neatly cut out to fit exactly the carapace shape and size (see Tan & Ng 1988, Lim et al. 1994). They are never found with any other object on their back.

Distribution. Cryptodromia pileifera is a widespread species in Southeast Asia and India (see Tan et al. 1986), and while its presence in Philippines constitutes a new country record, it is not surprising as it is often common in near­shore and intertidal habitats.

Alcock A. (1900) Materials for a carcinological fauna of India. No. 5. Brachyura Primigenia or Dromiacea. Journal of the Asiatic Society, Bengal, 1899 (1900), 68, 123 - 169.

Alcock A. (1901) Catalogue of the Indian decapod Crustacea in the collection of the Indian Museum. Part I. Brachyura. Fasc. I. Introduction and Dromides or Dromiacea (Brachyura Primigenia). Trustees of the Indian Museum, Calcutta. 80 pp., pls. 1 - 8.

Buitendijk, A. M. (1939) Biological results of the Snellius Expedition. V. The Dromiacea, Oxystomata and Oxyrhyncha of the Snellius Expedition. Temminckia, 4, 223 - 276.

Buitendijk, A. M. (1950) On a small collection of Decapoda Brachyura, chiefly Dromiidae and Oxyrhyncha, from the neighbourhood of Singapore. Bulletin of the Raffles Museum 21, 59 - 82.

Daniel, A. & Premkumar, V. K. (1968) Notes on animal relationships: dromiid crabs, Cryptodromia tuberculata pileifera Alcock, 1899 sheltering beneath commensal sponges. Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society, 65 (1), 240 - 242.

Ihle, J. W. E. (1913) Die Decapoda Brachyura der Siboga Expedition I. Dromiacea. Siboga Expeditie, Monograph 39 (b) 71, 1 - 96.

Lim, S. S. L., Ng, P. K. L., Tan, L. W. H. & Wee, Y. C. (1994) Rhythm of the Sea. Life and Times of Labrador Beach. National Institute of Education & National University of Singapore, 160 pp.

McLay, C. L. (1993) Crustacea Decapoda: The sponge crabs (Dromiidae) of New Caledonia and the Philippines with a review of the genera. In A. Crosnier (Ed.), Resultats des Campagnes MUSORSTOM Volume 10, Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, 156, 111 - 251, figs. 1 - 19.

Stimpson, W. (1858) Prodromus descriptionis animalium evertebratorum, quae in Expeditione ad Oceanum Pacificum Septentrionalem, a Republica Federata missa, Cadwaladaro Ringgold et Johanne Rodgers ducibus, observavit et descripsit W. Stimpson Pars VII. Crustacea Anomura. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Science, Philadelphia 10, 4, 225 - 252, figs. 1 - 60.

Tan, L. W. H., Lim, S. S. L. & Ng, P. K. L. (1986) The complete larval development of the dromiid crab, Cryptodromia pileifera Alcock, 1899 (Decapoda: Dromiidae) in the laboratory. Journal of Crustacean Biology, 6 (1), 111 - 118.

Tan, L. W. H. & Ng, P. K. L. (1988) A Guide to Seashore Life. Singapore Science Centre, 160 pp.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 3. Cryptodromia pileifera Alcock, 1901. Male, 6.6 x 5.8 mm, Panglao, Philippines, ZRC. A, overall dorsal view; B, frontal view; C, outer view of right chela.

ZRC

Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore

NMCR

New Mexico State University

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Dromiidae

Genus

Cryptodromia