GONEPLACINAE MacLeay, 1838

Castro, Peter, 2007, A reappraisal of the family Goneplacidae MacLeay, 1838 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura) and revision of the subfamily Goneplacinae, with the description of 10 new genera and 18 new species, Zoosystema 29 (4), pp. 609-774 : 618-620

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4525564

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/102B87CB-FF8B-2569-FF27-FE7FFCAEF97B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

GONEPLACINAE MacLeay, 1838
status

 

Subfamily GONEPLACINAE MacLeay, 1838 View in CoL

Gonoplacidae MacLeay, 1838: 64. — Ortmann 1894: 684; 1896: 416, 446 (part).

Carcinoplacinae H. Milne Edwards, 1852: 164 . — Miers 1886: 223 (part). — Ortmann 1894: 685; 1898: 1176 (part). — Borradaile 1907: 485 [in key] (part). — Rathbun 1918: 16 [in key], 17, 265 [diagnosis] (part). — Monod 1956: 340 [in key]. — Balss 1957: 1655 [in key], 1655 (part). — Serène 1964: 188 (part); 1968: 89 [in list] (part). — Sakai 1965: 165 [in key], 166 (part); 1976: 522 [in key], 523 (part). — Glaessner 1969: R524 [diagnosis]. — Guinot 1969b: 519 (part); 1971: 1081 [list of genera and species] (part). — Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: 62. — Takeda & Shimazaki 1974: 59 [discussion]. — Dai et al. 1986: 365 (part). — Dai & Yang 1991: 393 (part). — Tirmizi & Ghani 1996: 76 [diagnosis]. — Davie 2002: 192, 193 (part). — Hsueh & Huang 2002: 113 [in key] (part). — Karasawa & Kato 2003b: 130 [in list] (part). — Števčić 2005: 67 [diagnosis] (part). — Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: 40 [discussion].

Gonoplacinae – Miers 1886: 237 (part). — Alcock 1900: 286, 293, 316 (part). — Borradaile 1907: 485 [in key] (part). — Calman 1909: 315 [in list] (part).

Carcinoplacidae – Ortmann 1894: 684, 685; 1896: 416, 446; 1898: 1175 [diagnosis] (part). — Stebbing 1905: 34 [discussion].

Goneplacidae View in CoL – Ortmann 1898: 1176 [diagnosis] (part). — Karasawa & Schweitzer 2006: 26 [in list], 36 [discussion].

Pseudorhombilinae Alcock, 1900: 286, 292, 297 (part). — Tesch 1918: 153 (part). — Sakai 1939: 554 [in key], 555 [key to genera].

Goneplacinae View in CoL – Rathbun 1918: 16 [in key], 24 [diagnosis] (part). — Tesch 1918: 181 (part). — Balss 1957: 1655 [in key], 1656 (part). — Sakai 1939: 554 [in key], 562 [key to genera]; 1965: 165 [in key], 169 (part); 1976: 522 [in key], 537 (part). — Stephensen 1946: 226 [male pleopods]. — Bennett 1964: 73 [discussion]. — Serène 1964: 189 (part). — Glaessner 1969: R526 [diagnosis] (part). — Guinot 1969b: 519 (part); 1971: 1081 [list of genera and species] (part). — Serène & Umali 1972: 77 [key to species]. — Ingle 1980: 109 [diagnosis]. — Wil- liams 1984: 431 [in key], 433. — Dai et al. 1986: 376 (part). — Dai & Yang 1991: 406 (part). — Davie 2002: 200 (part). — Hsueh & Huang 2002: 113 [in key] (part). — Karasawa & Kato 2003b: 130 [in list], 137 [in list], 140. — Števčić 2005: 68 [diagnosis] (part).

GENERA INCLUDED . — Carcinoplax H. Milne Edwards, 1852 View in CoL ; Entricoplax View in CoL n. gen.; Exopheticus View in CoL n. gen.; Goneplacoides View in CoL n. gen.; Goneplax Leach, 1814 View in CoL ; Hadroplax View in CoL n. gen.; Menoplax View in CoL n. gen.; Microgoneplax View in CoL n. gen.; Neogoneplax View in CoL n. gen.; Neommatocarcinus Takeda & Miyake, 1969 View in CoL ; Notonyx A. Milne-Edwards, 1873 View in CoL ; Ommatocarcinus White, 1852 View in CoL ; Paragoneplax View in CoL n. gen.; Psopheticus Wood-Mason, 1892 View in CoL ; Pycnoplax View in CoL n. gen.; Singhaplax Serène & Soh, 1976 View in CoL ; Thyraplax View in CoL n. gen.

FOSSIL GENERA INCLUDED . — Amydrocarcinus Schweitzer, Feldmann, Gonzáles-Barba & Vega, 2002 View in CoL (in Amydocarcinidae Števčić, 2005; in Goneplacidae in Karasawa & Schweitzer [2006] View in CoL ).

Icriocarcinus Bishop, 1998 (in Goneplacinae in Karasawa & Kato [2003a] View in CoL and Karasawa & Schweitzer [2006]; subfamily Icriocarcininae in Števčić [2005] ).

Magyarcarcinus Schweitzer & Karasawa, 2004 View in CoL (in Goneplacidae in Karasawa & Schweitzer [2006] View in CoL ).

GENERA NOT INCLUDED IN GONEPLACINAE SENSU STRICTO View in CoL (see Remarks). — Bathyplax A. Milne-Edwards, 1880 View in CoL . Conleyus Ng & Ng, 2003 View in CoL (in family Conleyidae Števčić, 2005 in Števčić [2005] View in CoL and Ng & Manuel-Santos [2007]).

Paragalene Kossmann, 1878 View in CoL (in family Geryonidae Colosi, 1923 in Števčić [2005] View in CoL ; unknown status in Karasawa & Schweitzer [2006]).

Progeryon Bouvier, 1922 View in CoL (incertae sedis in family Goneplacidae in Karasawa & Kato [2003a] View in CoL ; in family Geryonidae Colosi, 1923 in Števčić [2005] View in CoL ; Progeryonidae Števčić, 2005 in Karasawa & Schweitzer [2006] View in CoL and Ng & Manuel-Santos [2007]).

Psopheticoides Sakai, 1969 View in CoL (in Euryplacidae View in CoL ).

DIAGNOSIS. — Carapace transversely rectangular, quadrate, subcircular, or trapezoidal ; front narrow to wide, lamellar, straight, rarely marked by median notch or projection. Dorsal surface smooth or marked with variously distinct regions. Single anterolateral tooth posterior to outer orbital angle, sometimes obsolete. Notch between frontal margin, inner edge of supraorbital border typically slight. Orbits moderately to conspicuously wide, fissure typically absent. Eye peduncles of varying length ; cornea round to elongated. Antennules fold transversely. Basal antennal article short to relatively long, subcylindrical ; lying freely in orbital hiatus, not reaching front. Thoracic sternum wide. Median sulcus on thoracic sternite 4 absent; sutures 4/5, 5/6 interrupted medially, 6/7, 7/8 interrupted medially or complete. Anterior end of sterno-abdominal cavity anterior to thoracic sternite 4. Prolongation of male episternite 7 present; thoracic sternite 7 laterally covered with thoracic sternite 8; thoracic sternite 8 without supplementary plate, portions of varying size left visible or not by abdomen. Cheliped (P1) fingers varying from dark to light in colour; ambulatory legs (P2-P5) compressed. Male abdomen with 6 freely articulated somites plus telson; narrower than sternum, somite 3 being narrower than thoracic sternite 7; telson slightly longer than wide. Abdominal-locking mechanism with medium-size button on edge of thoracic sternite 5 pairing with shallow socket on underside (ventral surface) of abdominal somite 6. Male opening coxal, with soft, free penis arising directly from P5 coxa but protected by sternum for a short distance (coxosternal condition). G1 slender or stout, typically with truncated tip. G2 long, typically with long flagellum (short in a few species). Female abdomen with 6 freely articulated somites plus telson ; locking mechanism with medium-size button on edge of thoracic sternite 5 in immature individuals; vulva of varying size on thoracic sternite 6, vulvar cover may be present.

REMARKS

As part of the Goneplacidae sensu Balss 1957 , the subfamilies Goneplacinae and Carcinoplacinae were traditionally separated by the shape of their respective carapaces. The typical carcinoplacine carapace, represented by Carcinoplax , is subquadrate, with orbits that are not excessively elongated (or “normal”) so that the widest breath of the carapace is at the level of the anterolateral borders, a shape often referred to as “xanthoid”. In contrast, the typical goneplacine carapace, as in Goneplax , is transversely rectangular and has its widest breadth typically at the level of the outer orbital angles as a result of conspicuously elongated orbits to accommodate long eye peduncles. An almost identical goneplacine carapace also appears among some members of the Euryplacidae (such as Frevillea A. Milne-Edwards, 1880 , and Trapezioplax Guinot, 1969 ), clearly not members of the Goneplacinae as evidenced by the morphology of their respective male abdomens, G1, and vulvae (see discussion of Psopheticoides Sakai, 1969, p. 620 ). As in other groups of brachyuran crabs, carapace shape is not always a reliable synapomorphy.

Guinot (1971: 1081, footnote) precisely explained that the separation between Carcinoplacinae and Goneplacinae was more a matter of convenience and that the distinction between the two taxa “ne sera peut-être pas justifiée dans une classification peu découpée”. Although the morphometry of the carapace conveniently separates some genera, carapace shape and the relative length of the orbits are clearly intermediate between the two extremes in the case of Psopheticus Wood-Mason, 1892 and Exopheticus n. gen. The absence of a clear distinction among other characters, such as the morphology of the male abdomen and its relation to the thoracic sternum, and the morphology of the G1 and vulva, do not support the traditional dichotomy (see Table 2).

The Carcinoplacinae was synonymized with Goneplacinae View in CoL by Karasawa & Kato (2003a, b) based on the cladistic analysis of characters among recent and fossil genera included or purportedly related to the Goneplacidae View in CoL . Their hypothesis is supported by the original “ Goneplacidae View in CoL carcinoplaciens-gonéplaciens ( Carcinoplacinae + Goneplacinae View in CoL )” line of Guinot (1969b) and more recently by Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006). The present work also supports Karasawa & Kato’s hypothesis, and the two subfamilies are thus treated as one. An alternate hypothesis is the creation of at least three subfamilies for the Carcinoplacinae (see Karasawa & Kato 2003a, b); another is the elevation of the subfamilies of the Goneplacidae View in CoL to full family status, as originally done by Ortmann (1894) and more recently by d’Udekem d’Acoz (1999) and Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006) and in part by Števčić (2005). For Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006) the Goneplacidae View in CoL consists of only one subfamily so in essence the Goneplacinae View in CoL was raised to family status.

Five genera that have been placed at one time or another in the Carcinoplacinae or Goneplacidae View in CoL are herein excluded from the Goneplacinae sensu stricto View in CoL . The inclusion in the Goneplacidae View in CoL of the first four genera listed below is questionable at best, but for the time being, these four genera are herein retained in the superfamily Goneplacoidea View in CoL .

Bathyplax A. Milne-Edwards, 1880 View in CoL , a monotypic Western Atlantic genus, has a carapace not unlike that of Carcinoplax View in CoL . It has one anterolateral tooth and a conspicuous outer orbital tooth. The G1 is slender, the G2 about half the length of the G1. The vulva is round and large but not as large as in Carcinoplax View in CoL , and partially covered by a vulvar cover in large females. The orbits and eyes are short. Although these characters may be found in some goneplacids, Bathyplax View in CoL shows similarities to various other groups. Guinot (1969c, 1978), Manning & Holthuis (1989), and Tavares (1996) have discussed its affinities to the families Geryonidae Colosi, 1923 View in CoL , and Xanthidae MacLeay, 1838 View in CoL , although they did not explicitly recommend its transfer to any of these two families.

Conleyus Ng & Ng, 2003 View in CoL , a monotypic Western Pacific genus, has a flattened, ridged, and bidentate carapace with superficial similarities to Intesius Guinot & Richer de Forges, 1981 View in CoL , which together with Mathildella Guinot & Richer de Forges, 1981 View in CoL , has been allied to the Goneplacidae View in CoL . The male holotype (cl 12.2 mm, cw 16.4 mm; UF 2098) and male paratype (cl 7.1 mm, cw 9.4 mm; ZRC 2002.175) show the unusually reduced orbits, eye peduncles, and eyes ( Ng & Ng 2003: figs 2, 4A, B), which are not typical goneplacine characters and which were considered adaptations to its presence in rubble at moderate depths (30-67 m). The G1 of Conleyus View in CoL ( Ng & Ng 2003: fig. 5D-F) has similarities to the stout G1 of Pycnoplax View in CoL n. gen. and Thyraplax View in CoL n. gen. but it is shorter, thinner, the tip is slightly flared, and the terminal spinules much smaller than in the two goneplacine genera. The G2 is long but it has a short flagellum and lacks the slightly-expanded tip with one or more spinules often seen in the G2 of goneplacines. The male abdomen is not typically triangular as in goneplacines, somites 5 and 6 being distinctively narrower than somite 4 ( Ng & Ng 2003: fig. 5D). The morphology of the vulva remains unknown since the species is known only from two males. The anterior portion of the thoracic sternum ( Ng & Ng 2003: fig. 5A) is narrower than in goneplacines and there is a complete and well developed 3/4 suture, a character absent in the Goneplacidae View in CoL . Conleyus View in CoL was included in the Carcinoplacinae by Ng & Ng (2003) but removed from the Goneplacidae View in CoL and placed, without explanation, in the superfamily Conleyodea [sic], family Conleyidae View in CoL by Števčić (2005). Ng & Manuel-Santos (2007) kept the genus in an independent family within the superfamily Goneplacoidea View in CoL .

Paragalene Kossmann, 1878 View in CoL , a monotypic genus from the Mediterranean Sea, has a carapace with a superficial resemblance to Carcinoplax View in CoL . Somites 3 and 4 of the male abdomen are fused, however, and the long flagellum of the G2 is serrated ( Guinot 1969c: fig. 103). Guinot (1969c: 696) tentatively included the genus in the family Geryonidae Colosi, 1923 View in CoL . Although Števčić (2005) kept Paragalene View in CoL in Geryonidae, Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006: 55) View in CoL stated that the genus “might be assigned to the Mathildellidae View in CoL ” but solely on account of its carapace.

Progeryon Bouvier, 1922 View in CoL , with four Indo-West Pacific species, has a carapace similar to that of geryonids. Nevertheless, all somites of the male abdomen are mobile (somites 3-5 fused and immobile in Geryonidae View in CoL ) and the G1 and G2 are similar to those of some goneplacines (see Ng & Guinot 1999). Sutures 4/5 to 6/7 are incomplete, thoracic sternite 8 is not visible ventrally, and the abdomen covers the space between the P5 coxae. The systematic position of Progeryon View in CoL is a controversial one (see Karasawa & Schweitzer 2006: 35, 55). More recently, it has been listed as incertae sedis in the family Goneplacidae View in CoL by Karasawa & Kato (2003a), in the tribe Progeryonini View in CoL of the family Geryonidae Colosi, 1923 View in CoL , by Števčić (2005), and in the Progeryonidae Števčić, 2005 View in CoL , by Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006). Ng & Manuel-Santos (2007) kept the genus in its own family, the Progeryonidae View in CoL , within the superfamily Goneplacoidea View in CoL .

Psopheticoides Sakai, 1969 View in CoL , a monotypic Western Pacific genus, is being referred to the Euryplacidae View in CoL . The examination of numerous specimens of Psopheticoides sanguineus Sakai, 1969 View in CoL , from the Philippine Is and Tonga, all deposited at ZRC and MNHN, show a slender male abdomen, a deep steno-abdominal cavity, a slender G1 with pointed tip and armed with spinules, a short G2 that is much shorter than the G1, a relatively long penis that lies in a concave thoracic sternite 8 before joining the G1, a relatively narrow female abdomen where the distal border of the thoracic sternites are left uncovered, and a thoracic sternite 8 that is concealed from dorsal view. The examination of these specimens is part of an ongoing revision of the Euryplacidae View in CoL and related genera.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Goneplacidae

Loc

GONEPLACINAE MacLeay, 1838

Castro, Peter 2007
2007
Loc

Goneplacinae

STEVCIC Z. 2005: 68
KARASAWA H. & KATO H. 2003: 130
HSUEH P. - W. & HUANG J. - F. 2002: 113
DAI A. & YANG S. 1991: 406
DAI A. & YANG S. & SONG Y. & CHEN G. 1986: 376
INGLE R. W. 1980: 109
SERENE R. & UMALI A. F. 1972: 77
GUINOT D. 1969: 519
BENNETT E. W. 1964: 73
SERENE R. 1964: 189
BALSS H. 1957: 1655
STEPHENSEN K. 1946: 226
SAKAI T. 1939: 554
RATHBUN M. J. 1918: 16
TESCH J. J. 1918: 181
1918
Loc

Goneplacidae

KARASAWA H. & SCHWEITZER C. E. 2006: 26
ORTMANN A. 1898: 1176
1898
Loc

Carcinoplacidae

STEBBING T. R. R. 1905: 34
ORTMANN A. 1894: 684
1894
Loc

Gonoplacinae

CALMAN W. T. 1909: 315
BORRADAILE L. A. 1907: 485
ALCOCK A. 1900: 286
MIERS E. J. 1886: 237
1886
Loc

Carcinoplacinae H. Milne Edwards, 1852: 164

STEVCIC Z. 2005: 67
KARASAWA H. & KATO H. 2003: 130
HSUEH P. - W. & HUANG J. - F. 2002: 113
TIRMIZI N. M. & GHANI N. 1996: 76
DAI A. & YANG S. 1991: 393
DAI A. & YANG S. & SONG Y. & CHEN G. 1986: 365
TAKEDA M. & SHIMAZAKI S. 1974: 59
SERENE R. & LOHAVANIJAYA P. 1973: 62
GUINOT D. 1969: 519
SAKAI T. 1965: 165
SERENE R. 1964: 188
BALSS H. 1957: 1655
MONOD T. 1956: 340
RATHBUN M. J. 1918: 16
BORRADAILE L. A. 1907: 485
ORTMANN A. 1898: 1176
ORTMANN A. 1894: 685
MIERS E. J. 1886: 223
MILNE EDWARDS H. 1852: 164
1852
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