Macrophthalmus

Naderloo, Reza, Türkay, Michael & Apel, Michael, 2011, Brachyuran crabs of the family Macrophthalmidae Dana, 1851 (Decapoda: Brachyura: Macrophthalmidae) of the Persian Gulf, Zootaxa 2911, pp. 1-42 : 37-38

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.203098

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5417641

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/587287CE-551D-FFD5-FF77-4B6BFA767947

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Macrophthalmus
status

 

Key to the species of Macrophthalmus View in CoL in the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman

1. Distinct chitinous plectrum near lower margin of inner surface of merus of male cheliped........................... 2

- Without plectrum on the upper surface of merus of male cheliped............................................... 3

2. Eyestalks stout, hardly reaching exorbital angle; lower orbital margin with small rounded tubercles; palm with longitudinal ridge on outer surface, inner surface fully covered with dense setae; small-size species (CL <10 mm); occurring on rocky shores.................................................................................... M. sinuspersici View in CoL

- Eyestalks narrow, not reaching to exorbital angle; lower orbital margin with long tubercles; palm without longitudinal ridge on outer surface, inner surface only with a longitudinal row of setae on upper potion; large-size species; occurring on muddy substrates....................................................................................... M. dentipes View in CoL

3. Eyestalks projecting beyond tip of exorbital angle........................................................... 4

- Eyestalks never projecting beyond tip of exorbital angle...................................................... 6

4. Eyestalks extremely long, extending beyond exorbital angle for half of its length; second anterolateral teeth of carapace nearly as long as exorbital angle....................................................................... M. serenei View in CoL

- Eyestalks not extremely long, extending only slightly beyond exorbital angle...................................... 5

5. Apical portion of cornea with unique extension, about half of the cornea extending beyond exorbital angle; exorbital angle longer than second lateral tooth of carapace; inner surface of palm of male cheliped without spine on proximal portion, without patch of setae................................................................................ M. graeffei View in CoL

- Apical portion of cornea without extension, extending beyond exorbital angle; second lateral tooth of carapace larger than exorbital angle; inner surface of palm of male cheliped with spines on proximal portion, patch of dense setae covering most part of inner surface, immovable finger strongly deflected............................................. M. sulcatus View in CoL

6. Exorbital angle much smaller than second lateral tooth of carapace; palm with longitudinal ridge on outer surface, inner surface of palm with spines on proximal portion.................................................... M. grandidieri

- Exorbital angle not larger than second lateral tooth of carapace; eyestalks never reaching tip of exorbital angle............ 7

7. Walking legs with dense setae; palm of male cheliped with inner surface fully covered with dense setae, without spines on proximal portion............................................................................ M. depressus View in CoL

- Walking legs without [dense] setae; palm of male cheliped without setae on inner surface; spines on proximal portion of inner surface of male cheliped......................................................................... M. laevis View in CoL

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF