Lamoha longirostris ( Chen, 1986 )

Ng, Peter K. L. & Forges, Bertrand Richer de, 2017, On a collection of Homolidae from the South China Sea, with descriptions of two new species of Homologenus A. Milne-Edwards, in Henderson, 1888, and the identities of Homologenus malayensis Ihle, 1912, and Lamoha superciliosa (Wood-Mason, in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891), Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 65, pp. 243-268 : 245-246

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5356049

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CC246EF9-E704-4DDC-BD25-61B6102A382F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA02C863-3169-FFC6-FC0D-542DFCFDF9EC

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Lamoha longirostris ( Chen, 1986 )
status

 

Lamoha longirostris ( Chen, 1986) View in CoL

( Figs. 3, 4 View Fig , 5A–D View Fig , 6A–G View Fig , 7A–F View Fig , 23 View Fig , 24A View Fig )

Hypsophrus longirostris Chen, 1986: 227 .

Hypsophrys futuna Guinot & Richer de Forges, 1995: 456 , figs. 61l, 66 a, g. – Cleva et al., 2007: 251 View Cited Treatment , fig. 20A.

Lamoha superciliosa View in CoL – Serène & Lohavanijaya, 1973: 30, pl. 4 fig. A. – Ahyong et al., 2009: 98, figs. 66–68. – Richer de Forges & Ng, 2008: 23 View Cited Treatment , figs. 19A–C, 20A–E, 21A–D, 22E, F (not Hypsophrys superciliosa Wood-Mason , in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891)

Lamoha longirostris View in CoL – Ng & Chen, 1999: 760. – Ng et al., 2001: 54. – Takeda et al., 2005: 106, fig. 1B. – Ng et al., 2008: 40. – Richer de Forges & Ng, 2008: 20 View Cited Treatment , figs. 17A–D, 18A–G, 22B–D. – Ahyong et al., 2009: 94, figs. 61–63.

Material examined. Paralectotype: male (22.9 × 18.6 mm) ( ZRC 1999.0007 View Materials ), East China Sea, St. 2V-9, 28°10′N 127°30′E, 900 m, coll. 3 January 1981 GoogleMaps . Others: 1 male (29.2 × 24.2 mm) ( ZRC 2008.0990 View Materials ), station CP 2753, eastern Luzon , 15°37.23′N 121°58.24′E, Philippines, 1252–1350 m, trawl, coll. AURORA 2007 Expedition, 3 June 2007 GoogleMaps . – 1 male (25.2 × 20.2 mm) ( ZRC 1999.0410 View Materials ) , off Tungsha Island, Taiwan, South China Sea , trawl coll. P.-H. Ho, 23 mm) ( USNM 1150828 View Materials ) , station 98, Pagan Island , Northern Mariana Islands, 18°05′48′′N 145°41′48′′E, 896 m, coll. Townsend Cromwell, 6 May 1982 GoogleMaps . – 1 male (22.0 × 18.3 mm) ( USNM 1150825 View Materials ), station 231, Agrihan Island , Mariana Islands, 18°47.4′N 145°35′E, 1280 m, coll. Townsend Cromwell, 11 July 1982 GoogleMaps . – 1 ovigerous female (18.5 × 16.6 mm) (MNHN-IU-2011-2732), station CP 3686, Papua New Guinea, 03°16′S 147°18′E, 964–1025 m, coll. BIOPAPUA, 26 September 2010 GoogleMaps .

Remarks. The specimen from the East China Sea is a paralectotype (see Ng & Chen, 1999). Lamoha futuna ( Guinot & Richer de Forges, 1995) was synonymised with L. longirostris by Ng & Chen (1999) after examining the types of both species. The distribution of this deep-sea species is therefore very wide, from the South China Sea and China to the central Pacific.

The prominent black spot on each side of the propodus of their chelipeds (see Richer de Forges & Ng, 2008: fig. 18C, D) is distinct in all specimens, but varies in size. This spot was “interpreted” by Williams (1976) as being a luminescent organ. Nobody, however, has observed this phenomenon on a live animal.

April 1995. – 2 ovigerous females (20.8 × 18.2 mm, 26.3 × 20.8 mm) (ZRC 2008.0991), Taiwan, South China Sea, 1400 m, coll. Taiwan University, 2000s. – 1 male (15.0 × 12.8 mm), 1 ovigerous female (23.2 × 18.9 mm), 1 female (24.9 × 20.3 mm) (ZRC 2016.0555), station CP 4167, off Tungsha Island, 22°06.12′N 119°07.77′E – 22°02.69′N 119°03.64′E, Taiwan, South China Sea, 1306–1756 m, mud substrate, trawl, coll. ZHONGSHA 2015 Cruise, 1 August 2015. – 2 males (24.9 × 20.5 mm, 15.3 × 12.6 mm), 1 ovigerous female (24.2 × 20.4 mm), 1 female (23.4 × 19.4 mm) (ZRC 2016.0556), station CTS 2, cold seep, 22°5.19′N 119°48.03′E – 22°2.22′N 119°48.02′E, off southern Taiwan, South China Sea, 1360–1669 m, mud sediment with many dead bivalves and vent tubes, trawl, coll. 30 May 2015. – 1 female (17.9 × 15.0 mm) (ZRC 2008.0993), Taiwan, station OCP 280, 24°23.71′N 122°14.22′E, 1213–1261 m, eastern Taiwan, South China Sea, trawl, coll. TAIWAN 2005 Cruise, 14 June 2005. – 1 male (18.0 × 14.8 mm), 2 females (13.1 × 10.0 mm, 10.8 × 8.5 mm) (ZRC 2008.0992), station CP 277, 24°23.57′N 122°14.12′E, 1222–1261 m, southern Taiwan, South China Sea, trawl, coll. TAIWAN 2005 Cruise, 14 June 2005. – 1 male (13.8 × 11.2 mm), 2 juvenile females (11.8 × 9.1 mm, 10.0 × 7.2 mm) (ZRC 2016.0557), station CST 17, muddy sediment, Pointer Ridge, Taiwan, 22°3.79′N 118°58.80′E – 22°3.78′N 119°4.11′E, 1482 m coll. 1 May 2016. – 2 ovigerous females (28.6 × 25.3 mm, 27.1 × 23.9 In L. longirostris , the supraorbital margin varies from almost entire, without trace of any tooth or spine ( Fig. 6G View Fig ), possessing a low tooth ( Fig. 6A, B, E, F View Fig ) or distinct spine or tooth ( Fig. 6C, D View Fig ). Both specimens of L. superciliosa have a small tooth on the supraorbital margin ( Fig. 6H View Fig ). The subhepatic region of L. longirostris always has one distinct spine and there is sometimes also a sharp granule or a small spine present on the outer part as well, but always distinctly smaller than the inner one ( Figs. 5A View Fig , 7A, C, E, F View Fig ). Many of the specimens of L. longirostris , however, have only one spine, with the remainder of the surface smooth ( Fig. 5B–D View Fig , 7B, D View Fig ). In L. superciliosa , however, this second tooth is either small ( Fig. 7G View Fig ) or can be as large as the inner one ( Figs. 1A, C View Fig , 7H View Fig ).

Colour. In life, the carapace, chelipeds and ambulatory legs are red to pink, with the fingers dark-brown to almost black ( Figs. 23 View Fig , 24A View Fig ) (see also Richer de Forges & Ng, 2008: fig. 18; Ahyong et al., 2009: figs. 61, 62, 66, 67).

Ecology. A specimen of L. longirostris was observed by a submersible at a depth of 1212 m in the Mariana Island group (18.323°N 165.979°E) on 13 August 2016 carrying an unidentified sea anemone ( Fig. 23 View Fig ). Another Lamoha species , L. inflata ( Guinot & Richer de Forges, 1981) has also been observed to use the P5 to cling to and manipulate sea anemones. Chintiroglou et al. (1996) first reported that specimens of L. inflata caught in deep-water traps often carried a species of Isanthus ( Anthozoa, Actiniaria , Isanthidae ). They noted the crabs were caught from hard bottoms and suggested that because the “special chelate structure of the last pair of legs which is raised over the carapace, that the crab must be the active partner, probably manipulating the anemone with the P5 to take it off the substratum and to establish the association.” ( Chintiroglou et al., 1996: 22) (see also Guinot et al., 1995). The present photographs of a L. longirostris photographed in situ ( Fig. 23 View Fig ) in his natural hard bottom habitat carrying an unidentified anemone confirms their hypothesis. Another homolid, Paramola japonica ( Parisi, 1915) is also reported to carry sea anemones (see Wicksten, 1985; Guinot & Wicksten, 2015).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Homolidae

Genus

Lamoha

Loc

Lamoha longirostris ( Chen, 1986 )

Ng, Peter K. L. & Forges, Bertrand Richer de 2017
2017
Loc

Lamoha longirostris

Ahyong ST & Naruse T & Tan SH & Ng PKL 2009: 94
Ng PKL & Guinot D & Davie PJF 2008: 40
Richer De Forges B & Ng PKL 2008: 20
Takeda M & Watabe H & Ohta S 2005: 106
Ng PKL & Wang C-H & Ho P-H & Shih H-T 2001: 54
Ng PKL & Chen H-L 1999: 760
1999
Loc

Hypsophrys futuna

Cleva R & Guinot D & Albenga L 2007: 251
Guinot D & Richer de Forges B 1995: 456
1995
Loc

Hypsophrus longirostris

Chen H 1986: 227
1986
Loc

Lamoha superciliosa

Ahyong ST & Naruse T & Tan SH & Ng PKL 2009: 98
Richer De Forges B & Ng PKL 2008: 23
Serene R & Lohavanijaya P 1973: 30
1973
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