Macrobrachium australe (Guérin-Méneville, 1838 (Guerin-Meneville, 1838)

Castelin, Magalie, Mazancourt, Valentin de, Marquet, Gérard, Zimmerman, Gabrielle & Keith, Philippe, 2017, Genetic and morphological evidence for cryptic species in Macrobrachium australe and resurrection of M. ustulatum (Crustacea, Palaemonidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 289, pp. 1-27 : 9-14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2017.289

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2FE169D8-BA25-4561-A7B8-66AA0563E1A9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3845821

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CF07E947-2730-FFEE-FE84-FA1FFCE4592A

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Macrobrachium australe (Guérin-Méneville, 1838
status

 

Macrobrachium australe (Guérin-Méneville, 1838 View in CoL in Guérin-Méneville 1829 –1838) Fig. 3 View Fig , Table 2 View Table 2

Palaemon australis Guérin-Méneville, 1838 in Guérin-Méneville 1829–1838: 37 View in CoL (“Île de Taïti” = Tahiti). Palaemon danae Heller, 1865: 120 View in CoL , pl. 11, fig. 4 (”Sydney”; synonymy considered erroneous by Short 2004).

Palaemon dispar von Martens, 1868: 41 View in CoL (“ Insel Adenare, unweit Flores” = Adenare Island, near Flores). Palaemon alphonsianus Hoffmann, 1874: 33 View in CoL , pl. 9, figs 63–65 (“l’île de la Réunion ” = Reunion Island). Palaemon parvus Hoffmann, 1874: 35 View in CoL , pl. 7, fig. 59 (“l’île de Nossy-Faly” = Nosy Faly Island).

Palaemon malliardi Richters, 1880: 166 View in CoL , pl. 18, figs 1–3 (“Creole River, Black River, Mauritius Is.”).

Leander lepidus de Man, 1915: 410 View in CoL , pl. 28, figs 6–6d (”Mündung des kleinen Flusses zu Oinaké, einem Dorfe an der Küste östlich von der Humboldt-Bai” = mouth of a small river at Oinaké, a coastal village east of Humboldt Bay (Yos Sudarso Bay), Papua).

Material examined

Neotype

COOK ISLANDS: 1 ♂, Rarotonga Island   GoogleMaps , Avana River, 21.2461° S, 159.7316° W, 11 Jul. 2010, 15.3 mm CL (MNHN-IU-2013-13198).

Other material

COOK ISLANDS: 1 ♂, same collection data, 12 mm CL (MNHN-IU-2013-13196); 1 ♂, 14.5 mm CL (MNHN-IU-2013-13197).

COMOROS: 1 ♂, Anjouan Island, Jomani River, 12.246° S, 44.529° E, 2 Nov. 2005, 16.2 mm CL (MNHN-IU-2013-13199).

VANUATU: 1 ♂, Pentecost Island, Warbot River, 15.957° S, 168.195° E, 26 Jan. 2010, 14.3 mm CL (MNHN-IU-2013-13200).

Description

ROSTRUM. Moderately long, reaching to or slightly beyond end of scaphocerite ( Fig. 3A View Fig ); tip slightly upcurved; dorsal margin with 10–11 teeth, including 2–3 teeth on carapace; ventral margin with 3–4 teeth; teeth large, evenly spaced; sometimes distance between ultimate and penultimate teeth much larger than distances between other teeth; sometimes distance between 1 st and 2 nd teeth larger than between 2 nd and 3 rd teeth.

GENERAL CEPHALON. Eyes well developed; cornea as long as, but broader than peduncle; stylocerite distinctly pointed, reaching beyond basal segment; inferior orbit bluntly angular ( Fig. 3A View Fig ); postantennular carapace margin straight or slightly concave; protective setation absent on carapace; epistome lobes narrowly separated, not strongly diverging anteriorly ( Fig. 3B View Fig ); TS4 unarmed ( Fig. 3C View Fig ).

SECOND CHELIPEDS (fully developed ♂). Very unequal sizes, non-isomorphic. Major P2 ( Fig. 3D View Fig ) long, subcylindrical, merus extending beyond scaphocerite; carpus 0.78–0.97 CHL, 1.18–1.40 PL. Fingers slender, 0.32–0.55 PL; dactylus shorter than FF. Cutting edges ( Fig. 3E View Fig ) with 4–5 conical teeth at base (3 rd largest) followed by 9–14 evenly spaced, small, blunt teeth along entire length; teeth diminishing in size distally; FF elongated, curved inwards; teeth arrangement similar to that of dactylus; basal part armed with 5–6 conical teeth (3 rd largest) followed by 9–16 evenly spaced, small, blunt teeth along entire length; teeth diminishing in size distally. Largest tooth of FF lies after largest tooth of dactylus. Cheliped with numerous large spiniform setae on inner edge, smaller and denser on outer edge. Some scattered long setae present on cheliped, but very distinct on fingers. Merus 0.51–0.60 CAL, ischium 0.48–0.76 MEL. Minor P2 ( Fig. 3F View Fig ) with entire carpus beyond scaphocerite. Carpus 0.79–1.04 CHL, 1.19–1.60 PL. Fingers slender, 0.46–0.53 PL. Palm and bases of fingers densely packed with velvety setae. CED ( Fig. 3G View Fig ) with 6–13 teeth along entire length diminishing in size. CEFF with 9–15 teeth, similar teeth arrangement to that of dactylus, but teeth smaller. Pereiopods with numerous spiniform setae, denser on lower edge. MEL 0.60–0.81 CAL, IL 0.76–0.81 MEL.

ABDOMEN. Smooth, inter-uropodal sclerite with preanal carina.

Remarks

Since the type specimen of P. australis is lost, and because of the taxonomic problems discussed above, a specimen from the Avana River on Rarotonga Island ( Cook Islands, Central Pacific), which is geographically close to the type locality of P. australis (Tahiti) , is herein designated as the neotype of M. australe in order to stabilize the taxonomy of the species. One specimen in our sample was collected from Moorea, which is closer to Tahiti. However, the specimen was in a less good condition than specimens from Rarotonga; thus, diagnostic morphological characters defined in this study were less obvious. Specimens from Rarotonga and from Moorea, however, showed no genetic variation in both the 28S and the 16S genes.

Distribution

From the Indian Ocean ( Madagascar, Comoros and Mascarenes Islands) to the Central Pacific Ocean ( French Polynesia and Cook Islands). Syntopic with M. ustulatum in the Northwest Pacific Ocean ( Taiwan, Philippines, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and Palau) and the Southwest Pacific Ocean ( Vanuatu) ( Fig. 1 View Fig ).

Habitat

Lentic habitats in the lower courses of rivers and at the edge of rivers, in water plant communities ( Keith et al. 2013).

Color patterns

Body colors ( Fig. 4A View Fig ) tend to match the substrate, varying from grey to brown, rather translucent, with three reddish stripes on each side of the cephalothorax.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Palaemonidae

Genus

Macrobrachium

Loc

Macrobrachium australe (Guérin-Méneville, 1838

Castelin, Magalie, Mazancourt, Valentin de, Marquet, Gérard, Zimmerman, Gabrielle & Keith, Philippe 2017
2017
Loc

Leander lepidus

De Man J. G. 1915: 410
1915
Loc

Palaemon malliardi

Richters F. 1880: 166
1880
Loc

Macrobrachium australe (Guérin-Méneville, 1838

Macrobrachium australe (Guérin-Méneville, 1838 in Guérin-Méneville 1829
Loc

Palaemon australis Guérin-Méneville, 1838 in Guérin-Méneville 1829–1838: 37

Palaemon australis Guérin-Méneville, 1838 in Guérin-Méneville 1829–1838: 37
Loc

Palaemon danae

Palaemon danae Heller, 1865: 120
Loc

Palaemon dispar

Palaemon dispar von Martens, 1868: 41
Palaemon alphonsianus Hoffmann, 1874: 33
Palaemon parvus Hoffmann, 1874: 35
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