Parastacus varicosus Faxon, 1898

Ribeiro, Felipe Bezerra & Araujo, Paula Beatriz, 2024, Taxonomic review of the genus Parastacus Huxley, 1879 (Decapoda: Astacidea: Parastacidae) with description of five new species, Zootaxa 5455 (1), pp. 1-84 : 34-38

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5455.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:08C2F841-1BF8-492D-A6DE-788CC5595E03

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11257708

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E0222776-BE71-6064-FF1B-FF38F650FCD0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Parastacus varicosus Faxon, 1898
status

 

Parastacus varicosus Faxon, 1898 View in CoL

( Fig. 18–20 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 )

Parastacus varicosus Faxon, 1898: 685 View in CoL , pl. 69. — Ortmann 1902: 293.—­ Riek, 1971:134,fig. 1a, d, e.—­ Buckup & Rossi, 1980:675, figs. 12-14,21.—­ Hobbs 1989: 80, fig. 367; 1991: 801, fig. 3d.—­ Buckup & Bond-Buckup 1994: 19.—­ Crandall & De Grave, 2017: 641.—­ Rogers et al. 2020: 876 (key), fig. 23.62A, C. —­ Huber et al. 2022: 275 (key).—­ De los Ríos-Escalante et al. 2022: 1131 (appendix), fig. 1q..—­ Huber et al. 2024: 13 (key).

Parastacus pilimanus View in CoL .—­ Correa et al. 2013: 156, fig. 1, 2.

Type locality. Colima ( Mexico) [erroneous locality] .

Type material re-examined. Holotype, ♂, Colima ( USNM 4133 View Materials ) [Photos examined].

Material examined. Brazil, Santa Catarina: one male, Joinville, Estrada Timbé (direção Chaparral ) (26°12’30”S; 48°50’47”W), 19/II/2001, coll. L. Buckup & G. Bond-Buckup ( UFRGS 3067 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; one male and one female, Joinville, Estrada Timbé (direção Chaparral ) (26°12’30”S; 48°50’47”W), 20/II/2001, coll. L. Buckup & G. Bond-Buckup ( UFRGS 3066 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; one male, Joinville, Estrada Timbé (direção Chaparral ) (26°12’30”S; 48°50’47”W), 08/X/2003, coll. L. Buckup & G. Bond-Buckup ( UFRGS 2663 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; two males, Siderópolis, Jordão Baixo , 01/XII/19777, coll. L. Buckup ( UFRGS 271 View Materials ) ; one female and two juveniles, Maracajá, Canal de drenagem de fragmento florestal, sub-bacia do Rio Mãe Luzia , Bacia do Rio Araranguá (28°51’7,75”S; 49°25’45,72”W), 01/X/2019, coll. C. Feltrin ( UFRGS 6920 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; one male, Maracajá, Arroio no Parque Ecológico Maracajá (28°53’55,8”S; 42°25’43,8”W), 27/ IX/2019, coll. C. Fukakusa, J. Ferrer, J. Chucktaya & L. Malabarba ( UFRGS 6920 View Materials ) GoogleMaps .

Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul: one male, Novo Hamburgo, Lomba Grande, Estrada da Integração , 27/X/1985, coll. G. Oliveira & J. Muller ( UFRGS 1354 View Materials ); five males, one female, Novo Hamburgo , Lomba Grande , Estrada da Integração , 28/IX/1985, coll. J. Muller ( UFRGS 1355 View Materials ); seven males, Novo Hamburgo , Lomba Grande , Estrada da Integração , 25/X/1985, coll. Guacira & Jackson ( UFRGS 2343 View Materials ); one sni, Novo Hamburgo , Lomba Grande , Estrada da Integração , coll. G. Oliveira & J. Muller ( UFRGS 879 View Materials ); four males, Fazenda do Sandro , Lomba Grande , Novo Hamburgo (- 29.7302545S; - 51.087590W), 25/XI/2018, coll. A.F. Huber & F.B. Ribeiro ( UFRGS 6656 View Materials ); six males, Canoas, floodplain of Sinus river , Tabaí-Canoas, 16/IX/1983 ( MCTP 981 ); one male, Porto Alegre, várzea do Rio Gravataí , 08/XI/2000, coll. Malabarba, Berg, Anza & Azevedo ( UFRGS 4790 View Materials ); six juveniles, Laguna dos Patos, Tavares, VI/2016, coll. L.E.K. Lanés, R. Godoy & V. Weber ( UFRGS 6413 View Materials ); one male, Taim, 21/XI/1979, coll. Helena ( UFRGS 2347 View Materials ); one female, Taim, 6–10/VII/1979, coll. P. Buckup, C. Souto & K. Leyser ( UFRGS 1370 View Materials ); six males, Pelotas, 22/VII1965 ( MZUSP 6934 ); one female GoogleMaps , Rio Grande do Sul, coll. Hering ( BMNH 1983 :5); one male, Mostardas , 21/I/1977 ( UFRGS 281 View Materials ); one male, Gravataí, Fazenda Alencastro, 29/X/1976 ( UFRGS 280 View Materials ) .

Uruguay: one sni, Republica Oriental del Uruguay, 1897, coll. F. M. Rodriguez (MACN–In 4570–1); two males, Departamento de Rocha, Camino a laguna de Rocha (Frente al Velódromo), IV/1996 (FC–UDELAR 314); one male and one female, Departamento de Rocha (FC–UDELAR 355); one male and three juveniles, Rocha, Ruta 9 Pte Arroyo Valizas, Charco al Norte de La Carretera, 09/V/1981, coll. R. V. Ferreira, F. Achaval & J. Bergan (FCUDELAR 276); one sni, Bocas del Sarandi , III/1995 (FC–UDELAR 313); one sni, Departamento de Maldonado, Gruta de Salamanca , Ruta 13 entre Aigua y Velazquez (FC–UDELAR 384); one sni, Montevideo, Parque Centenario, XII/1938, coll. Carcelles, Alberto & M. Rosa (MACN–In 23568); three females and 19 males, Maldonado, IX/1927, coll. C.R. Mazzoni (MACN–In 17514) .

Argentina: one female with juveniles, Entre Ríos (MACN–In 30723) .

Diagnosis and description. Faxon (1898) and Buckup & Rossi (1980).

Remarks. This species also occurs in the municipality of Siderópolis—­ SC, being erroneously identified as P. saffordi by Buckup and Rossi (1980). Regarding the type locality, it is clearly erroneous as pointed out by Hobbs (1987) and Buckup & Rossi (1980), because the genus Parastacus only occurs in South America. The material listed by De los Ríos Escalante (2022) from the locality of Cova do Touro (29°52’S 51°00’W) used in the study of Silva-Castiglioni et al. (2008) was analyzed and does not correspond to P. varicosus , and are considered to be an undescribed species. Additional morphological characters not mentioned in previous descriptions include: eyes large ( Fig. 18A, B, C View FIGURE 18 ); front wide ( Fig. 18A, B View FIGURE 18 ); epistome anterolateral section with a very sharp conical projection ( Fig. 19A View FIGURE 19 ); antennal scale lateral margin straight ( Fig. 19D View FIGURE 19 ); antennule internal ventral border of basal article with one sharp spine ( Fig. 19A View FIGURE 19 ); mandible with cephalic molar process molariform and caudal molar process bicuspidate or tricuspidate, incisor lobe with nine teeth; the third tooth from the anterior are the largest ( Fig. 19E View FIGURE 19 ); SLP4 smallest and separeted to each other, medial keel present and not inflated; SLP5 widely separeted to each other, median keel present and not inflated; SLP6 larger than SLP4 and SLP5 with slightly concave dorsal surface, medial keel present and inflated; SLP7 largest and with slightly concave surface, median keel present and slightly inflated; SLP8 smaller than SLP7, median keel absent, vertical arms of paired sternopleural bridges close to each other in the superior portion, bullar lobes not visible ( Fig. 19B, C View FIGURE 19 ); male cuticle partition present. Specimens collected in Joinville (state of Santa Catarina) lack the tufts of long setae present in the inner margin of cheliped merus, carpus, and propodus. However, there is not enough morphological evidence to group these individuals into another species. Parastacus varicosus is morphologically similar to P. saffordi as mentioned before, but it can be distinguishable by the serrated externally branchiocardic grooves, longer merus, propodus, and dactylus of chelipeds and by the anteriomedian lobe of epistome with acute apex.

Distribution. Brazil: states of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina ( Buckup and Rossi, 1980; 2003); Uruguay: departments of Montevideo, Maldonado and Rocha; Argentina: Province of Entre Ríos) ( Ribeiro et al. 2020).

Color of living specimens. Rostrum, cephalothorax anterior and lateral regions olive green. Dorsal pleon with dark green longitudinal lines interspaced by darkish yellow lines, tailfan light green, dark green or greenish brown. Chelipeds light green with a dark green line in lateral margins in palm and fingers. Pereiopod pairs 2–5 light green or dark green ( Fig. 20D, E View FIGURE 20 ).

Habitat and Ecology. Swamps and wetlands away from temporary or permanent water bodies and sometimes in streams, where they can build shallow burrows in the margins with or without chimneys ( Buckup & Rossi, 1980) ( Fig. 20A–C View FIGURE 20 ). Burrows of P. varicosus can be identified as type 1a, b according to Horwitz and Richardson’s (1986) classification and the species can be considered a tertiary burrower based on Hobbs’ (1942) classification ( Ribeiro et al. 2020).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Parastacidae

Genus

Parastacus

Loc

Parastacus varicosus Faxon, 1898

Ribeiro, Felipe Bezerra & Araujo, Paula Beatriz 2024
2024
Loc

Parastacus varicosus

Huber, A. F. & Araujo, P. B. & Ribeiro, F. B. 2024: 13
Huber, A. F. & Araujo, P. B. & Ribeiro, F. B. 2022: 275
Rios-Escalante, P. R. & Jara-Seguel, P. & Contreras, A. & Latsague, M. & Lara, G. & Rudolph, E. & Crandall, K. A. 2022: 1131
Rogers, C. D. & Magalhaes, C. & Peralta, M. & Ribeiro, F. B. & Bond-Buckup, G. & Price, W. W. & Guerrero-Kommritz, J. & Mantelatto, F. L. & Bueno, A & Camacho, A. I. & Gonzalez, E. R. & Jara, C. G. & Pedraza, M. & Pedraza-Lara, C. & Rudolph Latorre, E. & Santos, S. 2020: 876
Crandall, K. A. & De Grave, S. 2017: 641
Buckup, L. & Bond-Buckup, G. 1994: 19
Hobbs, H. H. Jr. 1989: 80
Buckup, L. & Rossi, A. 1980: 675
Riek, E. F. 1971: 134
Ortmann, A. E. 1902: 293
Faxon, W. 1898: 685
1898
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF