Tumidotheres margarita (Smith, 1870)

Campos, Ernesto, 2016, The Pinnotheridae of the northeastern Pacific (Alaska to Mexico): zoogeographical remarks and new bivalve hosts (Crustacea, Brachyura, Pinnotheridae), Zootaxa 4170 (2), pp. 311-329 : 324-325

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4170.2.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:ABA0F247-BE66-474F-9905-708E78AEB7EB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6088003

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E987B3-FFF3-FFE0-FF45-8F073AB5BCC7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tumidotheres margarita (Smith, 1870)
status

 

Tumidotheres margarita (Smith, 1870) View in CoL

( Figs. 5 View FIGURE 5. A – B C, D)

Material examined. Gulf of California : 2 females (1 juvenile, 1 gravid), Playa Kino Viejo , Sonora, 28°75'N, 112°00'W, 24 Jan 1985, in Argopecten irradians concentricus (Say, 1822) GoogleMaps ; 2 females (1 ovigerous), 24 Jan 1985, in A. i. concentricus ; 1 ovigerous, 2 May 1983, in Pinctada mazatlanica (Hanley, 1855) ; 1 female, 18 May 1984, in P. mazatlanica ; 3 females (2 ovigerous), 4 Nov. 1984, in P. mazatlanica, Punta San Pedro, Bahía Concepción, Baja California Sur, 26°49'46.95"N, 111°52'19.21"W. West coast of Baja California GoogleMaps : 4 males and 30 females, 4 April 1987, Estero El Cardón, Laguna de San Ignacio, Baja California Sur, 26°47'40.38"N, 113°9'4.49"W, in Argopecten ventricosus (G. B. Sowerby II, 1842) GoogleMaps ; 4 males (2 juveniles), 2 females (1 ovigerous) Banco El Zacatoso, Laguna Ojo de Liebre , Guerrero Negro, Baja California Sur, Mexico, 27°53´05”N ; 114°08´39”W, 9 Jan 2013 in Nodipecten subnodosus (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835) (new host); 2 females juveniles, Banco La Concha, Laguna Ojo de Liebre , Guerrero Negro, Baja California Sur, Mexico, 27°49´21”N ; 114°14´25” W, 9 Jan 2013 in N. subnudosus .

Additional material examined. 1 ovigerous female (Museum of Zoology, University of Costa Rica, MZ– UCR 2220–11), northeast side Cabo Blanco Is., dredged parallel to the line coast, 30–40 m depth, 16–17 May 1998, Costa Rica, 9°33´26.67”N, 85°07´05.61”W.

Revised distribution. Playa Kino Viejo, Sonora, (Gulf of California) and west coast of Baja California Sur to Scammon’s Lagoon, Guerrero Negro, Baja California Sur, Mexico to Panama Bay, Panama (Schmitt et al. 1973; Campos 1989; present record).

Hosts. Mollusca: Bivalvia: Pectinidae ; A. i. concentricus , A. ventricosus , N. subnudosus (new host); and Pteridae, P. mazatlanica (Campos-González 1988; Campos 1989; present study).

Distribution and host removed. Records of T. margarita from El Rosario, west coast of Baja California in Crassadoma giganteus (Gray, 1825) and the San Felipe area, northern Gulf of California, in Limaria pacifica (d'Orbigny, 1846) and Barbatia reeveana (d'Orbigny, 1846) by Campos (1989b) are confirmed misidentifications. Their taxonomic status is to be discussed in a forthcoming publication.

Remarks. The American genus Tumidotheres consist of three species: the Atlantic T. maculatus (Say) and the Pacific T. margarita and T. orcutti (Rathbun, 1918) . All these species share a swollen carapace covered with short, dense, and deciduous tomentum, a third maxilliped with a narrowly spatulate dactylus, inserted in angular notch in middle of ventral margin of propodus; the dactyl of the last ambulatory leg being much longer than that of the other ambulatory legs in adult females, and the abdomen with six somites and a freely articulating telson. Tumidotheres margarita , which seems to prefer scallops (family Pectinidae ), can be separated from its only known Pacific Ocean congener, T. orcutti (host unknown), by the unique dentition of the cutting edge of the cheliped pollex, which is armed with small teeth, all similar in size ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5. A – B C–D). In contrast, the pollex of T. orcutti has a blunt proximal lobe and a row of small teeth, the two distal teeth being conspicuously the largest ( Fig. 5 A–B View FIGURE 5. A – B ).

Some aspects of the life history of T. margarita were revised by Campos (1989b), who pointed out this species develops into a hard stage crab (Christensen & McDermott 1958) after several molts of the infestive and prehard stages. Presumably, hard stage males and females leave their host to form a copulatory swarming in open sea, reinfesting their host after mating. Data from Felix-Pico (1992) suggest that T. margarita , found in A. circularis , start copulation during late winter and spring. After copulatory swarming, females re-infest their host, reaching the ovigerous stage during late spring and summer, and disappearing during autumn-winter. The discovery of males of T. margarita , in prehard and hard stage, and females in posthard stages (Felix-Pico 1992) suggest this crab completes its postplanktonic life history in a single host species, which is re-infested after copulation in open water. Similarly T. maculatus re-infests to Mytilus edulis after copulation in open water (Pearce 1969). The absence of females in prehard and hard stage of T. margarita is remarkable, which may suggest that these female stages may live in a different host that was overlooked or that the males in prehard and hard stage recorded by Felix-Pico (1992) included undetected females. Males and females in pre-hard and hard stages are identical and have a narrow abdomen, which results in them frequently being identified as males. The sexes in Pinnotheridae at prehard and hard stage can be only recognized by locating the gonopods in males (see Campos 1989b, 2013) and pleopods in females along with the presence of female gonopores on the sixth thoracic sternite and male gonopods on the eighth thoracic sternite.

UCR

University of California

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