Tumidotheres orcutti (Rathbun, 1918) Rathbun, 1918

Campos, Ernesto & Vargas-Castillo, Rita, 2013, Pinnotheres orcutti Rathbun, 1918, a new Eastern Tropical Pacific species of Tumidotheres Campos, 1989 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Pinnotheridae), Zootaxa 3666 (1) : -

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3666.1.8

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8030879A-2693-4353-B837-2ABC17A3AC72

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6146752

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F60F00-195C-FFF1-DBB3-BCEF8A06FD52

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tumidotheres orcutti (Rathbun, 1918)
status

comb. nov.

Tumidotheres orcutti (Rathbun, 1918) View in CoL new combination

( Figs. 2 5 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 )

Pinnotheres orcutti Rathbun, 1918: 64 –66, 98–99.—Glassell 1938: 451–452.—Silas & Alagarswami 1967:1204, 1225 (list).— Ng et al. 2008: 250 (list).

Type locality. Manzanillo, Colima, México (Eastern Pacific).

Material examined. 1 male holotype, dried, Manzanillo, Colima, México (USNM 49215); 1 ovigerous female (MZ-UCR 2220 11), northeast side Cabo Blanco I., 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.

Measurements. Male holotype, lc = 3.6 mm, wc = 3.1 mm; ovigerous female (MZ-UCR 2220), lc = 5.9 mm, wc = 6.1 mm. Adult female (MZ-UCR 2220-11) lc = 8.5 mm, wc = 8.1 mm (Glassell 1938).

Comparative examined. Pinnotheres pisum (UABC), “coast of France ”; Tumidotheres margarita (UABC), Gulf of California; Playa Kino Viejo, Sonora, 2 females (1 ovigerous), 24 Jan 1985, J. R. Campoy-Favela coll., from Argopecten circularis (Sowerby, 1835) . Punta San Pedro, Bahía Concepción, Baja California Sur, 1 ovigerous female, May 1983, P. A. Ramirez coll., host Pinctada mazatlanica (Hanley, 1856) ; 1 female, 18 May 1984, P. A. Ramirez coll., host P. mazatlanica ; 3 females (2 ovigerous), 4 Nov 1984, J. L. Bello-León coll., host P. mazatlanica ; T. margarita (EMU3747), 1 female, Cortes 3, station 37 (Consag Rock), upper Gulf of California, 4 Aug. 1985, M. Hendrickx coll. West coast of Baja California; Estero El Cardón, Laguna de San Ignacio, Baja California Sur, 4 males and 30 females, 4 Apr 1987, Eulogio López coll., host Argopecten (?) aequisulcatus (Carpenter, 1864).

Geographic. West coast of México, Maria Madre Island, Tres Marías Islands, Nayarit; Tenacatita Bay, Jalisco and Manzanillo, Colima (Glassell 1938); Cabo Blanco Island, Costa Rica (present paper).

Host. Unknown.

Redescription of male (modified from Rathbun 1918). Carapace subhexagonal-suboctagonal, longer than broad, broadest in posterior half, dorsal surface tumid, uneven, posterolateral portion of branchial region forming steep triangular facet; dorsal surface densely hairy, bordered by raised rim; cardiac region surrounded by furrow except anteriorly, surmounted by median tubercle near posterior end. Front sub-rectangular truncate, corners rounded, medially emarginate; broad median furrow posterior to front. Lateral margins long, convex; posterolateral margins short, concave; posterior margin short, straight. Basal segment of antenna elongated, obliquely placed.

Merus of outer maxilliped wide, subangled; propodus broadly subtrapezoidal, digitiform dactylus inserted on proximal portion of oblique distal margin.

Cheliped (left only present) stout, manus short, dorsal margin oblique, increasing greatly in width toward distal end; lower margin of propodus straight except curved upward distal tip; cutting edge of immovable finger with few teeth of which 2 distal the larger, median largest; dactylus wide at base, strongly arched. Tip of propodus, dactylus sharper; curved, overlapping. Legs narrow, length 2>1= 3> 4, propodi with both margins convex except straight posterior margin of second leg; dactyli slender curved, subequal, with spine-like tips.

Abdomen widest at third segment, narrowing distally, telson subcircular longer than sixth segment; sixth segment with shallow right-angled indentation on either side.

Redescription of female (modified from Glassell 1938). Carapace calcareous, high, convex, suboctagonal, slightly longer than broad, broadest in posterior half, surface uneven, branchial regions with irregular lobes; dorsal surface pubescent, bordered by raised rim; cardiac region surrounded by furrow except anteriorly, no median tubercle near posterior end, as in smaller male. Front emarginated, blunt-pointed lobes separated by wide deep notch, behind which runs broad median furrow. Lateral margin long, angled, convex; postero-lateral margin short; posterior margin convex. Basal segment of antennae elongated, obliquely placed.

Merus of outer maxilliped wide, angled; the propodus gently curved at apex, dactyl extending nearly to extremity of propodus.

Chelipeds similar, stout, manus short, dorsal margin oblique, increasing in width toward distal end; ventral margin concave under gape; pollex sharply, upturned at apex, armed with blunt proximal lobe, row of small teeth, 2 distal larger, median largest; dactylus wide at base, strongly arched with wide, angular tooth anterior to deep proximal notch for reception of proximal lobe of pollex; tips of fingers sharply pointed, crossing each other.

Ambulatory legs narrow; second longest; dactyli of first 3 pairs subequal in length, slightly pubescent with spine-like tips; dactyli of fourth pair nearly 1/3 longer than others, nearly straight, longer than propodus fourth, with fringe of pubescence on lower margins.

Abdomen subspherical; telson within perimeter, posterior margins oblique, tip with slight median emargination.

Color. Male: dorsal surface of dried specimen dark purple except across front and on posterior margin and posterior half of cardiac region (Rathbun 1918: 99). Female: buff, pubescence earthy brown (Glassell 1938: 452).

Remarks. The lack of a subconical protuberance in the basal antennal article in Pinnotheres orcutti (see Campos 2009; Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 C) is a distinctive feature that allows to the species to be removed from Pinnotheres Bosc, 1802 . The following characteristics support the inclusion of P. o rc u t t i in Tumidotheres Campos, 1989: 1 ) presence of a thick and firm but not hard carapace, with its uneven surface covered with a short, dense, and deciduous tomentum; 2) third maxilliped with a propodus that is longer than the carpus and 3) a subspatulate dactylus medially inserted into a notch on the ventral margin of the propodus. Species of the genus Pinnotheres have an even and soft carapace ( Fig 1 View FIGURE 1 A) and although they have the propodus of the third maxilliped longer than the carpus, its dactyl is styliform and inserts into the proximal third of the ventral margin of propodus ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 B). Tumidotheres orcutti new combination is the third species of this American genus and the second recorded from the Tropical Eastern Pacific region. It can easily be separated from its sole Pacific congener, T. margarita , by its unique dentition on the inner margin of the cheliped pollex, which is armed with a blunt proximal lobe and a row of small teeth, the two distal ones being conspicuously the largest ( Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 D; 3A B). The pollex dentition of T. margarita consists of very small teeth, all of similar size ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 A–B).The morphology of the female on which Hendrickx based the upper Gulf of California record of T. orcutti concurs with T. margarita instead of T. orcutti . Tumidotheres orcutti species is restricted to Tres Marías Islands, Nayarit, Mexico. Glassell (1938) pointed out some remarkable variations of the third maxilliped of T. orcutti that need to be taken into account during future identifications of this species. In particular, he noted that in one specimen of Tenactatlita Bay, Jalisco, the dactyl of the right and left sides were asymmetrical in length, with that of the right extending considerably past its propodus, whereas that of the left was short of its propodal apex. This appears to be the first record of an asymmetry in the third maxilliped in the Pinnotheridae . It is unknown whether this is a normal variation or a developmental aberration. Some sexual differences in the shape of the male and female propodi were also noticed. In both sexes this article is subtrapezoidal ( Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 A-B; 3 C-D; 4 A), but in the male the distal dorsal margin is subacute instead of gently rounded as in the female. We consider that the subtriagular shape recorded by Glassell (1938) and earlier by Rathbun (1918) for males refers to the distal tip and not the propodus as a whole, which is clearly subtrapezoidal in both sexes. Glassell (1938) also pointed out that the shallow right-angled indentations on either side of the sixth abdominal segment present in the male holotype of T. orcutti , as well as in the adult male of T. margarita ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 C), were absent in a male from Maria Madre I. This specimen was unavailable for study, but the lack of abdominal indentation, which is always present in adult males, suggests that this specimen is a subadult male or a female in prehard or hard stage possessing a masculine habitus and can only be distinguished from males by the absence of gonopods (see Campos 1989, 2013).

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