Alpheus nuttingi ( Schmitt, 1924 )

Anker, Arthur, Hurt, Carla & Knowlton, Nancy, 2007, Revision of the Alpheus nuttingi (Schmitt) species complex (Crustacea: Decapoda: Alpheidae), with description of a new species from the tropical eastern Pacific, Zootaxa 1577 (1), pp. 41-60 : 44-47

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1577.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2DF6B6E7-0509-4D92-8DD6-96768B2BBE93

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039787DD-2216-280B-BEDF-FEC9FCF3FD4F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Alpheus nuttingi ( Schmitt, 1924 )
status

 

Alpheus nuttingi ( Schmitt, 1924) View in CoL

Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 5A View FIGURE 5 , 6A View FIGURE 6 , 7A–C View FIGURE 7 , 8A View FIGURE 8

Crangon nuttingi Schmitt, 1924: 78 , pl. 2, figs. 4–6

Alpheus nuttingi View in CoL – Hendrix, 1971: 111, pls. 14, 15; Chace, 1972: 68; Christoffersen, 1979: 304; Christoffersen, 1980: 92, figs. 21–23; Santos, 1981: 342, figs. 17f, g, 18a, b, f; Abele & Kim, 1986: 199, 214, 215, figs. e, h; Knowlton & Mills, 1992: 2; Hernández-Aguilera et al., 1996: 33; Martínez-Iglesias et al., 1997: 425; Christoffersen, 1998: 360; Santos & Coelho, 1998: 76, fig. 16; McClure, 2005: 147, fig. 18.

Alpheus nutting (lap. cal.) – Spivak, 1997: 72.

Not Alpheus nuttingi View in CoL var.? – Schmitt, 1936: 368 (= A. cf. bouvieri A. Milne-Edwards, 1878 View in CoL )

Alpheus heterochaelis View in CoL (not Say 1818) – Smith, 1871: 23 (part.); Rathbun, 1900: 152 (part.); Luederwaldt, 1919: 429 (part.) (see Christoffersen, 1984).

Crangon heterochaelis (not Say, 1818) – Schmitt, 1939: 28 (part.) (see Christoffersen, 1984).

Material examined.— Panama: 1 male, USNM 1100678 View Materials , Bocas del Toro, Isla Carenero, near Bucaneer, under rocks on sand/silt, depth: 0.5– 1 m, coll. A. Anker, 25 Oct 2005 [fcn 05-143] ; 1 female, USNM 1100679 View Materials , same collection data as previous specimen [fcn 05-138] ; 1 male, USNM 1100680 View Materials , Bocas del Toro, Hospital Point, under rocks on sand/silt, depth: 0.5– 1 m, coll. A. Anker, 16 Oct 2005 [fcn 05-140]; 1 ovig. female, MNHN-Na 16364, Bocas del Toro, Isla Colon , between Big Creek and Playa Bluff, from crevices in coral rocks, depth: 1–2 m, coll. A, Anker, 18 Oct 2005 [fcn 05-142] ; 2 males, USNM 1100682 View Materials , Bocas del Toro, Isla Colon, Bocas del Drago , from coral rocks, depth: 0.5– 1 m, coll. A. Anker, 20 Oct 2005 [fcn 05-141] ; 1 male, USNM 1100681 View Materials , Coco Solo, near Colón, under rocks, coll. N. Knowlton lab, 22 Feb 1995 [fcn B331, C- 1239] . Costa Rica: 1 male, MNHN-Na 16365, Cahuita, Puerto Vargas, under rocks and coral rubble, among seagrass roots, depth: 0.5– 1 m, coll. A. Anker, 26–27 Nov 2005 [fcn 05-144] . Aruba: 1 male, 1 female, MNHN-Na 16366, southern coast east of international airport, Pos Chiquito, from coral rocks, depth: 0.5– 1 m, coll. A. Anker, 7–8 Dec 2003 [fcn 03-013] .

Description.—For complete description see Schmitt (1924) and Hendrix (1971). An adult male from Panama is illustrated in Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 for comparison with the below-described A. millsae , n. sp.

Size.—The largest examined male is 12.7 mm CL and 36.8 mm TL. Hendrix (1971) gave the size range for Florida specimens as 5.5–10.0 mm CL for males and 6.0–9.16 mm CL for females.

Color.—Body greenish (combination of reddish and bluish chromatophores) speckled with numerous pale yellow or greenish dots, some interconnected, forming chains and small reticulations; flanks of carapace dull greenish to whitish; legs reddish with some spots and white patches marking articulations; third and fourth abdominal somite occasionally with a pair of minute dark-brown dorsolateral spots; fifth somite occasionally with one minute brown mediodorsal spot; major and minor chelae mesially greenish-brown with numerous whitish spots and patches, many of them interconnected, especially on distal half of palm and fingers; pale orange or yellow areas marking palmar depressions; dactylus of major chela pinkish-white distally; antennular and antennal flagella pale blue ( Fig. 7A, B View FIGURE 7 ); ovigerous females with yellow-orange eggs ( Fig. 8A View FIGURE 8 ); young individuals paler, more reticulated ( Fig. 7C View FIGURE 7 ). A similar color description was provided by Hendrix (1971).

Type locality.— Pelican Island , Barbados ( Schmitt, 1924) .

Distribution.—Western Atlantic: from southern Florida ( Abele & Kim, 1986) and southwestern Gulf of Mexico ( McClure, 2005) throughout Caribbean Sea ( Chace, 1972) to Santa Catarina, southern Brazil ( Christoffersen, 1998). Brazilian specimens are genetically distinct from the Caribbean specimens (Williams et al., 2001; see also below) despite having the same color pattern (A. Anker, pers. obs., based on color photographs by E. Mossolin).

Ecology.— Alpheus nuttingi is a very common Alpheus species in the Caribbean region and along the Brazilian coast. It occurs mostly on sandy bottoms with abundant coral rubble and rocks, often near Thalassia beds; in crevices of coral rocks; among sandy reefs of sabellariid polychaetes; in clumps of Halimeda and similar habitats in depths ranging from the intertidal to about 5 m ( Hendrix, 1971; Chace, 1972; Christoffersen, 1998).

Remarks.— Alpheus nuttingi differs from the closely related A. millsae , n. sp. (see description below) mainly by the shorter rostral carina ( Fig. 1C View FIGURE 1 ); the larger and more robust plunger of the dactylus of the major chela ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ); the broader dorsal notch on the palm of the major chela ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ); the relatively thicker fingers of the minor chela ( Fig. 6A View FIGURE 6 ); and by the color pattern, especially by the pale dots being mostly chained or interconnected (vs. isolated in A. millsae , n. sp., cf. Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ) (see also Table 1). It differs from A. galapagensis by the absence of a spine on the ischium of the third pereiopod ( Fig. 1N View FIGURE 1 ), which is always present in A. galapagensis (see Kim & Abele, 1988, fig. 30j), and by the color pattern, especially the blue antennal and antennular flagella (orange in A. galapagensis , cf. Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ) (see also Table 1).

The presence or absence of small dark (blackish or dark brown) spots on the third (two dorsolateral), fifth (one median) and occasionally fifth (one median) abdominal somites is shown here not to be a reliable character. These spots are always present in A. millsae , n. sp. ( Fig. 7G, H View FIGURE 7 ) and are usually absent in A. nuttingi ( Fig. 7A, C View FIGURE 7 ); however, at least two examined specimens of the latter species have feebly marked brown spots on the abdomen ( Fig. 7B View FIGURE 7 ), thus making this feature too ambiguous to be used for species discrimination. The color of freshly-laid eggs (orange in one photographed female of A. nuttingi , cf. Fig. 8A View FIGURE 8 ), if shown to be constant, may also separate A. nuttingi from the two eastern Pacific species, in particular from A. galapagensis , in which the eggs are bright green (cf. Fig. 8B View FIGURE 8 ).

The shape of the tooth on the mesioventral carina of the first segment of the antennular peduncle appears to be variable in A. nuttingi and other species of the complex (see below). This tooth usually bears an acute or subacute point ( Fig. 1D View FIGURE 1 ), but is bluntly subtriangular in some specimens, resembling the tooth in A. galapagensis illustrated by Kim & Abele (1988, fig. 30c). The minor chela is more slender in younger males and females compared to larger adult males.

A minor detail that Hendrix (1971) overlooked in his otherwise very detailed description of A. nuttingi is the presence of spinules on the distal margin of the telson and uropodal endopod ( Fig. 1R View FIGURE 1 ); these spinules are also present in A. galapagensis ( Kim & Abele, 1988, fig. 30l) and A. millsae , n. sp. ( Fig. 4R View FIGURE 4 , see below).

GenBank number.— COI 5’ EF092281 View Materials (fcn 05-127), EF092282 View Materials (fcn 06-417); COI 3’ AF309922 View Materials (fcn 98-330) AF309921 View Materials (fcn 98-282), AF309000 View Materials (fcn 98-282) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Alpheidae

Genus

Alpheus

Loc

Alpheus nuttingi ( Schmitt, 1924 )

Anker, Arthur, Hurt, Carla & Knowlton, Nancy 2007
2007
Loc

Alpheus nutting

Spivak, E. D. 1997: 72
1997
Loc

Alpheus nuttingi

McClure, M. R. 2005: 147
Christoffersen, M. L. 1998: 360
Santos, M. A. C. & Coelho, P. A. 1998: 76
Martinez-Iglesias, J. C. & Rios, R. & Carvacho, A. 1997: 425
Knowlton, N. & Mills, D. K. 1992: 2
Abele, L. G. & Kim, W. 1986: 199
Santos, M. A. 1981: 342
Christoffersen, M. L. 1980: 92
Christoffersen, M. L. 1979: 304
Chace, F. A. Jr. 1972: 68
Hendrix, G. Y. 1971: 111
1971
Loc

Crangon heterochaelis

Schmitt, W. L. 1939: 28
1939
Loc

Alpheus nuttingi

Schmitt, W. L. 1936: 368
1936
Loc

Crangon nuttingi

Schmitt, W. L. 1924: 78
1924
Loc

Alpheus heterochaelis

Luederwaldt, H. 1919: 429
Rathbun, M. J. 1900: 152
Smith, S. I. 1871: 23
1871
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