Parilia ovata Chen, 1984

Ng, Peter K. L., Devi, Suvarna & Kumar, Appukuttannair Biju, 2018, The genus Parilia Wood-Mason, in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891, with description of a new species and establishment of a new genus for P. tuberculata Sakai, 1961 (Crustacea, Brachyura, Leucosiidae), Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 66, pp. 300-319 : 302-304

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4503189

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CBB28174-9B04-4A65-8C7C-5EB4B3608D98

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4778996

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E3224D-FFBA-2832-FC72-F988FAF1AA30

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Parilia ovata Chen, 1984
status

 

Parilia ovata Chen, 1984 View in CoL

( Figs. 1C View Fig , 3C View Fig , 4E, F View Fig , 5F View Fig , 6C View Fig , 7E, F View Fig , 8 View Fig J–M)

Parilia ovata Chen, 1984: 482 View in CoL , figs. 1–6; Chen, 1989: 235, text fig. 30d; Tan, 1996: 1048; Chen & Sun, 2002: 366, text fig. 163; Ng et al., 2008: 92.

Myra anomala Zarenkov, 1990: 62 View in CoL , fig. 5.

Material examined. 1 male (31.6 × 43.3 mm) ( ZRC 2017.219 View Materials ), northwestern Panglao , Bohol, Philippines, coll. J. Arbasto , 2006.

Diagnosis. Carapace longitudinally ovate ( Figs. 1C View Fig , 3C View Fig ); dorsal surface smooth ( Fig. 3C View Fig ); branchial regions not swollen laterally and dorsally, lateral margin of carapace entire, smooth ( Fig. 3C View Fig ); dome-shape in frontal view ( Fig. 4E View Fig ); frontal region protruding prominently anteriorly with buccal cavity and third maxillipeds not visible in dorsal view, frontal lobes rounded ( Fig. 3C View Fig ); cardiac spine very long ( Fig. 3C View Fig ); outer surface of third maxillipeds smooth ( Figs. 4E, F View Fig , 5F View Fig ); exopod of third maxilliped in adult broad but not foliaceous ( Fig. 5F View Fig ); surfaces of ambulatory legs and chelipeds completely smooth ( Figs. 1C View Fig , 6C View Fig ); G1 proportionately shorter, distal part flared, subdistal lateral projection large, very wide, fan-like, laterally flattened ( Fig. 8 View Fig J–L); female sternopleonal cavity condition not known. South China Sea and Philippines.

Remarks. This is not a common species, with only a few records. The original description was by Chen (1984) from one male and one female specimens from 173 m in the South China Sea, with a subsequent record of a juvenile from the Philippines by Tan (1996). We here confirm the record from the Philippines with the discovery of an adult male from Bohol.

Zarenkov (1990) described Myra anomala from one small juvenile male 12.3 mm in carapace length from Tonkin Bay in northern Vietnam at a depth of 180 m. Galil (2001: 414) noted that this species “does not belong within Myra , as the male abdomen is depicted with an articulate sixth segment.” All Myra species have male pleonal somite 6 completely fused with somite 5 and their G1 structures are very different ( Galil, 2001). Galil (2001), however, did not reassign Myra anomala to another genus. Ng et al. (2008) synonymised Myra anomala Zarenkov, 1990 , under Parilia ovata Chen, 1984 , without comment. From Zarenkov’s (1990: 62, fig. 5-5–10) description and figures, Myra anomala is almost certainly a junior synonym of P. ovata . The carapace of M. anomala (cf. Zarenkov, 1990: fig. 5-5) resembles that of P. ovata ( Fig. 3C View Fig ) except that the lateral tubercles are relatively more prominent which is expected of a juvenile specimen. The exopod of the third maxilliped of M. anomala (Zarenkov, 1990: fig. 5-9) is not as wide as that of the adult ( Fig. 5F View Fig ) but this has also been observed for juvenile P. alcocki in which the structure is proportionately more slender (see earlier). The male pleon of M. anomala has the shape of typical Parilia , with somite 6 and telson free and the surfaces unarmed (Zarenkov, 1990: fig. 5-10); and the fingers of the chela are shorter than the palm (Zarenkov, 1990: fig. 5-7). The G1 of M. anomala is that of a juvenile, being not distinctly elongate, and the subdistal part appears to be damaged, although it appears that there was a lateral projection at that junction (Zarenkov, 1990: fig. 5-6).

Distribution. Parilia ovata was described from the South China Sea (Chen, 1984; Chen & Sun, 2002) but has also been reported from the Philippines ( Tan, 1996) and northern Vietnam (Zarenkov, 1990, as Myra anomala ). The few specimens of this species have been found at depths between 173–230 m (Chen, 1984; Zarenkov, 1990).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Leucosiidae

Genus

Parilia

Loc

Parilia ovata Chen, 1984

Ng, Peter K. L., Devi, Suvarna & Kumar, Appukuttannair Biju 2018
2018
Loc

Myra anomala

Zarenkov 1990: 62
1990
Loc

Parilia ovata

Chen 1984: 482
1984
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