Trissoplax tuberosa, Castro & P. K. L. Ng, 2010

CASTRO, PETER & NG, PETER K. L., 2010, Revision of the family Euryplacidae Stimpson, 1871 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Goneplacoidea), Zootaxa 2375 (1), pp. 1-130 : 104-109

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2375.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F487A8-393B-4248-7D8C-FCD3F141FE21

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Trissoplax tuberosa
status

sp. nov.

Trissoplax tuberosa View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs. 42A–E View FIGURE 42 ; 43D–F View FIGURE 43 )

“? Heteroplax dentatus ” — Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: 72 [in key], 73, 98, figs. 178–182, pl. 17 [Gulf of Thailand]. Heteroplax nitidas [sic] — Serène & Soh 1976: 23 (part) [Andaman Sea]. [not Henicoplax nitida ( Miers, 1879) ]

Type material. Male holotype, 7.6 mm × 10.2 mm ( MNHN-B10340 ) ( Fig. 42 View FIGURE 42 ). Type locality. Indonesia, Moluccas, Ceram , Piru Bay, Tanjung Ani, 03°14'50'' S, 128°04'20''E GoogleMaps .

Material examined. Thailand. Andaman Sea , Thai-Danish Expedition: stn.1047-8, 05°43’N, 100°13’E, 15 m, 26.01.1966, id. as Heteroplax dentata by R. Serène: 1 feminised male parasitized by sacculinid, 3.8 mm × 4.4 mm, 1 juv. male ( ZMUC CRU-10066 ) GoogleMaps .

Indonesia. Moluccas. Rumphius 1 Expedition : Ceram , Piru Bay, Tanjung Ani, stn. D1, 03°14'50'' S, 128°04'20''E, sand with mixed dead shells and dead corals, 23.01.1973: male holotype, 7.6 mm × 10.2 mm ( MNHN-B10340 ) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Suborbital border straight, without inner suborbital tooth or median lobe ( Fig. 42E View FIGURE 42 ). Outer surface of chelipeds with spherical tubercles ( Fig. 42E View FIGURE 42 ).

Description. Carapace ( Fig. 42A View FIGURE 42 ) hexagonal, transversely elongated, wider than long (1.3 wider than long in male holotype), anterolateral borders nearly straight, dorsal surface without clear indication of regions; front wide, with shallow median notch, transverse sulcus along margin. Three anterolateral teeth posterior to triangular outer orbital tooth (first well developed, triangular, obtuse tip; second largest, triangular, acute tip; third short, obtuse tip); margin of teeth slightly granular, margin between outer orbital tooth, first anterolateral teeth curved, margin between first, second anterolateral teeth straight. Orbits moderately long ( Fig. 42A, E View FIGURE 42 ), nearly as long as front (0.8 times frontal width in holotype); small notch on inner third portion of slightly sinuous, thin, granular (from notch to outer orbital tooth) supraorbital border; suborbital border granular, sinuous, without inner suborbital tooth or median lobe ( Fig. 42E View FIGURE 42 ); eye peduncles moderately long (0.4 frontal width in holotype), much longer than corneas (2.6 times cornea length in holotype); large, spherical corneas.

Basal antennal article slightly mobile, with small disto-lateral process so that orbital hiatus is closed excluding antennal flagellum from orbit ( Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: pl. 17, fig. A, as Heteroplax dentatus ).

Posterior margin of epistome lobular; lateral lobes large, with straight margins, separated from median portion by deep fissure; median portion with 3 lobes separated by very weak clefts, with median lobe broadly rectangular. Anterior margin of endostome well demarcated from buccal cavern, endostomial ridges low. Pterygostomian region with coarse granules. Third maxillipeds completely closing buccal cavern; ischium rectangular with deep submedian line; merus relatively square in shape but anteroexternal part angular, rounded, auriculiform; exopod long, reaching to just before anterior edge of merus with long flagellum ( Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: fig. 178, pl. 17, fig. A, as Heteroplax dentatus ).

Cheliped fingers moderately stout, slightly longer than swollen propodus, distal portion light in colour. Outer (dorsal) surface of carpus, propodus, dactylus covered with large, spherical, mammillate tubercles ( Fig. 42E View FIGURE 42 ; Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: pl. 18, figs. C, D, as Heteroplax dentatus ). Inner (dorsal) margin of carpus with large tooth; clump of short setae on anterior margin of carpus, long plumose setae on ventral margin; outer (dorsal) margin of merus with large, obtuse, distal tooth with few, long, simple setae; median portion of ventral surface with 3, 4 rows of large, spherical tubercles. Dorsal, ventral margins of ambulatory legs (P2– P5) smooth, with long, sparse simple setae; dactyli long, slender; P5 merus long, moderately slender (4.1 mm long in holotype), ventral margin slightly arched, distal end reaches past third anterolateral tooth but not second anterolateral tooth when folded against carapace; P5 propodus (1.8 mm long, 0.8 mm wide in holotype), proportionally stout, subcylindrical, inner margin fringed with row of numerous short, simple setae, outer margin with scattered long, simple setae; P5 dactylus (2.2 mm long, 0.2 mm maximum width in holotype) proportionally slender, subcylindrical ( Fig. 42A, B View FIGURE 42 ), fringed with short, simple setae.

Thoracic sternum ( Fig. 42C, D View FIGURE 42 ) wide, thoracic suture 2/3 complete, convex; 3/4 deep, short, interrupted; 4/5, 6/7, 7/8 interrupted, 5/6 complete; median groove on thoracic sternites 7, 8. Sterno-abdominal cavity of male deep, nearly reaching anterior margin of sternite 4 ( Fig. 42D View FIGURE 42 ). Press-button of male abdominal-locking mechanism not visible in holotype.

Male abdomen ( Fig. 42C View FIGURE 42 ; Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: fig. 180, as Heteroplax dentatus ) narrow, slender, transversely narrow (T-shaped), lateral margins of somites 4–6 abruptly narrowing from somite 3 to narrow, pointed telson; somite 3 reaching inner margins of P5 coxae; small portion on each side of thoracic sternite 8 left exposed by closed abdomen, somite 2 transversely almost as long as somite 3 ( Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: fig. 180, as Heteroplax dentatus ). G1 ( Fig. 43D, E View FIGURE 43 ; Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: figs. 181, 182, as Heteroplax dentatus ) long, slender, sinuous, acuminate apex, with small denticles; G2 ( Fig. 43F View FIGURE 43 ) less than onethird of G1, straight, with 2 processes: one long, tip obtuse; second much shorter, tip acute. Male genital opening (gonopore) coxal; coxo-sternal disposition of long penis, protected by concave posterior portion of thoracic sternite 7.

Female not examined (female abdomen illustrated by Serène & Lohavanijaya (1973: fig. 179, as Heteroplax dentatus ).

Etymology. From tuber, Latin for “swelling” or “bulb”, in reference to the conspicuous, spherical tubercles on the outer and dorsal surface of the chelipeds (P1) that is diagnostic of the species.

Remarks. Photographs and drawings of specimens from Manila Bay, Philippines that were identified as “? Heteroplax dentatus ” by Serène & Lohavanijaya (1973: figs. 178–182, pl. 17) clearly show that their two specimens, a male and a female, are referable to the new species. These authors did not realize that their Philippine specimens were actually different from either of Stimpson’s two species of Heteroplax , even after not- ing that H. dentata lacks the coarse cheliped granules found in their Philippine specimens, that the carapace of Stimpson’s H. dentata was narrower than that of the Philippine specimens, and that the conspicuous tomentum on the cheliped meri of Stimpson’s H. dentata was missing in the Philippine specimens.

One difference between Serène & Lohavanijaya’s specimens and the holotype is that in their male specimen the cheliped granules were “less numerous and more worn out” than in their female specimen, a situation that is evident from their photograph ( Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973: pl. 17, fig. B, D, as “? Heteroplax dentatus ”).

Two of a number of specimens from the Andaman Sea identified by Serène & Soh (1976: 23) as Heteroplax nitida (the remaining belong to Henicoplax pilimeles n. sp., see above) are also referred to T. tuberosa n. sp. The detached chelipeds of one of the two specimens (a male feminised by a sacculinid, 3.8 mm × 4.4 mm; ZMUC CRU-10066) are characteristic of the new species. The second, a very small juvenile male, had no chelipeds but both specimens are clearly conspecific and differ from T. dentata because the suborbital border lacks teeth, but possesses a defined median lobe in contrast to T. dentata ( Fig. 41A, B View FIGURE 41 ).

Although close to T. dentata in the general shape of the carapace, T. tuberosa n. sp. is easily distinguished from its sole congener by the presence of coarse tubercles on the outer surface of its chelipeds (smooth in T. dentata ; Fig. 41E View FIGURE 41 ), the absence of the conspicuous tomentum of T. dentata ( Fig. 39D–F View FIGURE 39 ; 40A–E View FIGURE 40 ; 41E View FIGURE 41 ), and, as mentioned above, the absence of both, an inner suborbital tooth and a median lobe on each suborbital bor- der (both present in T. dentata ; Fig. 41A, B View FIGURE 41 ).

Distribution. Andaman Sea coast of Thailand, Philippines ( Serène & Lohavanijaya 1973, as “? Heteroplax dentatus ”), Indonesia ( Moluccas). Depth: shallow subtidal of at least 15 m depth.

Genus Trizocarcinus Rathbun, 1914

Trizocarcinus Rathbun, 1914a: 117 View in CoL ; 1918: 16 [in key], 17 [diagnosis]. — Balss 1957: 1656. — Guinot 1969b: 517, 518 [discussion]; 1971: 1081 [list of species]. — Karasawa & Kato, 2003a: 151 [in list]; 2003b: 139 [in list] [part]. — Ng & Castro 2007: 44 [in list] [part]. — Ng et al. 2008: 78 [in list] [part]. — De Grave et al. 2009: 33 [in list].

Diagnosis. Carapace ( Figs. 44A View FIGURE 44 ; 45A View FIGURE 45 ) nearly quadrate, slightly wider than long, dorsal surface granular ( T. dentatus ) or smooth ( T. tacitus ), without clear indication of regions; anterolateral borders slightly arched; front wide, straight or slightly bilobed, with small median notch. Two triangular anterolateral teeth with acute tips posterior to triangular, anteriorly oriented outer orbital tooth on outer orbital angle. Orbits ( Figs. 44B View FIGURE 44 ; 45A View FIGURE 45 ) moderately transversely long (shorter than front) or long (almost as long as front in T. tacitus ); thin supraorbital margin, granular or smooth, with 2 notches; inner suborbital tooth absent (only slightly elevated margin), sinuous median lobe, outer notch on granular or smooth suborbital border ( Figs. 44C View FIGURE 44 ; 46A, G View FIGURE 46 ); eye peduncles moderately long, shorter than front, approximately as long as corneas; large, spherical corneas ( Figs. 44B, C View FIGURE 44 ; 46G View FIGURE 46 ). Stridulating ridge on pterygostomian region in T. dentatus ( Rathbun 1918: fig. 3). Basal antennal article immobile, orbital hiatus is closed excluding antennal flagellum from orbit ( Figs. 44B, C View FIGURE 44 ; 46A, G View FIGURE 46 ). Anteroexternal margin of third maxilliped merus auriculiform ( Figs. 44C View FIGURE 44 ). Cheliped fingers slender, dorsoventrally flattened, slightly shorter than propodus, light in colour ( Fig. 44D View FIGURE 44 ); carpus with acute, curved tooth on inner margin; conspicuous tomentum on outer surface of propodus, carpus (plus anterior margin of merus in T. tacitus ; Figs. 44A, D View FIGURE 44 ; 45A View FIGURE 45 ). Dorsal margins of ambulatory legs (P2–P5) meri, carpi, propodi unarmed, dactyli slender, smooth, setose; P5 propodus, dactylus long, slender, fringed with many short setae ( Figs. 44A View FIGURE 44 ; 45A View FIGURE 45 ). Thoracic sternum ( Figs. 44F View FIGURE 44 ; 45B View FIGURE 45 ; 46C; 46I View FIGURE 46 ) wide; thoracic suture 2/3 complete, slightly convex ( Fig. 45B View FIGURE 45 ); 3/4 deep, short, interrupted; 4/5, 6/7, 7/8 interrupted, 5/6 complete ( Fig. 45B View FIGURE 45 ); median groove on thoracic sternites 7, 8. Ovoid concavity on anterior portion of sternite 1–2. Sterno-abdominal cavity of male deep, reaching anterior margin of sternite 4 ( Fig. 46C, I View FIGURE 46 ); sterno-abdominal cavity of female with deep, wide depression along median portion of sternite 4 ( Fig. 45B View FIGURE 45 ). Press-button of male abdominal-locking mechanism as large tubercle near thoracic suture 4/5 (small tubercle present in pre-adult females). Male abdomen proportionally wide, triangular (not T-shaped), telson longer than wide ( Figs. 1A View FIGURE 1 ; 44E View FIGURE 44 ); somite 3 only slightly transversely shorter than somites 4–6, reaching inner margins of P5 coxae, fitting under episternite 7 ( Fig. 44G View FIGURE 44 ; 46D; 46J View FIGURE 46 ); small portion on each side of thoracic sternite 8 left exposed by closed abdomen, somite 2 transversely shorter than somite 3 ( Fig. 44G View FIGURE 44 ). G1 long (particularly in T. dentatus , which has long, thin distal part), slender, slightly sinuous, with many small denticles, acuminate apex ( Figs. 44F View FIGURE 44 ; 46E, K View FIGURE 46 ); G2 less than onethird of G1, apex with 2 unequal processes ( Fig. 46F, M View FIGURE 46 ). Male genital opening (gonopore) coxal ( Fig. 46B, H View FIGURE 46 ); coxo-sternal disposition of long penis, protected by slightly convex posterior portion of thoracic episternite 7 ( Fig. 44F View FIGURE 44 ). Vulva relatively large, ovoid, transversely near median portion of sternite 6, extending across median half of sternite ( Fig. 45B View FIGURE 45 ); thick, elevated outer-posterior margin; covered by soft membrane, sternal vulvar cover absent.

Type species. Carcinoplax dentatus Rathbun, 1893 (by monotypy, gender masculine).

Remarks. The proportionally wide, triangular male abdomen of Trizocarcinus ( Figs. 1A View FIGURE 1 , 44E View FIGURE 44 ) contrasts with the T-shaped abdomen of most other euryplacids, a character shared with Nancyplax and Villoplax n. gen. (see Remarks for Euryplacidae ). The G1 is particularly long, with a narrow distal part, in T. dentatus ( Figs. 44F View FIGURE 44 ; 46E View FIGURE 46 ), longer than in its congener T. tacitus and all other euryplacids except one (see below). All other characters, however, clearly argue for its inclusion in the Euryplacidae (see Guinot 1969b: 518).

Trizocarcinus peruvianus Garth, 1973 , like T. dentatus also described from the Tropical Eastern Pacific region, is being referred to Villoplax n. gen. (see below). Trizocarcinus dentatus appears to be sympatric with V. peruvianus ( Garth, 1973) , along its southernmost distribution in northern Perú. Both species share a conspicuous tomentum and a G1 with a long, narrow apex. Other characters, most importantly the shape of the carapace, nevertheless provide evidence of their inclusion in separate genera (see Remarks for Villoplax n. gen. and Table 1).

Species included.

Trizocarcinus dentatus ( Rathbun, 1893)

Trizocarcinus tacitus Chace, 1940

The genus is restricted to the Western Atlantic and Tropical Eastern Pacific regions.

Species excluded from Trizocarcinus : Trizocarcinus peruvianus Garth, 1973 (= Villoplax peruvianus ( Garth, 1973))

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Euryplacidae

Genus

Trissoplax

Loc

Trissoplax tuberosa

CASTRO, PETER & NG, PETER K. L. 2010
2010
Loc

Trizocarcinus

De Grave, S. & Pentcheff, N. D. & Ahyong, S. T. & Chan, T-Y & Crandall, K. A. & Dworschak, P. C. & Felder, D. L. & Feldmann, R. M. & Fransen, C. H. J. M. & Goulding, L. Y. D. & Lemaitre, R. & Low, M. E. Y. & Martin, J. W. & Ng, P. K. L. & Schweitzer, C. E. & Tan, S. H. & Tshudy, D. & Wetzer, R. 2009: 33
Ng, P. K. L. & Guinot, D. & Davie, P. 2008: 78
Ng, P. K. L. & Castro, P. 2007: 44
Karasawa, H. & Kato, H. 2003: 151
Guinot, D. 1969: 517
Balss, H. 1957: 1656
Rathbun, M. J. 1918: 16
Rathbun, M. J. 1914: 117
1914
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