Cristarma eulimene (De Man, in Weber, 1897)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26107/RBZ-2020-0097 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:815E4670-B063-4FD8-B31E-3AD89B3A7942 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6532430 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/49152B56-FFC6-BA06-FF7B-FD2EFC78FA64 |
treatment provided by |
Diego |
scientific name |
Cristarma eulimene |
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Cristarma eulimene View in CoL (De Man, in Weber, 1897)
( Figs. 13E View Fig , 14E View Fig , 15C, D View Fig , 18C View Fig , 20A–H View Fig , 43G View Fig )
Sesarma (Sesarma) eulimene De Man View in CoL , in Weber, 1897: 157, pl. 15 fig. 1.
Sesarma eulimene View in CoL – Stebbing, 1910: 322; Fourmanoir, 1953: 90.
Sesarma (Holometopus) eulimene View in CoL – Tesch, 1917: 150; Crosnier, 1965: 51, figs. 68, 69, 73, 77b, 85, 107, 108; Guinot, 1967: 288; Serène, 1968: 107.
Holometopus eulimine (sic) – Hartnoll, 1975: 308, 311, 316.
Chiromantes eulimene View in CoL – Naderloo & Schubart, 2009: 67.
“ Chiromantes ” eulimene View in CoL – Ng et al., 2008a: 220; Emmerson, 2016: 235, unnumbered colour fig.
Material examined. MOZAMBIQUE – 1 male (22.2 × 17.2 mm) , 1 adult female (15.6 × 12.8 mm) ( ZRC 1968.1.22.2– 3), Inhaca Island , coll. W. McNae, April 1967 . SOUTH AFRICA – 2 males (22.0 × 17.8 mm, 22.2 × 18.5 mm) ( ZRC 2017.0168 View Materials ), mangrove creek, Mngazana, Eastern Cape Province, coll. S. Cannici, 9–10 March 2017 .
Diagnosis. Carapace quadrate; lateral margin sinuous; dorsal margin of male cheliped dactylus with about 15 symmetrical tubercles on proximal half, followed by 10 asymmetrical tubercles on distal half; male pleon proportionately narrower, longer.
Colour. In life, the species was described as with a brown carapace and red male chela ( Crosnier, 1965: 51). In larger males, the centre of the chela becomes more faded ( Emmerson, 2016: 235, unnumbered colour fig.).
Remarks. The authorship for this species should be “De Man, in Weber, 1897 ”. Weber wrote the chapter on decapod crustaceans in his paper but noted that some contributions were by De Man ( Weber, 1897: 156). In the new species description for Sesarma eulimene , it was clearly stated that the work was by De Man: “(Beschrieben von Herrn Dr. J. G. de Man.)” ( Weber, 1897: 157). The year of publication is usually cited as 1898 but this is incorrect. While volume 10 of “Zoologische Jahrbücher, Abtheilung für Systematik, Geographie und Biologie der Thiere” was dated as 1898, the articles actually appeared in parts. Weber’s paper appeared in part 2 of volume 10, and this was stated to be published on 21 May 1897. This species was described from two males and four females from Umbilo River in Natal (present day KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa), and he gave measurements for the two males (17 × 14.25 mm, 15 × 12 mm) and two larger females (15.3 × 12.5 mm, 12.25 × 9.7 mm). It is not known where this material is now and whether it is still extant; it is not in Leiden ( Fransen et al., 1997). Crosnier (1965: 51) commented that he had compared his specimens to the syntypes but he did not elaborate if he had actually seen the specimens or based it on the publication only. In any case, the material reported by Crosnier (1965) from Madagascar and the present specimens agree well with De Man’s (1897) detailed description and good figures and we have no doubt of their conspecificity.
Crosnier (1965) redescribed C. eulimene with good figures and compared it in detail with C. ortmanni . While both species have superficially a similar G1, their carapace shapes are quite different: C. eulimene is more squarish, with the lateral carapace margins sinuous ( Figs. 13E View Fig , 20A View Fig ), while C. ortmanni is distinctly more transversely rectangular with the lateral margins almost straight ( Figs. 13F View Fig , 20I View Fig ). In addition, C. ortmanni has 25 tubercles on the dorsal margin of the male cheliped dactylus, with half of them larger and relatively symmetrical ( Figs. 15E View Fig , 20J View Fig ), while C. eulimene has only 12 slightly asymmetrical tubercles ( Figs. 15C View Fig , 20D View Fig ). The male pleon of C. ortmanni is also slightly wider and shorter ( Figs. 18D View Fig , 20K View Fig ) compared to that of C. eulimene ( Figs. 18C View Fig , 20E View Fig ).
Biology. The best account of the ecology of this species is by Hartnoll (1975: 316) who notes that it occurs only in the terrestrial vegetation above the supralittoral zone. Neosarmatium africanum Ragionieri, Fratini & Schubart, 2012 [as N. meinerti ( De Man, 1887) ] and C. ortmanni also occur in this zone, with both species also found elsewhere in the mangroves. Emmerson (2016: 237, 238) provides a detailed summary of the known ecology and biology of the species.
Distribution. From Tanzania and Mozambique to South Africa and Madagascar ( Crosnier, 1965: 51; Hartnoll, 1975; Emmerson, 2016).
ZRC |
Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Cristarma eulimene
Schubart, Christoph D. & Ng, Peter K. L. 2020 |
Chiromantes eulimene
Naderloo R & Schubart CD 2009: 67 |
“ Chiromantes ” eulimene
Emmerson WD 2016: 235 |
Ng PKL, Guinot D & Davie PJF 2008: 220 |
Holometopus eulimine
Hartnoll RG 1975: 308, 311, 316 |
Sesarma (Holometopus) eulimene
Serene R 1968: 107 |
Guinot D 1967: 288 |
Crosnier A 1965: 51 |
Tesch JJ 1917: 150 |
Sesarma eulimene
Fourmanoir P 1953: 90 |
Stebbing TRR 1910: 322 |
Sesarma (Sesarma) eulimene
Weber M 1897: 157 |