Podophthalmus nacreus Alcock, 1899
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.50826/bnmnszool.48.4_147 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12760171 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F30F95F-FFE8-9024-FF51-FB8EFBDE5B2E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Podophthalmus nacreus Alcock, 1899 |
status |
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Podophthalmus nacreus Alcock, 1899 View in CoL
( Fig. 1C View Fig )
Material examined. RV Hakuhō Maru KH-72-1 cruise, sta. 45, 1 8 (CB 11.0×CL 7.1 mm), NSMT-Cr 30925.
Remarks. The female at hand ( Fig. 1C View Fig ) is not fully mature, but is clearly identifiable with Podophthalmus nacreus , with the hexagonal carapace armed with a strong epibranchial tooth and the long eyestalk having a large cornea.
Ng et al. (2017) transferred P. nacreus to the genus Vojmirophthalmus erected by Števčič (2011) to accommodate P. minabensis Sakai, 1961 , but P. nacreus as well as P. vigil are generically distinct from V. minabensis by the unusually ornamented eyestalk of the latter species ( Sakai (1961: pl. 4 fig. 1; 1976: fig. 207a, pl. 135 fig. 1) and Huang and Shih (2021: fig. 3E).
Distribution. Indo-West Pacific from Japan through Taiwan, the Philippines, and Indonesia to New Caledonia in the Pacific, and from Western Australia through the Andaman Sea and the Gulf of Martaban to Madagascar, 30–126 m depth ( Alcock, 1899b; Leene, 1938, 1940; Sakai, 1939, 1965, 1976; Crosnier and Thomassin, 1974; Moosa, 1981; Hosie, 2012).
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