Sternostylus investigatoris (Alcock & Anderson, 1899)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4555.3.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8A9C010B-8F55-4A5F-8007-CD741342F6E0 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5135893 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BF0C87E5-FFDD-4E2E-FF4F-82EEFCCF2D5C |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Sternostylus investigatoris (Alcock & Anderson, 1899) |
status |
|
Sternostylus investigatoris (Alcock & Anderson, 1899) View in CoL
( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 )
Ptychogaster investigatoris Alcock & Anderson, 1899a: 24 (type locality: Andaman Sea, 741 m).— Alcock & Anderson 1899b: pl. 45 fig. 1 (no record).— Alcock 1901: 281.— Alcock & McArdle 1902: pl. 58 fig. 4 (no record).— Kemp & Sewell 1912: 25.
Chirostylus investigatoris .— Doflein & Balss 1913: 132, figs 1, 2.— Tirmizi 1964: 386, figs 1, 2.
Gastroptychus investigatoris .— Zarenkov & Khodkina 1981: 86, fig. 3.— Baba 1988: 15, fig. 5.— Baba 2005: 213 (synonymies, key).— Baba et al. 2008: 22 View Cited Treatment (synonymies).— McCallum & Poore 2013: 10, figs 1, 11A.
Material examined. RUMF-ZC-5357, 1 male (pcl 23.5 mm), 2.3 km northeast of Kume Island, Ryukyu Islands, Japan, sluice gate of deep sea water, 612 m, Okinawa Prefectural Deep Sea Water Research Center (Maja, Kumejima, Okinawa), 4 October 2017.
Color ( Fig. 1A View FIGURE 1 ). Body and P1–4 reddish orange in general. Carapace pale pink on anterior gastric and branchial regions and intestinal region. Abdomen pale pink on anterior parts of tergites. Ocular and antennular peduncles reddish orange; cornea black. Antennal peduncle pale red. P2–4 pinkish orange on carpi and propodi.
Distribution. Marcus-Necker Rise in the central Pacific, the Philippines (between Cebu and Leyte), Indonesia (west of Sumatra and Moluccas), Western Australia, Andaman Sea, southwest of India, and the Maldives; 390– 1500 m ( Baba et al. 2008; McCallum & Poore 2013). At present from Kume Island, Ryukyu Islands, southwestern Japan; 612 m.
Remarks. The genus Sternostylus Baba, Ahyong & Schnabel, 2018 includes 12 species worldwide, of which four species are recorded from the Indo-West Pacific ( Baba et al. 2018). In Japanese waters, only S. hendersoni (Alcock & Anderson, 1899) has been recorded from the Kyushu-Palau Ridge ( Baba 1986, as Gastroptychus Caullery, 1896 ).
The specimen examined agrees mostly with the recent description of S. investigatoris in the morphology and fresh coloration ( McCallum & Poore 2013, as Gastroptychus ). The diagnostic morphology of the species includes the following characters (cf. Baba 2005: 213; McCallum & Poore 2013: 150): carapace with prominent spines and interspersed smaller spines, gastric region with prominent spines in hexagonal arrangement with anteromedian spine ( Figs. 1C, D View FIGURE 1 , 2A View FIGURE 2 ); anterior margin of sternite 3 with median ridge anteriorly produced and sloping down in ventral view ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ); sternite 4 with 2 anterior spines between first lateral spines ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ); abdomen thickly covered with fine setae, tergites 3 and 4 without spines, pleura of somite 3 each with low, blunt process ( Fig. 1C, D View FIGURE 1 ); and both Mxp 3 close to each other. In the present specimen, the Mxp 3 carpus has a small proximal spine in addition to a dorsodistal spine ( Fig. 2E View FIGURE 2 ), although the proximal spine is not described nor illustrated by McCallum & Poore (2013: fig. 1F) for their material examined.
As reported by McCallum & Poore (2013: fig. 1C) for the north-western Australian material, the present specimen also has small scattered spines on the surface of thoracic sternite 4 ( Fig. 2B View FIGURE 2 ), which are not illustrated by Baba (1988: fig. 5b). The antennal scale is present but rudimentary ( Fig. 2C, D View FIGURE 2 ) as described by Baba (1988) and McCallum & Poore (2013) for the Philippine and north-western Australian specimens. The antennal article 5 is approximately two times longer than the article 4 and reaches to the midlength of the antennular penultimate article ( Fig. 2C, D View FIGURE 2 ). The external appearance and armature of the P1–4 are generally similar to those of the previous illustrations ( Fig. 1B, E, F View FIGURE 1 ; Alcock & Anderson 1899b: pl. 45, fig. 1; Alcock & McArdle 1902: pl. 58, fig. 4; McCallum & Poore 2013: fig. 1G, H).
Sternostylus investigatoris View in CoL is distinguished from S. hendersoni View in CoL , a morphologically close congener in the Indo- West Pacific, by the pleura of the abdominal segment 3 being unarmed instead of having spines (cf. Baba 2005; McCallum & Poore 2013).
There are no published records on the hosts of S. investigatoris View in CoL and no host information of the present specimen. Nevertheless, many species of Chirostyloidea live in association primarily with anthozoans of Alcyonacea (Octocorallia) and Antipatharia (Hexacorallia) (cf. de Saint Laurent & Macpherson, 1990; Buhl- Mortensen & Mortensen 2004; Baba et al. 2009; Schnabel 2009; Guilloux et al. 2010; Hendrickx 2012). Sternostylus investigatoris View in CoL and a new species of Eumunida described below probably have similar hosts and associations to those of the previous reports; such host colonies exist near the sluice gate of deep sea water as the present collection site.
A new Japanese name, Daidai-tsuno-waraebi (meaning orange-colored, horned straw lobster in Japanese), is given for G. investigatoris based on the present specimen.
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Sternostylus investigatoris (Alcock & Anderson, 1899)
Osawa, Masayuki & Higashiji, Takuo 2019 |
Gastroptychus investigatoris
McCallum, A. W. & Poore, G. C. B. 2013: 10 |
Baba, K. & Macpherson, E. & Poore, G. C. B. & Ahyong, S. T. & Bermudez, A. & Cabezas, P. & Lin, C. - W. & Nizinski, M. & Rodrigues, C. & Schnabel, K. E. 2008: 22 |
Baba, K. 2005: 213 |
Baba, K. 1988: 15 |
Zarenkov, N. A. & Khodkina, I. V. 1981: 86 |
Chirostylus investigatoris
Tirmizi, N. M. 1964: 386 |
Doflein, F. & Balss, H. 1913: 132 |
Ptychogaster investigatoris
Kemp, S. W. & Sewell, R. B. S. 1912: 25 |
Alcock, A. 1901: 281 |
Alcock, A. & Anderson, A. R. S. 1899: 24 |