Anoplodactylus tubiferus (Haswell, 1884)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930210158771 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5460422 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F10B8791-FFB6-FF91-2605-145DF1D67865 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Anoplodactylus tubiferus (Haswell, 1884) |
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Anoplodactylus tubiferus (Haswell, 1884) View in CoL
Phoxichilidium tubiferum Haswell, 1884: 1032 , pl. 57, figures 1–5.
Anoplodactylus tubiferus: Cole, 1904: 288 View in CoL ; Loman, 1908: 72; Flynn, 1919a: 79–81, pl. 10, figures 12–14; Williams, 1941: 35; Clark, 1963: 49; Staples, 1982: 457, figure 2C–F; Child, 1988a: 61; Müller, 1989: 281, figures 15–20; Nakamura and Child, 1991: 32; Stock, 1991: 224; 1994: 67.
Material examined. Cleveland Bay , 15 m, dredged,? September 1999, three X, one W with eggs, two juveniles (coll. Cruz) .
Description. Trunk length 1.84 mm, width 1.26 mm, unsegmented, smooth, crurigers separated by almost twice their diameter, twice longer than wide, fine spines distally; ocular tubercle extremely tall (0.64 mm), slender, erect; abdomen subequal to ocular tubercle, slightly inclined downwards from the base; proboscis long, placed at 45°, with minor middle-constriction. Chelifores very long, with long dorsal setae and spinules; small chelae, fingers well curved and smooth. Ovigers sixsegmented, first and second segments thicker, third segment the longest, with typical proximal constriction. Legs slender, not long, longer spines distally on femur and tibiae; cement gland twice longer than the segment diameter, protruding vertically from femur; propodus half the length of second tibia, one large heel spine and small uniform sole spines. Main claw almost as long as propodus, minute auxiliaries on each side of the base of the claw.
Distribution. This long-known species was first reported from Queensland, Australia. It has also been collected in the north of New South Wales according to museum specimens at the AM. It is distributed from the Australian coasts to the Indo-west Pacific, Madagascar, the Persian Gulf, the Philippines and Japan. Known from a wide a range of depths from 2 to 235 m.
Remarks. Males are fairly easy to identify due to their extremely long cement gland tube. The unsegmented pattern of the trunk and the extremely tall ocular tubercle and abdomen also help to discriminate the species.
AM |
Australian Museum |
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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Anoplodactylus tubiferus (Haswell, 1884)
Arango, Claudia P. 2003 |
Anoplodactylus tubiferus
: Cole 1904: 288 |
Phoxichilidium tubiferum
Haswell 1884: 1032 |