Crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Seas of East and Southeast Asia Collected by the RV Hakuhō Maru (KH- 72 - 1 Cruise) 3. Sahul Shelf
Author
Manikandan, K
Author
Megalaa, N
Author
Valliappan, Subramanian
Author
Nandini, K
Author
Rani, Lourdu V
Author
Dakshinamurthi, Senthil
Author
Nagappan, Nagappan
text
Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science. Series A, Zoology
2022
2022-05-20
48
2
35
83
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jpbs.jpbs_806_23
journal article
303514
10.50826/bnmnszool.48.2_35
ae1af4e1-c35d-41db-99cc-8e05c3e3f510
2434-091X
13824279
Pilumnus longicornis
Hilgendorf, 1879
(
Fig. 18E–F
)
Material examined
.
RV
Hakuhō Maru
KH-72-1 cruise, sta. 29, 1 Ə (
CB
11.2 mm
including lateral teeth×CL
8.6 mm
), NSMT-Cr 30754.
Remarks
. The specimen of
Pilumnus
longicornis
at hand is slightly smaller than the size usually seen, but is typical in the setation and armature of the carapace and ambulatory legs (
Fig. 18E
). This species is most characteristic in having three strong spines on the median to submedian parts of the anterior margin of each merus of the first three ambulatory legs, with a spine at the distal end. Otherwise,
P. longicornis
is characterized by the following: 1) the carapace is covered with sparse, short setae, with a line of long setae along the frontal margin and some tufts of similar setae on the protogastric and mesobranchial regions; 2) the carapace dorsal surface is shallowly separated into regions which are regularly covered with minute granules of equal size; 3) the frontal lobes are rather rounded and produced forwards; 4) the three anterolateral teeth of the carapace are each tipped with a sharp spine on the thick base, curving strongly obliquely forward; 5) both chelipeds are different in size, the merus outer margin being armed with a strong spine-tipped tubercle behind the subterminal depression followed by two much smaller tubercles; the carpus surface is wholly and equally covered with conical granules; the larger palm is smooth and polished except for the upper basal part covered with conical granules similar to those on the carpus upper surface.
Fig. 17.ɹ
Latopilumnus tuberculosus
(Garth and Kim)
from sta. 29. A–C: Ə (NSMT-Cr 30780; CB 4.8× CL 3.3 mm). D: $(NSMT-Cr 30781; CB 4.8×CL 3.2 mm).
Balss (1933)
synonymized
Pilumnus andersoni
De
Man, 1887
and
P. tantulus
Rathbun, 1923
with this species, without comment.
Takeda and Miyake (1968)
simply followed this conclusion, but
Ng
et al.
(2008)
listed
P. tantulus
as valid. The original figures of
P. tantulus
show the quite similar formation of the carapace and chelipeds with this species, but the ambulatory armature is described as "Ambulatory legs hairy, the merus roughened above by fine, unequal spinules."
Distribution
. Widely distributed throughout the whole Indo-West Pacific, from East Africa through the Indian Ocean to the western and central Pacific, with bathymetric records from
5 to
100 m.