New And Additional Records Of Salmoneus Holthuis, 1955 (Decapoda, Caridea, Alpheidae) From Brazil, With A Key To The Southern Atlantic Species
Author
Anker, Southern Tlantic Species Arthur
Author
Mendonça, Joel B.
. Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de São Paulo. Caixa Postal 42.494, 04218 - 970, São Paulo, SP, Brasil.
Author
Pachelle, Paulo P. G.
. LIMCE, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Fortaleza, Ceará, Brasil. E-mail: paulopachelle @ gmail. com
Author
Tavares, Marcos
. Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de São Paulo. Caixa Postal 42.494, 04218 - 970, São Paulo, SP, Brasil. &. E-mail: mdst @ usp. br
text
Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia
2013
São Paulo
2013-12-31
53
33
451
458
http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0031-10492013003300001&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en
journal article
10.1590/S0031-10492013003300001
1807-0205
13152803
Salmoneus depressus
Anker, 2011
Figs. 1
,
2
Salmoneus depressus
Anker, 2011: 44
, figs. 4-6.
Material examined:
Brazil
,
São Paulo
: 1 ovigerous specimen (cl
5.2 mm
),
MZUSP 30934
,
São Sebastião
,
Praia do Segredo
, near CEBIMar,
23°49’43.53”S
,
45°25’24.68”W
, rocky intertidal, low tide (
0.2 m
tide), near low tide mark, under very large rock on mixed gravel-sand substrate, sieving muddy water with dip-net,
P.P.G. Pachelle
,
A. Anker
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
31 October 2013
;
1 non-ovigerous specimen, missing minor cheliped (cl
3.8 mm
),
MZUSP 28412
,
São Sebastião
channel, off CEBIMar, near tide-gauge, mud-rock bottom, depth
3-4 m
, from ARS (retrieved after 14 months),
M. Tavares
and
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
17 April 2013
.
Comparative material:
Caribbean Sea
,
St. Martin
: 1 non-ovigerous specimen, missing major cheliped (cl
5.4 mm
),
FLMNH
UF 31907
,
Tintamarre Island
, near
Remorqueur
wreck, coral rubble brushing under rocks, depth
10-15 m
,
A. Bemis
et al.,
10 April 2012
[field collection number
BSTM 0227
]
.
Description:
See detailed description in
Anker (2011)
; some additional drawings of the Brazilian specimens are provided in
Fig. 1
.
Colour in life:
Semitransparent beige to pale strawyellow; eggs and ovary pale rusty-orange (
Fig. 2
).
Distribution:
Caribbean Sea (
Panama
,
Venezuela
,
Barbados
,
St. Martin
) (
Anker, 2011
; present study);
Brazil
(
São Paulo
) (present study).
Remarks:
The material from São Sebastião agrees reasonably well with the description of
S. depressus
in
Anker (2011)
based mainly on material from the Caribbean coast of
Panama
. In addition, the two Brazilian specimens were directly contrasted to a more recently collected specimen from
St. Martin
, eastern Caribbean Sea. The differences observed between the Brazilian and Caribbean specimens include the shape and size of the orbital teeth, development of the rostral carina, armature of the major chela, fifth and sixth pleonite, and ischium of the fifth pereiopod.
FIGURE 1: A-I,
Salmoneus depressus
Anker, 2011
.
A-D,
non-ovigerous specimen from São Sebastião, Brazil, MZUSP 28412.
E-F,
ovigerous specimen from São Sebastião, Brazil, MZUSP 30934;
G-I,
non-ovigerous specimen from St. Martin, Caribbean Sea, FLMNH UF 31907.
A, E, G
– anterior region of carapace, dorsal view.
B, H
– anterior region of carapace, lateral view.
C
– right fifth pereiopod, lateral view.
D, F, I
– distal fifth pleuron and sixth pleonite, lateral view. Scale bars = 1 mm. Note in 1A, E, G differences in the development of the orbital teeth; in 1A-B, E, G, H (arrow in A and B) low elevation near the anterior edge of the dorsal depression of the carapace; and in 1C (arrow) a spiniform seta on the ischium of the fifth pereiopod.
The two Brazilian specimens of
S. depressus
markedly differ from each other in the development of the orbital teeth (
Fig. 1A, E
). In the larger ovigerous specimen (
Fig. 1E
), the orbital teeth are distinctly smaller than in the smaller non-ovigerous specimen (
Fig. 1A
), in which they are similar to those of the non-ovigerous specimen from
St. Martin
(
Fig. 1G
) and the
type
specimens from
Panama
(
Anker, 2011
: Fig. 4A, M). In fact, in the development of the orbital teeth, the ovigerous specimen from São Sebastião (
Fig. 1E
) approaches
S. excavatus
Anker, 2011
, the presumed eastern Pacific sister species of
S. depressus
(
Anker, 2011
: fig. 1A). However, the two species can still be separated from each other by the presence (in
S. depressus
) and absence (in
S. excavatus
) of a stout spiniform seta on the ischium of the minor cheliped, as well as the comparatively longer second article of the antennular peduncle in
S. excavatus
(
Anker, 2011
)
.
FIGURE 2:
Salmoneus depressus
Anker, 2011
, ovigerous specimen from São Sebastião, Brazil, MZUSP 30934, dorsal (A) and lateral (B) views.
In both specimens of
S. depressus
from São Sebastião, the rostral carina is rather poorly marked, relatively short, and does not extend posterior to the level of the eyes (
Fig. 1A, E
). In the specimen from
St. Martin
, the rostral carina is more conspicuous, extending into the dorsal depression (
Fig. 1G
). In addition, in all
three specimens
examined, the rostral carina bears a low elevation, sometimes in the form of a tubercle, near the anterior edge of the dorsal depression of the carapace (
Fig. 1A, B, E, G, H
). This feature was not mentioned in the original description of
S. depressus
,
although a low broad elevation can be seen in
Anker’s (2011
: fig. 4E). This elevation is rather inconspicuous in the larger ovigerous specimen from São Sebastião (
Fig. 1E
) and is most developed in the non-ovigerous specimen (
Fig. 1A, B
) and in the specimen from
St. Martin
(
Fig. 1G, H
). A similar, minor elevation on the mid-dorsal line of the carapace, at the anterior edge of the dorsal depression, is present in
S. excavatus
(
Anker, 2011
: fig. 1D, F).
In the Brazilian specimens of
S. depressus
,
the major chela fingers are armed with 12-13 teeth,
i.e.,
one or two teeth more than in the
type
series from
Panama
(11-12 teeth,
cf.
Anker, 2011
). In the general shape of the major chela, including the characteristic depressions on the palm, the Brazilian specimens closely resemble the
type
series.
In both specimens from São Sebastião, the posteroventral margin of the fifth pleuron ends in a small, blunt tooth, whilst the posterior margin of the sixth pleonite is produced into a moderately long, sharp tooth (
Fig. 1D, F
). In the specimen from St. Martin, the posteroventral margin of the fifth pleuron is produced into a much larger, subacute tooth, whilst the sixth pleonite is produced into a much stouter, sharp tooth (
Fig. 1I
), which is distinctly longer than the tooth illustrated for a
type
specimen from
Panama
(
Anker, 2011
: fig. 4G).
Anker (2011)
stated that the ischium of the fifth pereiopod is unarmed in
S. depressus
,
see
Anker (2011
: fig. 5I). The ovigerous specimen from São Sebastião also has no trace of a spiniform seta on the ischium of the fifth pereiopod. However, in the smaller non-ovigerous specimen, a very conspicuous spiniform seta is present on the ischia of both fifth pereiopods (
Fig. 1C
). Thus, the presence or absence of a spiniform seta on the ischium of the fifth pereiopod is now considered to be a variable feature in
S. depressus
.
The morphological variation shown herein for
S. depressus
,
especially in the rostro-orbital region (
Fig. 1A, E, G
; see also
Anker, 2011
: fig. 4A, M) and in the configuration of the posterior abdominal somites (
Fig. 1D, F, I
; see also
Anker, 2011
: fig. 4G), is rather significant. However, with the presently available material (
type
series from
Panama
, two heavily damaged specimens from
Venezuela
and
Barbados
, one incomplete specimen from
St. Martin
, one complete and one incomplete specimens from
Brazil
), it is not possible to make more conclusive statements. The apparently disjunct, Caribbean – southern
Brazil
distribution of
S. depressus
may be simply due to insufficient collecting of this cryptically living shrimp along the eastern- and north-eastern Brazilian coast.