More cautionary tales: family, generic and species synonymies of recently published taxa of ghost and mud shrimps (Decapoda: Axiidea and Gebiidea)
Author
Dworschak, Peter C.
Author
Poore, Gary C. B.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-03-13
4394
1
61
76
journal article
30533
10.11646/zootaxa.4394.1.3
30f97048-a3c2-4cdf-a525-7ac1070ca9dc
1175-5326
1196962
3833A0D9-64E0-4BF3-84AF-5B01C7C24AD0
Upogebia balmaorum
Ngoc-Ho, 1990
(
Fig. 6
)
Upogebia balmaorum
Ngoc-Ho, 1990: 966–969, figs 1, 2a–d.—Ngoc-Ho 1994: 77, fig. 12a.—
Sakai 2006a
: 93
.—
Ngoc-Ho 2008
: 141
–143, fig. 5.
Upogebia tractabilis
.—
Sakai 1982
: 16
–17 (part,
Madagascar
material).—
Sakai 1993
: 91
(part) [not
Upogebia tractabilis
Hale, 1941
].
Kuwaitupogebia nithyanandan
Sakai, Türkay & Al
Aidaroos, 2015
: 1223
–1227, figs 1, 2.
Syn. nov.
Material examined.
Holotype
of
Kuwaitupogebia nithyanandan
Sakai, Türkay & Al
Aidaroos, 2015
,
Kuwait
, Al-
Khiran
,
SMF
48913 (ovigerous female,
6.3 mm
)
.
Paratypes
, same locality,
SMF
48914 (4 ovigerous females,
4 females
,
5 males
)
.
Remarks.
Sakai
et al.
(2015a
: 1227) repeated their argument yet again in the species discussion, stating that, “The specimens from
Kuwait
examined are outstandingly different from all known upogebiid species reported up to now, because of the peculiar forms of the eyestalks and the A1, and the absence of the rostrum and of a linea thalassinica. It would be suggested from these morphological features that they are to be determined as a new species, which could not be classified under any genera of the family
Upogebiidae
. This means that this new species is to be classified under a new genus, and this genus also, in its turn, in a new family in the Thalassinidea, as is established in the present paper.”
The study of the
type
material showed that: (1) a linea thalassinica is present, clearly visible in the
holotype
and all
paratypes
anterior to the cervical groove as in almost all
Upogebiidae
(
Fig. 6A, B
); (2) the antennules and antennae run parallel as in all other
Upogebiidae
, the antennules directed downwards (in the
holotype
and most
paratypes
), the antenna directed upward (the right flagellum broken off in the
holotype
) (
Fig. 6B
) or forward. In dorsal view (
Fig. 6A
), the antennules are not visible in most specimens. It appears that K. Sakai interpreted the dense setation on the antenna article 4 as flagella of the antennule. Nothing is unusual with the rostrum—except being very short—or the eyestalks. The rostrum of the
holotype
is one of the shortest among the specimens (
Fig. 6A, B
); in most
paratypes
the rostrum is triangular (
Fig. 6C, E
) and may even reach to the end of the cornea (
Fig. 6D
).
Another inaccuracy is that the authors even figured two flagella on the antenna (
Sakai
et al.
2015a
: fig. 1B). The characteristic prominent proximal spine on the uropodal exopod (
Fig. 6C
; Ngoc-Ho 1990: fig.
1i
;
Ngoc-Ho 2008
: fig. 5G) has been erroneously interpreted as being on the protopod (
Sakai
et al.
2015a
: fig. 1H).
As observations on the specimens by
Sakai
et al.
(2015a)
are mainly based on errors, the genus
Kuwaitupogebia
and the family
Kuwaitupogebiidae
lack any justification and are synonymised with
Upogebia
and
Upogebiidae
, respectively.
Ngoc-Ho (1990: table 1) compared three species of
Upogebia
that have a very short rostrum:
U. tractabilis
Hale, 1941
from
South
Australia
,
U. laemanu
Ngoc-Ho, 1990 and
U. balmaorum
Ngoc-Ho, 1990 from the
Seychelles
, all three often associated with sponges. Both species of Ngoc-Ho were synonymised with
U. tractabilis
by
Sakai (1993)
while he considered them distinct later (
Sakai, 2006a
). Additional records of
U. balmaorum
are from
Queensland
,
Australia
(Ngoc-Ho, 1994),
Madagascar
and Dampier Archipelago,
Western
Australia
(Ngoc-
Ho, 2008
).
With a median groove on the rostrum, four or five lateral teeth on the rostrum, presence of a small ventral spine on the antennal article 1, absence of ventral and carpal spines on pereopod 1, the sexual dimorphism of pereopod 1 and the presence of a proximal spine on the uropodal exopod, the material studied herein shows many of the characters of
U. balmaorum
and is within its known geographical range.
Kuwaitupogebia nithyanandan
is therefore synonymised with
U. balmaorum
.