Brachyuran crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the remote oceanic Archipelago Trindade and Martin Vaz, South Atlantic Ocean
Author
In, First Published
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-06-02
5146
1
129
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5146.1.1
3b24340c-ddcb-45bc-a12b-a3f21832e794
11755334
7626155
52C3E5E3-80B6-49DB-BC9C-194560D491F7
Plagusia depressa
(
Fabricius, 1775
)
(
Figs. 53A–C, E, F
)
Cancer depressus
Fabricius, 1775: 406
.
Trindade specimens.
1 male
(
MZUSP 41246
),
Trindade Island
,
A. Za
and
F. Lauria
coll.,
8.viii.1986
, rocky coast
.
1 male
,
4 females
(3 ovigerous) (
MZUSP 41245
),
ibidem
,
Praia
da
Calheta
,
Praia
da Calheta
,
20°30’29.5’’S
,
29°18’37.0”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
11.vii.2015
, low tide, breaking wave zone
.
3 males
(
MZUSP 41244
),
ibidem
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
21.vi.2016
,
12.5m
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 40327
),
ibidem
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.
20.xi.2017
, low tide, breaking wave zone
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 41247
)
,
1 juvenile
male (
MZUSP 40348
),
ibidem
, between
Praia
dos Andradas
and
Tartaruga
,
20°31’03.8’’S
,
29°18’08.4”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
20.iv.2014
, low tide, breaking wave zone
.
4 juvenile
males (
MZUSP 41249
),
ibidem
,
20°29’53.9’’S
,
29°19’24.1”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
12.iv.2014
, low tide, breaking wave zone
.
4 juvenile
males (
MZUSP 41248
),
ibidem
,
Ponta Norte
,
Crista do Galo
,
20°29’22.1’’S
,
29°20’03.1”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
16.vi.2016
, rocky tide pool,
1.5 m
.
Size of largest male: cl
48 mm
, cw
51 mm
; largest female: cl
44 mm
, cw
47 mm
.
Comparative material examined.
Plagusia depressa
:
Brazil
:
Ceará
:
1 male
(
MZUSP 29769
),
São Gonçalo do Amarante
,
Taíba
, PROBIO
Expedition, T. Lotufo
coll.
,
13.vi.2003
.
Rocas Atoll
:
1 male
(
MZUSP 12481
),
R.L. Moura
and
R.S. Rosa
coll.
,
vii.1995
.
Fernando de Noronha Archipelago
:
1 male
(
MZUSP 7245
),
Boldró, S.A. Rodrigues
coll.
,
27.x.1985
.
Bahia
: 1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 3917
),
Arembepe
,
16.xi.1971
.
Central Atlantic
: 1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 4831
),
São Pedro
and
São Paulo
Archipelago
,
1146 km
off the coast of northeastern
Brazil
,
Belmont Islet
,
R. Haddock
coll.
,
19.ix.1979
.
1 male
, 3 ovigerous females (
MZUSP 41250
),
ibidem
, 00°55’02’’S, 29°44”
W, M. Tavares
coll.
,
4–5.iii.2018
, rocky tide pool.
Plagusia squamosa
(Herbst, 1790)
:
Austral Islands
:
1 female
(
MZUSP 20327
),
Raivavae Island, J. Poupin
coll.
,
3.xii.1990
, reef,
0.5 m
, J. Poupin leg.
Plagusia immaculata
Lamarck, 1818
:
Philippines
:
1 male
(
MZUSP 41257
),
Bay
of
Manila
,
Jetty
of
Cavite
,
M. de Saint Laurent
coll.
,
18.iii.1976
, M. de Saint Laurent leg.
Distribution.
Amphi-Atlantic. Western Atlantic:
Bermuda
, North Carolina, Gulf of Mexico, Antilles,
Venezuela
and
Brazil
(
Ceará
to
Bahia
) (
Rathbun 1918
;
Rodriguez 1980
;
Melo 1996
;
Felder
et al.
2009
;
Almeida & Carvalho 2014
;
Rosa
et al.
2018
). Brazilian oceanic islands: São Pedro and
São Paulo
Archipelago, Rocas Atoll, Fernando de Noronha and Trindade (
Moreira 1920
;
Coelho & Ramos 1972
;
Holthuis 1980
). Central Atlantic:
Ascension and St. Helena
(Chace 1966;
Manning & Chace 1990
). Eastern Atlantic: Azores, Canary,
Cape Verde
and
Morocco
to
Angola
(
Miers 1886
;
Manning & Holthuis, 1981
;
González 2018
).
Ecological notes.
Plagusia depressa
(
Fig. 53A–C, E, F
) is a littoral species inhabiting the splash zone of rocky shores, sandstone reefs and rocky tide pools (
Fig. 53D
). It has been seen rafting on flotsam and is occasionally preyed (megalopa and adults) by the sea turtle
Caretta caretta
(see
Frick
et al.
2009
).
Santana
et al.
(2019)
reported that
P. depressa
feeds on macroalgae, gastropods, polychaetes, amphipods, decapods, tanaidaceans and ascidians. Males are usually smaller than females and also mature at smaller size. Apparently,
P. depressa
breeds along the year with a peak at the end of the dry season and beginning of the rainy season (April to July in northeast
Brazil
) (
Rocha
et al.
2019
). Ovigerous females have been collected in September in the São Pedro and
São Paulo
Archipelago (
Holthuis 1980
), August in Trindade (this study), February in
Saint Helena
(
Williams 1984
), and May, August, September, October, and December off West Africa (
Manning & Holthuis 1981
). The recruitment in northeast
Brazil
was estimated to occur from December to March, about four months after mating (
Coelho Filho
et al.
2004
). The larval development goes through five zoeal stages (probably six), and takes 60 days for completion under laboratory conditions (
Wilson & Gore 1980
). The megalopa was described by
Schubart
et al.
(2001)
.
Plagusia depressa
is locally consumed as food in Tamandar (
Pernambuco
,
Brazil
), where it is relatively easily harvested at night using a torch and apparently is under fishing pressure (
Coelho Filho
et al.
2004
).
Dana, 1852a
), and
Guinusia
Schubart & Cuesta, 2010
(
type
species:
Cancer chabrus
Linnaeus, 1758
). The presence of flagellum on the Mxp3 exopod in
Davusia
and
Guinusia
has been used to distinguish both from
Plagusia
s.s.
, whose Mxp3 is devoid of flagellum (Guino, 2007;
Schubart & Cuesta 2010
). The absence of flagellum on the Mxp3 exopod has been well documented in
Plagusia depressa
, in which the Mxp3 exopod flagellum is already absent in the megalopa stage (
Schubart & Cuesta 2010
: fig. 5F). However, an aspect largely overlooked is the presence of a well-developed flagellum on the exopods of the second and first maxillipeds (Mxp2, Mxp1, respectively). The Mxp2 and Mxp1 exopods are excavated distally to receive the proximal articles of the flagella when folded (this study).
In
P. depressa
, the vulva is provided with a mobile operculum (
Guinot
et al.
2013
;
Guimarães
et al.
2021
); in the ovigerous females MZUSP 41250 the vulvae were completely obliterated by the operculae.
In the male (MZUSP 41246) the penis is completely covered and protected by the lateral expansion of the third pleonal somite (somites 3–6 fused together) and additionally is sclerotized proximally.