Podochela meloi Sankarankutty, Ferreira & Cunha, 2001, a junior synonym of the spider crab Inachoides forceps A. Milne-Edwards, 1879 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Inachoididae)
Author
Santana, William
Author
Tavares, Marcos
text
Zootaxa
2009
2294
62
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.191524
2f6f7152-e417-4803-8cb8-0bc3a61446c5
1175-5326
191524
Inachoides forceps
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
(
Figs. 1B
, D; 2C; 3B)
Inachoides forceps
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
: 199
, pl. 33, figs. 4-4d. —
Garth, 1958
: 99
, 101. —
Powers, 1977
: 45
. —
Melo, 1996
: 206
; 1998: 146. —
Camp
et al
., 1998
: 146
. —
Boschi, 2000
: 88
. —
Nizinski, 2003
: 129
. — McLaughlin
et al.
, 2005: 251, 311. — Coelho, 2006: 18. — Ng
et al.
, 2008: 115.
Inachoides obtusus
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
: 199
, pl. 33, figs. 3, 4d.
Inachoides intermedius
Rathbun, 1894
: 57
. —
Rathbun, 1901
: 59
.
Podochela meloi
Sankarankutty, Ferreira
&
Cunha
, 2001: 552, figs. 1, 2. — Coelho, 2006: 678.
Material examined.
Inachoides forceps
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
.
Puerto Rico
, Smithsonian-Hartford expedition, stn 21, W. L. Schmitt coll.,
29.iii.1937
: 1 ovigerous female (
MCZ
12186).
Virgin Islands
,
Saint Thomas
, C. R. Shoemaker coll., 1915 1 ovigerous female (
USNM
55488).
Brazil
, Maranhão, Tutóia,
Almirante Saldanha
, stn 1731A,
02°22,0’S
–
41°51,05’W
,
30.x.
1967
, 37 m:
1 female
(
MZUSP
6594). Ceará, Ponta do Trapia, Camocim, P. Young coll.,
6.viii.1982
:
1 male
,
2 females
(
MZUSP
6268). Pernambuco, Itamaracá, R. Paripe,
22.xi.1969
:
2 males
(
MZUSP
6593). Espírito Santo, Projeto Rio Doce, stn 54,
18
°54’08”S–
39°15’04”W
,
i.
1990
, 41 m:
3 males
,
6 females
(
MZUSP
9843). Rio de Janeiro,
Ilha
da Rata,
Hassler
:
2 males
, 3 ovigerous females (
MCZ
1834). Rio de Janeiro, Thayer expedition,
iv.1865
–
vii.1866
:
1 male
(
MCZ
8403). Rio de Janeiro, Thayer expedition,
iv.1865
–
vii.1866
:
1 male
, 4 ovigerous females,
1 juvenile
(
MCZ
1833). Rio de Janeiro, Angra dos Reis, Praia Vila Velha, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
21.v.1966
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2761). Rio de Janeiro, Angra dos Reis, Praia do Leste, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
21.v.1966
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2762). Rio de Janeiro,
Ilha
Grande, stn 46,
10
.xii.
1965, 13 m
:
1 juvenile
(
MZUSP
2765); stn 104,
01
.vii.
1966, 26 m
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2766); stn 132,
12
.v.
1966, 24 m
:
1 male
,
3 females
(
MZUSP
2767); stn 133,
12
.v.1966:
1 male
(
MZUSP
2768); stn 212,
15
.vi.
1967, 10 m
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
3477); Praia da Baleia, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
20.vii.1966
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2760); Praia Brava, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
21.vii.1966
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2759); Praia Freguesia do Leste, G. A. S. Melo coll.:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2756); Praia Freguesia do Sul, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
24.vii.1966
:
1 male
,
1 female
(
MZUSP
2755); Praia do Funil, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
24.vii.1966
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
2758); Praia do Funil,
24.vii.1966
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
2764). Praia do Furado, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
20.vii.1966
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2753); Praia do Furado,
22.vii.1966
:
1 juvenile
(
MZUSP
2754); Praia do Grumixama, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
23.vii.1966
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
2757); Praia do Leste, G. A. S. Melo coll.,
20.vii.1966
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
2763). Praia do Guarda-Mor, R.
Y
. Tsukamoto coll.,
14.ii.1983
:
6 males
,
3 females
(
MZUSP
6011). São Paulo, Ubatuba, P. Moreira coll.,
27.iv.1964
,
1 male
(
MZUSP
1821); Praia do Lamberto,
04.iv.1969
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
3727); Praia do Lamberto, E. Boffi coll.,
02.v.1969
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
3726). Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, A. R. Magalhães coll.,
20.iii.1991
:
1 female
(
MZUSP
12609). Locality unknown,
16.i.1985
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
6067).
Podochela meloi
Sankarankutty, Ferreira
&
Cunha
, 2001.
Brazil
, Rio Grande do Norte, estuary near
Macau
, 05
0 04’S
–05
0 08’S
; 36
0 35’W
–36
0 30’W
, male
holotype
(
MNRJ
13769), female
paratype
(
MZUSP
13192).
Comparative material:
Inachoides lambriformis
(
De
Haan, 1839)
.
Peru
, Paraca Bay,
Hassler
: 1 ovigerous female (
MCZ
2051).
Chile
, Caldera,
Hassler:
1 male
, 1 ovigerous female (
MCZ
1837). Valparaiso,
Hassler
:
1 male
(
MCZ
1838).
Inachoides laevis
Stimpson, 1860
.
Panamá
(Pacific coast), Sternberg coll.,
v.1869
:
1 male
(MCZ 2044).
Costa Rica
(Pacific coast), Punta Culebra Bay,
Velero III
, Allan Hancock Pacific Expedition, stn 254-34,
24
.ii.1934, Dredge,
5–18 m
:
1 male
(USNM 134274).
Remarks.
The description of
Podochela meloi
was based on six males and seven females collected from the sublittoral zone on broken stones and molluscan shells with algal growth bottoms in northeastern
Brazil
(
Sankarankutty
et al.
, 2001
). Additional specimens have never again been obtained. The male
holotype
and one female
paratype
are in the collections of the MNRJ and MZUSP, respectively. The remaining
paratypes
, housed in the collections of the Department of Oceanography and Limnology, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte,
Natal
, were not found.
In a review of the inachid genus
Podochela
Stimpson, 1860
, and allied genera from the Caribbean and the Atlantic coast of South
America
, Coelho (2006: 683) argued that
Podochela meloi
lacks typical inachid traits, such as the neck-like anterior part of the carapace, the swollen branchial and gastric regions of the carapace, and the prehensile pereopods. Comparing
Sankarankutty
et al
.’s (2001
: 555, fig. 2F) illustration of the G1 of
P. m e l o i
(
Sankarankutty
et al
., 2001
: 555, fig. 2F) with those of
Williams (1984
: 305, fig. 241 j–l, i) for
I. forceps
and
Podochela
spp., Coelho (2006) noticed that in
P. m e l o i
the G1 markedly differs from those of
Podochela
species and resemble instead those of
I. forceps
. Accordingly, he transferred
P. m e l o i
from the
Inachidae
MacLeay, 1838
to the
Inachoididae
Dana, 1851
, genus
Inachoides
H. Milne Edwards & Lucas, 1842
, based on overall similarities. Overall similarities alone, however, do not imply close phylogenetic relationships.
FIGURE 1.
A, B. Dorsal view of the carapace, cephalothorax, and abdomen. A,
Podochela meloi
Sankarankutti, Ferreira
& Cunha, 2001, male holotype (MNRJ 13769). B,
Inachoides forceps
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
, male (MZUSP 6593). C, D.
Habitus
, dorsal view. C,
Podochela meloi
Sankarankutti, Ferreira
& Cunha, 2001, female paratype (MZUSP 13192). D,
Inachoides forceps
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
, female (MZUSP 6011). E, F.
Inachoides lambriformis
(De Haan, 1839)
, male (MCZ 1837). E.
Habitus
, dorsal view. F, ventral view of carapace, cephalothorax, and abdomen. Scale bars: A, B, 5 mm; B, C, 4 mm; E, F, 12 mm.
FIGURE 2.
A–D. Dorsal view of carapace, cephalothorax, and abdomen. A, B,
Podochela meloi
Sankarankutti, Ferreira
& Cunha, 2001. A, male holotype (MNRJ 13769). B, female paratype (MZUSP 13192). C,
Inachoides forceps
A. Milne- Edwards, 1879, male (MZUSP 6593). D,
Inachoides lambriformis
(De Haan, 1839)
(MCZ 1837). Scale bars: 2 mm.
In an investigation of phylogenetic relationships of the groups in question
Santana (2008)
found four unambiguous synapomorphies that indicate the monophyly of the
Inachoididae
: 1) thoracic pleurites V–VIII gymnopleura (see also
Drach & Guinot, 1982
;
1983
; Guinot & Richer de
Forges, 1997
); 2) female abdominal segments 5, 6 fused with each other and with telson; 3) second antennal segment with a longitudinal carina parallel to the lateral margin of the antennular fossa; and 4) female sterno-abdominal cavity deeply concave. The genus
Inachoides
is also monophyletic as evidenced by the following synapomorphies: 1) single rostral spine; 2) antennular septum with no lobe or spine and restricted to antennular fossa; 2) propod of cheliped strongly swollen; 4) ventromesial margin of antennal article 2 with a low carina; 5) ventrolateral margin of subhepathic region with no spine or prominent tubercles. Comparisons of
P. m e l o i
with representatives of the valid species of
Inachoides
revealed that
P. m e l o i
has all the synapomorphies of
Inachoididae
and
Inachoides
. Therefore, these synapomorphies support the placement of
P. m e l o i
in
Inachoides
.
FIGURE 3.
A, B. Outline drawing of dactyl and propodus of the third left pereopod. A,
Podochela meloi
Sankarankutti, Ferreira
& Cunha, 2001, male holotype (MNRJ 13769). B,
Inachoides forceps
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
, male (MZUSP 6593). Scale bars: 1 mm.
Inachoides
currently comprises three species:
I. laevis
and
I. lambriformis
, both from the Pacific coast of the Americas, and
I. forceps
, from the Western Atlantic. Striking variations in the rostral length in
I. forceps
(e.g.,
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
: 199, pl. 33, figs. 4, 4d;
Williams, 1984
: 299, fig. 234) resulted in the addition of two species,
I. obtusus
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
, and
I. intermedius
Rathbun, 1894
. Variations in the ornamentation of the carapace and chelipeds led
Rathbun (1925)
to merge
I. forceps
into with
I. laevis
.
Garth (1958: 101)
returned to the concept of
Stimpson (1860)
and considered
I. laevis
as an exclusively Eastern Pacific species, an interpretation followed by many subsequent authors (e.g.,
Powers, 1977
;
Williams, 1984
;
Melo, 1996
;
1998
;
Boschi, 2000
; Ng
et al.
, 2008).
Inachoides forceps
differs from
I. laevis
mainly in the possession of a shorter rostrum, although its status as a valid species deserves further investigation. Comparatively,
I. lambriformis
(
Figs. 1
E, F; 2D) is a much larger species, with gastric and branchial regions of the carapace surmounted by tubercles and granules whereas in
I. forceps
and
I. laevis
these are smooth.
Inachoides lambriformis
has a strong postorbital spine, whereas it is inconspicuous in
I. forceps
and
I. laevis
.
In
Podochela meloi
, as in
Inachoides forceps
, the carapace (
Figs. 1A
–D; 2A–C) is pyriform and nearly smooth. The cardiac, branchial and gastric regions are swollen, and the anterior margin of the branchial region is ornamented with few small tubercles. The postorbital spine is inconspicuous. In both species the rostrum is usually long in males, short in females, tapering gradually to a rather blunt tip, and with lateral margins possessing a row of hooked setae. In males the cheliped is longer and heavier than in females, with sparsely distributed granules mainly in the dactylus, propodus, and carpus. In
P. m e l o i
and
I. forceps
the pereopods are similar in length and the dactyls are armed with calcareous spinules on the ventral margins (
Figs. 3A, B
). In this and other respects
P. m e l o i
shows no difference with
I. forceps
and is considered herein to be its junior synonym.