First record of two rare spider crabs (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Majoidea) from Brazil
Author
Alves-Júnior, Flavio De Almeida
Author
Lucatelli, Débora
Author
Santana, William
Author
Souza-Filho, Jesser Fidelis De
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-10-21
4688
1
111
118
journal article
25182
10.11646/zootaxa.4688.1.6
9fded863-4b93-41c1-ae6e-e6056a3c258d
1175-5326
3514876
B775D9AD-027C-443A-AE9E-19A879A30A41
Collodes leptocheles
Rathbun, 1894
(
Fig. 4
)
Collodes leptocheles
Rathbun, 1894: 53—1900
: 508
; 1925: 117, fig. 42, pl. 38, figs. 5–6.—
Pequegnat 1970: 181
—
Powers 1977: 44
—
Abele & Kim 1986: 38
—
Boschi 2000: 75
—
McLaughlin
et al
. 2005: 251
, 311—
Ng
et al
. 2008: 115
(list)—
Felder
et al
. 2009: 1076
—
Santana & Tavares 2017: 1147
(comparative material).
Material examined.
2 females
, cl: 42 &
45 mm
, cw: 12 &
13 mm
(
MOUFPE 19233
), R/
V
Seaward Johnson
, Potiguar Basin,
Rio Grande do Norte
, Station #MT–52,
04°44’S
,
036°25’W
,
23 May 2011
, otter trawl,
180 m
, gravel bottom, temperature 28.8°C, salinity 36.6
.
Geographic distribution.
Western Atlantic: Gulf of
Mexico
(Florida –
type
locality – Louisiana and southeast of Caribbean Sea) (
Rathbun 1894
;
Felder
et al
. 2009
) and
Brazil
(
Rio Grande do Norte
) (present study).
Occurring between 91 and
384 m
depth (
Rathbun 1894
;
Pequegnat 1970
;
Abele & Kim 1986
;
Felder
et al
. 2009
).
Remarks.
Collodes
Stimpson, 1860
, is an endemic, amphi-American genus inhabiting shallow waters down to around
700 m
.
The genus currently comprises of 16 species, five of which are found in Brazilian waters:
Collodes armatus
Rathbun, 1898
;
C. inermis
A.
Milne-Edwards, 1878
;
C. rostratus
A.
Milne-Edwards, 1879
;
C. trispinosus
Stimpson, 1871
; and
C. tuerkayi
Santana & Tavares, 2017
(see
Santana & Tavares 2017
).
The present specimens fit well with the original description provided by
Rathbun (1894)
, but presented some variations, highlighted in bold:
Carapace pyriform, longer than wide, dorsal surface densely covered with tubercles (
Fig. 4A
); branchial, cardiac, intestinal spines absent (
Fig 4A
). Rostrum short, bifurcated, divided by U-shaped notch into two blunt teeth (
Fig. 4C
). Antenna distinctly exceeding rostral length,
third article slightly shorter
. Supraorbital spine absent; postorbital tooth broad and long,
as long as the eyestalk
, directed laterally,
tip slightly curved anteriorly
(
Fig. 4C
). Antennular fossae elongated, septum long formed by a strong spine,
which does not exceed the septum area
(
Fig. 4D
); antenullar flagellum surpassing the rostrum tip, with first and second antennal articles fused to epistome. Epistome slightly wider than long (
Fig. 4D
); epistomial spine separated by
small gap
from inter-antennular septum (
Fig. 4D
). Mouth subrectangular; pterygostomial spine with few subequal tubercles. Third maxilliped with long exopod, reaching halfway along length of merus, dorsal face with subequals tubercles; ischium longer than wide; merus longer than half of ischium; palp cylindrical, longer than merus, with rows of setae. Hepatic region
well marked, convex
. Chelipeds subcylindrical in both sexes, slender, fingers
as long as palm
(
Fig. 4F
); merus, ischium with few tubercles; propodus, carpus, dactylus smooth with long setae. Pereopods 2–5 (ambulatory legs 1–4) slender, slightly granulated, setose; P2, P3 longest when compared with the P4, P5 (
Fig. 4A, B
); merus, carpus, propodus, dactylus covered with small tubercles; dactylus broadly curved (
Fig. 4A
). Pleotelson subtriangular, rounded distally (
Fig. 4E
). Pleonal somites 1–4 free, somites 5, 6 and telson fused (
Fig. 4B
). Females present a prominent tubercle in the midline of fifth abdominal somite (
Fig. 4B
) and
one prominent spine on first
(
Fig. 4A
).
Collodes leptocheles
is closely related to
C. robustus
Smith, 1883
(distributed from
Massachusetts
to Florida on the
US
east coast, the Gulf of
Mexico
and the southeastern Caribbean Sea), but is distinguished from it by the fifth pleonal somite having a strong spine in males and a prominent tubercle in the midline in females (
Fig. 4B
) (
versus
fifth abdominal somite without spines in males and with small, evenly distributed tubercles in females
C. robustus
).
Collodes leptocheles
was previously known from the Gulf of
Mexico
(
Felder
et al
. 2009
) and is here recorded for the first time from far further south (about
6,800 km
) off the northeastern Brazilian coast (Rio Grande do Norte).