Six new species and three new records of infaunal alpheid shrimps from the genera Leptalpheus Williams, 1965 and Fenneralpheus Felder & Manning, 1986 (Crustacea, Decapoda)
Author
Anker, Arthur
text
Zootaxa
2011
3041
1
38
journal article
46283
10.5281/zenodo.278802
275e1f6f-69ff-4f2e-a9a9-0d1cb7d286d8
1175-5326
278802
Leptalpheus
Williams, 1965
Leptalpheus
Williams, 1965
: 193
.
Emended diagnosis.
Carapace glabrous, not setose; frontal margin without orbital teeth, rounded or with more or less developed median rostral projection; small orbital crests present or absent; anterolateral suture present; pterygostomial angle rounded; branchiostegial margin with narrow ventral lip; posterior margin with deep cardiac notch. Sixth abdominal somite with posteroventral articulated plate. Telson with two pairs of spiniform setae dorsally; posterior margin rounded, with two pairs of posterolateral spiniform setae; anal tubercles more or less developed. Eyes concealed in dorsal and lateral views; anteromesial margin bluntly projecting. Antennular peduncles sometimes flattened dorsoventrally; ventromesial carina of first article with strong tooth; stylocerite appressed or not, rarely exceeding distal margin of first article; second article varying from shorter to much longer than wide; lateral antennular flagellum with short secondary ramus. Antenna with basicerite bearing distoventral tooth; scaphocerite with distolateral tooth; carpocerite exceeding scaphocerite. Mouthparts not especially modified; mandible with two-articulated palp; first maxilliped with elongate palp and broad caridean lobe; second maxilliped with elongate epipod. Third maxilliped with lateral plate on coxa more or less produced dorsally; tip of ultimate article unarmed. First pereiopods (chelipeds) very unequal in size and asymmetrical in shape, carried flexed; major cheliped elongate, with enlarged, elongate chela; merus depressed ventrally, with margins smooth, rugose or furnished with tubercles; carpus short, more or less cup-shaped; palm ventromesially depressed, smooth or with row or fields of tubercles; fingers with variously shaped armature, without tooth-fossa system; adhesive discs present or absent. Second pereiopod with carpus composed of four or five articles. Third pereiopod and fourth pereiopods strongly compressed laterally; ischium with or without spiniform seta ventrolaterally; carpus with distoventral spiniform seta; propodus with spiniform setae on ventral margin; dactylus simple, conical. Fifth pereiopod not compressed, shorter and more slender than third and fourth pereiopods; propodus with at least three setal rows distolaterally. Male second pleopod with appendix masculina exceeding appendix interna; female second pleopod with appendix interna only. Uropod with lateral lobe of protopod bifid distally; exopod distally rounded or truncate; endopod sometimes produced into posterior filament; diaeresis with deep incision and large triangular tooth near mesial margin of exopod. Gill/exopod formula: 5 pleurobranchs (P1–5), 1 arthrobranch (Mxp3), 2 lobe-like epipods (Mxp1–2), 0 podobranchs, 5 mastigobranchs (Mxp3, P1–4), 5 setobranchs (P1–5), 3 exopods (Mxp1–3).
Species included.
Leptalpheus forceps
Williams, 1965
(
type
species),
L. pacificus
Banner & Banner, 1974
,
L. mexicanus
Ríos & Carvacho, 1983
,
L. axianassae
Dworschak & Coelho, 1999
(? =
L. petronii
Ramos-Porto & Souza, 1994
,
nomen dubium
, see Anker
et al.
2006 for discussion),
L. felderi
Anker, Vera Caripe & Lira, 2006
,
L. pierrenoeli
Anker, 2008
,
L. denticulatus
Anker & Marin, 2009
,
L. dworschaki
Anker & Marin, 2009
,
L. marginalis
sp. nov.
,
L. azuero
sp. nov.
,
L. penicillatus
sp. nov.
,
L. hendrickxi
sp. nov.
,
L. bicristatus
sp. nov.
Distribution.
Pantropical except for East Atlantic. Indo-West Pacific:
Madagascar
,
Vietnam
,
Philippines
,
Fiji
,
French Polynesia
, Hawaii. East Pacific:
Mexico
,
Nicaragua
,
Costa Rica
,
Panama
,
Colombia
. West Atlantic: southeastern
USA
(North Carolina, Florida, Louisiana),
Venezuela
,
Aruba
,
Panama
,
Costa Rica
,
Brazil
(Sergipe, São Paulo).
Remarks.
The increasing morphological diversity of
Leptalpheus
, especially in the proportions of the antennular peduncles, the shape and length of the stylocerite, and the armature of the major chela fingers, calls for a phylogenetic investigation of this genus. It is possible that some morphologically and genetically well-defined clades will be assigned to new subgenera or even genera. However, in the absence of molecular data for many taxa and in the presence of further undescribed species (
Felder
et al.
2003
; Anker
et al.
2006; see also below), a subdivision of
Leptalpheus
in either subgenera or genera is not possible at this time.