Recognition of Parapinnixidae Števčić, 2005, and Tetriasidae fam. nov. in Pinnotheroidea De Haan, 1833 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Thoracotremata)
Author
Tsang, Ling Ming
0000-0002-5029-5690
Simon F. S. Li Marine Science Laboratory, School of Life Sciences, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong, China. lmtsang @ cuhk. edu. hk; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 5029 - 5690
lmtsang@cuhk.edu.hk
Author
Naruse, Tohru
0000-0001-9212-5246
Tropical Biosphere Research Center, Iriomote Station, University of the Ryukyus, 870 Uehara, Taketomi, Okinawa 907 - 1541, Japan naruse @ lab. u-ryukyu. ac. jp; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 9212 - 5246
naruse@lab.u-ryukyu.ac.jp
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-03-06
5249
5
540
558
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5249.5.2
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5249.5.2
1175-5326
7701343
949F2D17-F10C-4ED1-9580-2CB12BD65896
Family
Pinnotheridae
De Haan, 1833
Pinnotheridea
De Haan, 1833: 34
.
Diagnosis.
Carapace circular (mainly
Pinnotherinae
) to ellipsoidal (mainly
Pinnixinae
and Pinnixulalinae), dorsally vaulted to flat, regions generally ill-defined, carapace cuticle usually poorly calcified in female pinnotherines. Buccal cavern semicircular, large. Mxp3 obliquely placed in buccal cavern; ischium and merus indistiguishably fused (mainly pinnotherines) or with or without superficial suture (mainly pinnixines and pinnixualines), ischiomerus produced mesiosubdistally, somewhat hatchet-shaped; palp 2- or 3-segmented, small, 3-segmented species with slender to narrowly spatulated dactylus inserted subdistally on lateral margin (
in situ
) of propodus; ambulatory legs mostly symmetrical but bilaterally asymmetrical in some pinnotherines. Male pleonal somites and telson free, telson not usually markedly wider than pleonal somite 6. G1 simple, slender to rather stout, straight to broadly curved. G2 small. Female pleonal somites and telson free, covering most of thoracic sternum in large female.
Remarks.
This study formally transfers
Tetrias
and
Parapinnixa
+
Sakina
from
Pinnotheridae
to their own families,
Tetriasidae
fam. nov.
and
Parapinnixidae
, respectively. The monophyletic
Pinnotheridae
sensu stricto
is the largest family in
Pinnotheroidea
and is comprised of nearly 300 species in 3 subfamilies and 59 genera (
Ng
et al
. 2008
;
Ng & Ho 2016
;
Palacios Theil
et al
. 2016
;
Ahyong 2018
;
Ng 2018
;
Ng
et al
. 2019
;
Palacios Theil & Felder 2020
;
Ng & Ahyong 2022
).
Pinnotheridae
exhibits high morphological diversity, especially between subfamilies. For instance, crabs from
Pinnixinae
and Pinnixulalinae mostly live in the tubes or burrows of other marine benthos (e.g. mud shrimps and annelids). They have a much wider carapace (i.e. high aspect ratio carapace) compared to more circular carapace observed in the species from
Pinnotherinae
that predominantly live endosymbiotically with bivalve hosts, or occasionally with gastropod, ascidian and echinoderm hosts (
Hultgren
et al.
2022
).