A collection of crabs (Crustacea, Brachyura) from the southwestern coast of India, with a discussion of the systematic position of Nectopanope Wood-Mason in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891 (Euryplacidae)
Author
Ng, Peter K. L.
Author
Priyaja, P.
Author
Kumar, A. Biju
Author
Devi, S. Suvarna
text
ZooKeys
2019
818
1
24
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.818.32108
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.818.32108
1313-2970-818-1
E362680898A040319A27579D902CFE18
Nectopanope Wood-Mason in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891
Nectopanope
Anonymous, 1891: 56 (nomen nudum).
Nectopanope
Wood-Mason in Wood in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891: 261.
Diagnosis.
Carapace (Fig. 3A, B) subhexagonal, wider than long, dorsal surface smooth, regions poorly indicated; front (Fig. 3
C-E
) wide, straight with small median notch, with transverse sulcus along margin. Anterolateral borders (Fig. 3A, B) convex; with two low teeth posterior to broadly triangular outer orbital angle, first tooth wider than acute second tooth. Orbits (Fig. 3
C-E
) wide, spherical, deep; supraorbital margin with submedian notch, small acute lobe before notch with front; low suborbital tooth on broad, suborbital border; eye peduncles short, stout, with large subreniform (dorsoventrally flattened) cornea (Fig. 36D, E). Basal antennal article mobile, completely closing orbital
hiatus
(Fig. 3D). Ischium of third maxilliped (Fig. 3B) elongate; anteroexternal margin of merus auriculiform. Cheliped fingers (Figs 3A, G, 4E, F) stout, as long as propodus, not pigmented; carpus with small, sharp spine on inner margin, merus with acute anterodorsal tooth. Dorsal margins of ambulatory legs (P2-P5) (Figs 3A, 4
G-J
) meri, carpi, propodi unarmed, dactyli slender, smooth, setose; P5 propodus, dactylus proportionally short, flattened, fringed with many short setae. Thoracic sternum (Fig. 4A, D) relatively wide; sternites 1, 2 completely fused; suture 2/3 complete, gently convex towards buccal cavity; sternites 3, 4 medially fused, with shallow median groove, almost indiscernible with only lateral notch distinct; sutures 4/5, 6/7, 7/8 medially interrupted, 5/6 complete; median groove on thoracic sternites 7, 8. Male sternopleonal cavity (Fig. 4A, D) deep, reaching median part of sternite 4, just before sternite 3. Press-button of male pleonal-locking mechanism (Fig. 4D) present as low tubercle on sternite 5, near thoracic suture 4/5. Male pleon (Fig. 4
A-C
) narrow, slender, T-shaped, lateral margins of somites 4-6 abruptly narrowing from somite 3 to transversely narrow, acutely triangular telson (Fig. 4B); somite 3 wide, reaching inner margins of P5 coxae; no part of thoracic sternite 8 exposed by closed pleon, somite 2 transversely shorter than somite 3, somite 1 (Fig. 4C) conspicuous, narrow. G1 (Fig. 7
A-D
) long, slender, almost straight; distal quarter distinctly chitinised; apex sharp, distal third with numerous sharp denticles. G2 (Fig. 7E) less than one-third G1 length, relatively straight, apex spatuliform. Male genital opening (gonopore) coxal; penis long. Female characters not known.
Remarks.
The type species of
Nectopanope
has been somewhat confused. Only one species,
Nectopanope longipes
, was recognised in
Anonymous (1891
: 56) but both these names are nomina nuda. Wood-Mason (in
Wood-Mason and Alcock 1891
: 261, 262) provided valid descriptions for the genus and species, and included
N. rhodobaphes
as a second species.
Ng et al. (2008
: 80) noted that the type species of
Nectopanope
was
N. rhodobaphes
by monotypy, but this is not correct. Although Wood-Mason (in
Wood-Mason and Alcock 1891
) did not explicitly state which was the type species for
Nectopanope
Wood-Mason in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891, they wrote "
Nectopanope rhodobaphes
, gen. et sp. n., Wood-Mason" (Wood-Mason in
Wood-Mason and Alcock 1891
: 261). Under Article 68.2.1 of the Code (
ICZN 1999
), this is sufficient to recognise it as the type species of the genus (see
Huys et al. 2014
: 27). Alcock (1898: 213) later commented that
Nectopanope
should be restricted to
N. rhodobaphes
and that "
Nectopanope longipes
, which was provisionally referred to this genus by Wood-Mason, who had insufficient material for examination, turns out, now that numerous good specimens have been dredged by the '
Investigator
,' to be a Catometope belonging to the genus
Carcinoplax
."
Alcock (1899a
: 64) repeated the same comments in his treatment of the deep-sea
Crustacea
of the Indian Seas.
Nectopanope longipes
Wood-Mason in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891, is now generally regarded as a valid species in
Carcinoplax
H. Milne Edwards, 1853 (
Goneplacidae
MacLeay, 1838) (see
Castro 2007
).
Nectopanope
Wood-Mason in Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891, was originally placed in
Cancridae
Latreille, 1802, by Wood-Mason (in
Wood-Mason and Alcock 1891
) with Alcock (1898,
1899a
) later transferring the genus to
Xanthidae
s. lato. Alcock (1898) recognized a new group in his xanthid subfamily
Pilumninae
,
Heteropanopioida
Alcock
, 1898, in which he included
Heteropanope
Stimpson, 1858,
Eurycarcinus
A. Milne-Edwards, 1867, and
Nectopanope
.
Ng et al. (2008
: 204) transferred
Nectopanope
to
Xanthinae
(
Xanthidae
) without explanation. This was necessary as
Heteropanope
and
Eurycarcinus
had already been moved to the
Pilumnidae
(present
Pilumnoidea
) by then (see
Ng et al. 2018
).
The family position of
Nectopanope
is difficult because its only species,
N. rhodobaphes
, has previously only been known from one female specimen. Wood-Mason (in
Wood-Mason and Alcock 1891
: 262) noted that he had "one specimen obtained at Station 96, 98 to 102 fathoms; the length of its carapace is 21.4 millim., and the greatest breadth between the points of the third teeth 29 millim." Station 96 was in the Bay of Bengal,
18°30'N
,
84°46'E
, substrate is sand at a depth of 98-102 fathoms, and dated 4 March 1890 (
Anonymous 1914
). The sex of the specimen was not stated.
Alcock (1899a
: pl. 38 fig. 6) figured the specimen but it is not clear what its sex was (Fig. 2). Alcock (1898: 213; 1899a: 65) noted that they only had one female collected from the
Godavari
coast (in the Bay of Bengal) from 98-102 fathoms, that is the type. A search in the Zoological Survey of India in Calcutta for this specimen was not successful and it could not be located (S. Mitra, personal communication).
The study of the present male specimen resolves the systematic position of
Nectopanope
. The structures of the male pleon and gonopods leave no doubt that
Nectopanope
is in fact a member of
Euryplacidae
Stimpson, 1871.
Nectopanope
is only superficially resembles
Eurycarcinus
(and the
Pilumnidae
) due to similar carapace features. Their male pleons and gonopods, however, are completely different (cf.
Ng et al. 2018
).
In
Euryplacidae
, the general shape and structure of the carapace as well as smoothness of the surfaces of
Nectopanope
most closely resembles
Psopheticoides
Sakai, 1969 (with only one species, P.
sanguineus
Sakai, 1969), from the western Pacific. They also share a similar eye morphology. The eye of
Psopheticoides
is large and is distinctly flattened dorsoventrally, with the structure appearing reniform (
Castro and Ng 2010
: fig. 36B). The eye of
Nectopanope
is relatively less distinctly flattened dorsoventrally and only weakly reniform in shape (Fig. 3D, E). No other euryplacids, however, have such a distinct eye structure which has been reported in other deep-sea brachyurans (e.g.,
Hexaplax
Doflein, 1904,
Hexapodidae
; cf.
Rahayu and Ng 2014
).
The carapace anterolateral margin of
Nectopanope
has three distinct teeth (Figs 2, 3A, C) (with only two teeth in
Psopheticoides
, with the external orbital tooth very broad;
Sakai 1969
: text-fig. 16b;
Sakai 1976
: pl. 192, fig. 3). The external orbital tooth of
Psopheticoides
, however, is usually partially medially indented, and although the cleft is not deep, it gives the appearance of having three teeth on the anterolateral margin (cf.
Sakai 1969
: text-figs 16b, 18b;
Sakai 1976
: text-fig. 282a;
Castro and Ng 2010
: fig. 36A). The frontal margin in
Nectopanope
is medially indented (Figs 2, 3A, C) (margin entire in
Psopheticoides
; cf.
Castro and Ng 2010
: fig. 36A); the ischium of the third maxilliped is proportionately longer with the auriculiform anteroexternal angle of the merus more developed (Fig. 3B) (ischium of third maxilliped relatively shorter and the anterexternal angle of the merus less produced in
Psopheticoides
; cf.
Castro and Ng 2010
: fig. 36C); the cornea is weakly reniform (Fig. 3D, E) (cornea prominently reniform in
Psopheticoides
;
cf
.
Castro and Ng 2010
: fig. 36B); the male telson is proportionately shorter (Fig. 4A) (elongated and linguiform in
Psopheticoides
; cf.
Castro and Ng 2010
: fig. 36E); and the G1 is relatively straighter with the tip tapered to a tip (Fig. 7
A-D
) (G1 slightly sinuous with the tip arrow-shaped in
Psopheticoides
; cf.
Castro and Ng 2010
: fig. 38D, E).