Decapod crustaceans from the state of Ceará, northeastern Brazil: an updated checklist of marine and estuarine species, with 23 new records
Author
Pachelle, Paulo P. G.
Author
Anker, Arthur
Author
Mendes, Cecili B.
Author
Bezerra, Luis E. A.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4131
1
1
63
journal article
38707
10.11646/zootaxa.4131.1.1
a745ef66-a828-4b3c-ab2c-124f7f7a68e0
1175-5326
400297
48CA9FCC-8044-448D-8CA5-5CD5B403D884
Lysmata lipkei
Okuno & Fiedler, 2010
(
Figures 10–12
)
Lysmata lipkei
Okuno & Fiedler 2010
: 599
, figs. 1–4.
Material examined
.
Brazil
, Ceará: 1 hermaphrodite,
MZUSP
29791, Camocim, Praia do Farol do Trapiá, rocky intertidal, under large rock, coll. P.P.G. Pachelle & C.B. Mendes,
08.iv.2012
[fcn PP 12-083]; 1 hermaphrodite,
OUMNH
.ZC.2012-10-0025, same collection data [fcn PP 12-083]; 1 ov. hermaphrodite,
OUMNH
.ZC.2015-04- 0 15, same collection data [fcn PP 12-083]; 4 hermaphrodites, 1 ov. hermaphrodite,
MZUSP
33744, Icapuí, Praia de Ponta Grossa, rocky intertidal, under rocks in tide pools, coll. C.B. Mendes
et al.
,
09.ix.2014
.
Additional material
.
Brazil
, Rio Grande do Norte: 1 hermaphrodite,
MZUSP
29788, Areia Branca, Praia de Baixa Grande,
04°55’45’’S
37°05’06’’W
, rocky intertidal, under rocks in tide pools, coll. P.P.G. Pachelle,
23.vii.2013
[fcn PP 13-021]; 1 ov. hermaphrodite,
MZUSP
29789, same collection data [fcn PP 13-022]; 1 hermaphrodite,
MZUSP
29790, same collection data [fcn PP 13-023].
FIGURE 10.
Lysmata lipkei
Okuno & Fiedler, 2010
: hermaphrodite from Camocim, Ceará, Brazil (MZUSP 29791); A, frontal region, dorsal view; B, same, lateral view; C, detail of the pterygostomial angle of caparace; D, abdomen, lateral view; E, telson, dorsal view; F, left antennule, distal peduncle and proximal articles of the antennular flagellae, dorso-mesial view; G, left third maxilliped, lateral view; H, same, tip of ultimate article, dorsal view; I, left first pereiopod, lateral view; J, left second pereiopod, lateral view; K, right second pereiopod, lateral view; L, right uropod, dorsal view.
Comparative material
.
Lysmata lipkei
Okuno & Fiedler 2010
.
Japan
:
paratype
, ov. hermaphrodite,
OUMNH
.ZC.2010-09-0001, Okinawa Island, off Motobu Peninsula, Sesoko Island,
26º38.2'N
127º52.0'E
, depth
1–2 m
, coll. G.C. Fiedler,
05.ix.2001
; 1 ov. hermaphrodite,
OUMNH
.ZC.2011-02-0043, Kume-Jima, Ebi-ana,
26º17.547’N
126º47.771’E
, depth
10 m
, coll. Y. Fujita,
13.xi.2009
.
Distribution
. Western Pacific:
Japan
(Boso Peninsula, Okinawa, Tokashiki-jima, and Kumejima) (
Okuno & Fiedler 2010
; De Grave
et al.
2012); probably introduced to southwestern Atlantic:
Brazil
(Ceará, Rio Grande do Norte) (present study, see remarks below).
FIGURE 11.
Lysmata lipkei
Okuno & Fiedler, 2010
: hermaphrodite from Camocim, Ceará, Brazil (MZUSP 29791); A, left third pereiopod, lateral view; B, same, detail of dactylus, lateral view; C, left fourth pereiopod, lateral view; D, same, detail of dactylus, lateral view; E, left fifth pereiopod, lateral view; F, same, detail of dactylus, lateral view.
Remarks
. The material identified here as
Lysmata lipkei
can be separated from all other Brazilian / Atlantic species of
Lysmata
by the combination of the following morphological characters: (1) lateral antennular flagellum with the accessory branch bearing only one free article; (2) pterygostomial angle of the carapace produced into a small sharp tooth; (3) carpus of the second pereiopod subdivided into 29–32 joints (
Fig. 10
C, F, J, K).
The specimens from Ceará are morphologically undistinguishable from
L. lipkei
Okuno & Fiedler 2010
from southern
Japan
, a species nearly identical and possibly synonymous (see below) with
L. dispar
Hayashi, 2007
from western
Australia
(
Hayashi 2007
;
Okuno & Fiedler 2010
). According to
Okuno & Fiedler (2010)
,
L. lipkei
is distinguishable from
L. dispar
by the “account of the length and form of the rostrum” (i.e. reaching the distal margin of the second article of the antennular peduncle and straight in
L. lipkei
vs. reaching distal margin of the first article and with slightly convex dorsal margin in
L. dispar
); the “armature of the antennular peduncle” (i.e. with a minute spinule on the third article in
L. lipkei
vs. without such a spinule in
L. dispar
); and the “articulation of the ischium of the second pereiopod” (i.e. with barely visible articles in
L. lipkei
vs. with clearly visible ones in
L. dispar
). The Brazilian specimens have a straight, not particularly curved rostrum, which is typically reaching at least to the middle of the second article of the antennular peduncle (
Fig. 10
A, B), as in
L. lipkei
. The articulations on the second pereiopod ischium are clearly visible (
Fig. 10
J, K), as in
L. dispar
. All Brazilian specimens also have a minute spiniform seta on the third article of the antennular peduncle, a presumed differential character between
L. lipkei
and
L. dispar
. The most-posterior tooth on the mid-line of the carapace has been figured with a well-marked articulation for both
L. dispar
and
L. lipkei
(cf.
Hayashi 2007
: fig. 2a, b;
Okuno & Fiedler 2010
: fig. 1C). However, in the Brazilian material and in the examined
paratype
of
L. lipkei
, this tooth appears to be fixed or may have at most a feeble articulation in its posterior half (
Fig. 10
B). The carpi of the third and fourth pereiopods are furnished with small spiniform setae in all Brazilian specimens examined (
Fig. 11
A, C). These setae were not illustrated or mentioned by
Okuno & Fiedler (2010)
in
L
.
lipkei
, but were confirmed to be present by examination of the
paratype
deposited in the OUMNH. Remarkably, the Brazilian specimens match the
type
specimens of
L. lipkei
in all details of the colour pattern (cf.
Fig. 12
and
Okuno & Fiedler 2010
: fig. 4); the colour pattern of
L. dispar
remains unknown.
Based on the absence of clear morphological differences between the Ceará material and the
type
material of
L. lipkei
from
Japan
, as well as great similarities in their colour patterns, the Brazilian specimens are tentatively assigned to
L. lipkei
. Due to the ambiguity and subtleness of characters used by
Okuno & Fielder (2010)
to separate
L. lipkei
from
L. dispar
, a possibility that
L. lipkei
may represent a junior synonym of
L. dispar
has to be seriously considered. However, a decision on the taxonomic status of
L. lipkei
is beyond the scope of the present study.
The Brazilian material of
L. lipkei
may represent the second record of a presumably non-indigenous species of
Lysmata
Risso,
1816
in
Brazil
and the southwestern Atlantic.
Lysmata vittata
(
Stimpson, 1860
)
was the first species of
Lysmata
reported as invasive in
Brazil
, after synonymization of
L. rauli
Laubenheimer & Rhyne, 2010
, by Soledade
et al.
(2013). However, since the taxonomic identity of
L. vittata
remains unsettled, the identity of the Brazilian material reported as
L. vittata
by Soledade
et al.
(2013) also remains uncertain. Thus, both species of
Lysmata
supposed to be invasive on the Brazilian coast, viz.
L. lipkei
and
L. vittata sensu
Soledade
et al.
(2013)
, will need to be genetically compared to reliably identified Indo-West Pacific specimens of
L. lipkei
,
L. dispar
and
L. vittata
, respectively.