Hermit crabs from Brazil: Family Diogenidae (Crustacea: Decapoda: Paguroidea), except Paguristes
Author
Nucci, Paulo Ricardo
Author
Melo, Gustavo Augusto Schmidt De
text
Zootaxa
2015
3947
3
327
346
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3947.3.2
6173bd73-5471-4c1e-a758-5481ffbd97b5
1175-5326
240452
4BEA9B2D-E883-43B5-AE74-1EBBD0D4D684
Cancellus ornatus
Benedict, 1901
(
Figs 1
C, 5C)
Cancellus ornatus
Benedict, 1901b
: 772
, figs 1, 2.—
Alcock, 1905
: 167
[list].—
Gordan
, 1956
: 306
[list].—
Russell, 1962
: 19
.—
Mayo, 1973
: 18
, figs 5–8.—
Williams, 1984
: 193
, fig. 134.—
Coelho & Ramos-Porto, 1986
: 49
.—
Rieger, 1998
: 421
.—
Melo, 1999
: 44
, fig. 4.—McLaughlin
et al.
, 2010: 19.
Cancellus calypso
Forest & Saint Laurent, 1968
: 96
, figs 54–59.
Material examined
.
Brazil
: Pernambuco—Tamandaré, 1 spec. (DOUFPE—3681). Rio de Janeiro—Proj. Monitoramento, st. 3, 1 spec. (MZUSP-13880).
Diagnosis
. Shield slightly broader than long, with lateral margins strongly convex. Ocular peduncles approximately 2/3 length of shield, slightly turned outer. Antennal flagella short, slightly longer than ocular peduncles. Anterodorsal region of dactyl, propodus and merus of first ambulatory legs and chelipeds forming an operculum; irregular transverse rows of tubercles on opercular face. First ambulatory legs with opercular face slightly concave on carpus and propodus, dactylus planar. Second ambulatory legs with lateral face of merus and propodus longer than twice the width of these segments. Sixth abdominal tergite broadly hexagonal, length 2/3 width. Anterior lobe larger than posterior. Telson broader than long; two anterolateral depressions on either side in front of raised central area.
Distribution
. Western Atlantic—North Carolina, Florida,
Bahamas
, Gulf of
Mexico
, Antilles, north of South
America
and
Brazil
(from Pernambuco to Rio de Janeiro).
FIGURE 1
. Shield and cephalic region: A,
Areopaguristes iris
; B,
Calcinus tibicen
; C,
Cancelus ornatus
; D,
Clibanarius antillensis
.
Remarks
. Found at depths of
30–
350 m
. In
Brazil
, the genus
Cancellus
is represented only by
C. ornatus
whose nearest relative is
C. viridis
from Caribbean Sea. The use of limestone, calcareous algae, sponges and coral as shelter, hinders the recognition of possible new species, because field collectors, expecting to find hermit crabs in gastropod shells, may unknowingly discard
Cancellus
specimens.