Stomatopod Crustacea of Lord Howe Island
Author
Ahyong, Shane T.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-10-04
5194
1
144
150
journal article
158410
10.11646/zootaxa.5194.1.9
54ee982a-82d4-4a3c-afed-4dd1f0481cde
1175-5326
7142133
E5A14910-D41A-4AC1-B246-54F01D17A514
Acaenosquilla keablei
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 1
)
Type material
.
AM
P100914
, male
holotype
(TL
42 mm
),
Old Settlement Beach
,
Lord Howe Island
,
31.51969°S
,
159.05719°E
, intertidal sand burrow, yabby pump
,
LHI
2017Mar29
_059, coll. S. Keable & E. Kupriyanova,
29 March 2017
.
Diagnosis
. Cornea mesial lobe rounded. Rostral plate with ventral spine near base of median spine. Raptorial claw dactylus with 9 teeth on occlusal margin (including terminal tooth). Telson submedian and intermediate carinae well-defined; without longitudinal carinae on surface between median boss and submedian carina.
Description of
holotype
. Eye not extending beyond antennular peduncle article 2 (
Fig. 1A
); cornea broadened, inclined laterally on stalk (
Fig. 1C
), not concealed by rostral plate, mesial lobe rounded. Ophthalmic somite anterior margin faintly convex. Ocular scales small, rounded, separate (
Fig. 1A
).
Antennular peduncle 0.61CL. Antennular somite dorsal processes with acute apices, spiniform, directed almost anteriorly (
Fig. 1A
). Antennal protopod dorsally unarmed; with small ventrodistal tooth and 1 ventral papilla (
Fig. 1D
). Antennal scale length 3.17× width, 0.41CL.
Rostral plate cordiform, about as wide long, widest basally, with slender anterior spine; anterior lateral margins sinuous; dorsum smooth, weakly elevated in midline; with slender ventral spine at base of median anterior spine (
Fig. 1A, B
). Carapace anterolateral angles broadly rounded.
Raptorial claw (
Fig. 1E
) dactylus occlusal margin with 9 teeth (including terminal tooth), outer margin broadly curved, with shallow proximal notch. Propodus occlusal margin fully pectinate, with 4 proximal movable spines. Carpus dorsal margin terminating in short spine tooth, directed ventrally. Merus inferodistal angle blunt, rounded, approximating right angle; length shorter than carapace, PI 103. Ischium about one-third merus length.
Mandibular palp of 3-articles. Maxillipeds 1–5 each with epipod. Maxilliped 5 basal article without ventrally directed spine.
Pereopods 1–3 (
Fig. 1G–I
) first article each with posterior spine on outer margin; inner margin unarmed. Pereopod 1 endopod distal article subcircular. Pereopod 2 endopod distal article ovate. Pereopod 3 endopod distal article slender, elongate.
Male pleopod 1 endopod with distinct lateral lobe on distal ‘endite’. Hook process short, squat, distinctly shorter than tube process (
Fig. 1O
).
Thoracic somite 5 lateral process obsolete, lacking ventrally directed spine. Thoracic somites 6–8 lateral process subtruncate to broadly rounded (
Fig. 1F
). Thoracic sternite 8 keel bluntly angular (
Fig. 1N
).
Abdominal somites 1–5 smooth; posterior margin unarmed; posterolateral corners bluntly angular, unarmed (
Fig. 1L
). Abdominal somite 6 smooth, lacking carinae; posterolateral spine prominent, elongated (
Fig. 1J
); with short spine and blunt, obtuse projection anterior to uropodal articulation (
Fig. 1M
); sternum posterior margin unarmed, slightly concave.
Telson thick, about twice as wide as long, with three pairs of primary marginal teeth (submedian, intermediate, lateral) (
Fig. 1J
); submedian teeth slender, movable, slightly upcurved; with 10 spiniform submedian denticles in transverse row either side of midline; with 4 acute ‘intermediate’ denticles, second and fourth from midline slightly longer and more slender than first and third; lateral denticle spiniform. Intermediate and lateral teeth slender, subequal. Mid-dorsal surface with broad, posteriorly trispinous median elevation, flanked by single spine, and 2 cristate, posteriorly armed carinae (submedian and intermediate). Median elevation flat, margins converging posteriorly; median spine slightly overreaching posterior margin of telson, almost twice length of lateral spines. Minute spine present (right) or absent (left) between intermediate and lateral carina. Post-anal spine prominent, reaching posteriorly beyond midpoint between anal pore and posterior margin of telson (
Fig. 1K
).
Uropodal protopod terminal spines slender, dorsally flattened, ventrally carinate, outer spine shorter than inner spine; with slender ventral spine anterior to endopod articulation (
Fig. 1M
). Exopod (
Fig. 1F
) proximal article inner margin straight, unarmed; small distoventral spine; outer margin with 7 movable spines, distalmost spine reaching distal quarter of distal article. Exopod distal article longer than proximal article. Endopod length 3.19× width, dorsal surface with weak proximal fold.
Colour in preservative
. Largely faded. Carapace, thorax and abdomen with diffuse transverse bands.Abdominal somite 5 with dark, narrow posterolateral bar. Telson median elevation with pair of longitudinal, elongate, black bars. Ocular peduncle with dark proximodorsal spot. Antennules, antennae, raptorial claw, pereopods and uropods with scattered brown chromatophores. Uropodal exopod distal article dark on inner half; endopod distolateral quarter dark.
Etymology
. Named for my colleague, Steve Keable, for his longstanding contributions to isopod research and decades of dedication to the marine invertebrate collections at the Australian Museum.
Measurements
. TL
42 mm
, CL
7.90 mm
, cornea width
2.15 mm
, antennular peduncle
4.84 mm
, antennal scale
3.27 mm
, raptorial claw propodus length
7.68 mm
, abdominal somite 5 width
8.15 mm
.
Remarks
.
Acaenosquilla
currently includes two species: the
type
species,
A. latifrons
(de Haan, 1844)
, from
Japan
and
Korea
(
Hwang
et al
. 2019
), and
A. brazieri
(
Miers, 1880
)
from coastal eastern
Australia
and
New Caledonia
(
Ahyong 2001
).
Acaenosquilla keablei
sp. nov.
, the third known species of the genus, is the first lysiosquilloid to be recorded from Lord Howe Island.
Acaenosquilla keablei
differs from both
A. latifrons
and
A. brazieri
in having nine instead of six or seven (usually six) teeth on the dactylus of the raptorial claw. The new species further differs from
A. brazieri
in having a rounded rather than conical mesial lobe of the cornea and in lacking carinae between the median elevation and submedian carina of the telson.
Acaenosquilla keablei
is further distinguished from
A. latifrons
by the presence of the ventral spine on the rostral plate (absent in
A. latifrons
), sharply defined submedian and intermediate carinae on the telson (versus indistinct) in which the submedian carina is flanked mesially by a small spine (absent in
A. latifrons
).
Acaenosquilla keablei
is ecologically unusual in the genus in occurring intertidally. Both other species of
Acaenosquilla
are currently known only from sublittoral depths:
36–59 m
for
A. brazieri
(see
Ahyong 2001
), and shallower than
20 m
in
A. latifrons
(see
Hwang
et al
. 2019
).
Acaenosquilla
is closely related to three other Indo-West Pacific tetrasquillid genera sharing five or more teeth on the dactylus of the raptorial claw and a postanal spine on the telson:
Heterosquillopsis
Moosa, 1991
(
type
species:
H. danielae
Moosa, 1991
,
New Caledonia
),
Kasim
Manning, 1995
(
type
species:
K. philippinensis
(
Moosa, 1986
)
, South
China
Sea;
K. insuetus
(
Manning, 1970
)
, southwestern
Australia
;
K. karubar
Ahyong, 2002
,
Indonesia
), and
Pariliacantha
Ahyong, 2012
(
type
species:
P. georgeorum
Ahyong, 2012
,
New Zealand
) (
Ahyong & Harling 2000
;
Ahyong 2012
). Of these,
Acaenosquilla
is closest to the monotypic
Pariliacantha
Ahyong, 2012
from
New Zealand
, differing chiefly in the armature of the ischium and dactylus of the raptorial claw (ischium unarmed versus with prominent distoventral spine; dactylus with 6–9 versus 12–17 teeth) (
Ahyong 2012
). Along eastern
Australia
,
A. brazieri
is a largely warm-temperate water species ranging from southern
Queensland
south to Sydney (
Ahyong 2001
;
Hutchings
et al
., 2013
), corresponding the Peronian marine region (
Ebach
et al
. 2013
). Discovery of
Acaenosquilla
on the southern Lord Howe Rise, at an intermediate locality between eastern
Australia
and northern
New Zealand
, is biogeographically parsimonious.
Distribution
. Presently known only from Lord Howe Island; intertidal.