A new species of Alainodaeus Davie, 1993 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Xanthidae) from Balicasag Island, Philippines, with a key to the genus
Author
Mendoza, Jose Christopher E.
Author
Ng, Peter K. L.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1897
53
63
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.184471
520c5f96-bfec-4706-be42-159054178971
1175-5326
184471
Alainodaeus
Davie, 1993
Type
Species.
Alainodaeus akiaki
Davie, 1993
, by original designation. Gender masculine.
Remarks.
Davie (1992) discussed the affinity of
Alainodaeus
with
Medaeops
and
Monodaeus
.
Davie (1997)
subsequently noted similarities in the form of the carapace, particularly between
A. nuku
and another xanthid genus,
Nanocassiope
Guinot, 1967
, as well as other panopeid genera such as
Micropanope
Stimpson, 1871
,
Coralliope
Guinot, 1967
, and
Gonopanope
Guinot, 1967
. He also commented that the forms of the G1 of
Nanocassiope
,
Coralliope
and
Gonopanope
were too different from the general form in
Alainodaeus
, although he notes that
Micropanope
has “a relatively simpler G1, not unlike that of
Alainodaeus
” (
Davie 1997: 347
).
Two additional features appear to link
Alainodaeus
more closely to
Euxanthinae
. The presence of welldeveloped endostomial ridges in
Alainodaeus
(Fig. 3A) is a feature shared with other euxanthine genera such as
Cranaothus
Ng, 1993
,
Epistocavea
Davie, 1993
, and
Ladomedaeus
Števčić, 2005
(cf.
Davie 1993
; Ng 1993; Manuel-Santos & Ng 2007). The form of the G
1 in
Alainodaeus
(e.g., Figs. 4E, F) is most similar to that seen in other euxanthine genera such as
Crosnierius
Serène & Vadon, 1981
, and
Ladomedaeus
. This is especially so for species such as
A. akiaki
,
A. rimatara
and
A. filipinus
n. sp.
The G
1 in
these crabs is moderate in length, a little more than twice the length of the G2, outwardly and laterally curving, spinulose on the distal half, without any terminal or subterminal setation and, instead, having a distinct lobe or “tongue” at its distal tip (
Serène & Vadon 1981
;
Davie 1993
,
1997
; Ng &
Chen 2005
; Manuel-Santos & Ng 2007). The “flange” or crest on the lateral margin noted by Davie (1992, 1997), a feature shared with some species of
Medaeops
and
Monodaeus
, is also found in
Crosnierius
and
Ladomedaeus
.
A few works have cited the occurrence of a strongly differentiated, obliquely oriented tooth on the proximal end of the dactylus of the major chela (see Fig. 3C) in some species of
Euxanthinae
, and have alluded to the possibility of some phylogenetic significance in such a structure (
Davie 1993
,
1997
; Ng 1993; Ng &
Clark 2003
; Ng et al. 2008). This specially modified tooth is somewhat similar in structure to the shell-peeling tooth in species of
Calappa
Weber, 1795
, and has been thought to serve a similar purpose. The modified tooth of
Calappa
is used to peel off the shell of gastropods, exposing the flesh on which they feed (see Ng &
Tan 1984
,
1985
). Although there have been no reports of such behaviour in any euxanthine crab thus far, the modified tooth has been noted in genera such as
Alainodaeus
,
Cranaothus
,
Crosnierius
,
Danielea
Ng &
Clark, 2003
,
Epistocavea
,
Medaeops
,
Medaeus
,
Miersiella
Guinot, 1967
,
Monodaeus
,
Palatigum
Davie, 1997
,
Paramedaeus
,
Paraxanthodes
and
Pleurocolpus
Crosnier, 1995
. Other euxanthine genera such as
Euxanthus
Dana, 1851
,
Hypocolpus
Rathbun, 1897
,
Hepatoporus
Serène, 1984
,
Glyptoxanthus
A. Milne-Edwards, 1879
, and their close relatives do not possess such a tooth. However, this is a character also present in many genera in at least one other xanthid subfamily—Xanthinae, e.g.
Xanthias
Rathbun, 1897
,
Nanocassiope
,
Euryxanthops
Garth & Kim, 1983
,
Paraxanthias
Odhner, 1925
(see Ng et al. 2008). In addition, Ng &
Tan (1985)
also noted that the peeling tooth is also present in some eriphioids.
Prior to the discovery of the new species (
A. filipinus
), the westernmost extent of the genus
Alainodaeus
was in the Chesterfield Islands in the Coral Sea, between the eastern coast of
Australia
and the main island of
New Caledonia
, as represented by
A. rimatara
. Its northernmost extent was in the Marquesas Islands, in the central Pacific, less than 10 degrees south of the Equator, as represented by
A. nuku
. The ocurrence of
Alainodaeus filipinus
n. sp.
in the central
Philippines
has extended the range of the genus northward to about 10 degrees beyond the Equator and westward, beyond
Australia
and Oceania, into Asia. In a similar extension of range, the monotypic genus
Epistocavea
Davie, 1993
, originally described from the Tuamotu Archipelago, was reported by Mendoza & Ng (in press) from the Bohol Sea, in the central
Philippines
. Another similar distributional pattern is seen in
Cranaothus deforgesi
Ng, 1993
, originally from the Chesterfield Islands in the Coral Sea and
Philippines
; and in the goneplacoid crab,
Vultocinus anfractus
Ng & Manuel-Santos, 2007
, which occurs both in the central
Philippines
and northern
Vanuatu
(see Ng 1993; Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007).