Stenopodidean shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda) from New Caledonian waters
Author
Goy, Joseph W.
text
Zootaxa
2015
4044
3
301
344
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4044.3.1
855ebb96-ee77-4a03-a378-70e20df9aeaa
1175-5326
240460
83D58648-447D-442D-B9BD-A36F192E1D3A
Stenopus hispidus
(
Olivier, 1811
)
(
Figs. 27
,
28
)
Palaemon hispidus
Olivier, 1811
: 666
.
Stenopus hispidus
.—
Latreille, 1819: 71.—
Holthuis, 1946
: 12
. (with references and complete synonomy).—
Yaldwyn, 1968
: 278
.—de Saint-Laurent &
Cleva, 1981
: 157
.—Goy, 1992: 100— Saito
et al
., 2009: 109.—
Goy, 2010
: 215
. —
De
Grave & Fransen, 2011
: 253
.
FIGURE 27
.
Stenopus hispidus
(Olivier, 1811)
. Male, Baie de Poya, MNHN. Scale bar = 1.0 mm.
Material examined
.
New Caledonia
. Lagoon, Aubry Lacomte 241-63, 1903, det. Bouvier 1907,
1 male
,
1 female
(MNHN-NA 3570).—Lagoon, coll. Bougier 1903, det. Bouvier 1907,
1 male
,
1 female
ov. (MNHN-NA 3573).— Mission Singer-Polignac, Phares Amedes, Noumea, coll. Salvat,
30.XII.1961
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA).—Aquarium de Noumea, don. C. Vadon,
17.II.1977
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA 3489).—Baie de Poya,
21°23’S
,
165°04’E
, coll. F. Conand, chatutage,
5–12m
10.XII.1982
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA).—Lagon Sud-Ouest, Campaign No.2. stn 104,
Ile
Ouen, Baie du Prony,
22°26’S
,
166°40’E
,
24 m
,
VIII.1984,
1
female ov. (MNHN-NA).—MUSORSTOM 4, stn CC147,
19°35’S
,
163°39.06’E
,
43 m
,
13.IX.1985
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA 11990). —Baie de
Saint Vincent
, coll. M. Kilbriki, chalutage,
VIII 1985,
1
male,
1female
(MNHN-NA—Baie de
Saint Vincent
, chalutage,
23.IV.1986
,
3 males
,
1 female
ov. (MNHM-NA).—Lagon Nord-Ouest, Campaign No.12, stn DW916,
20°55.5’S
,
164°28.3’E
,
13 m
,
26.IV.1988
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA).—Lagon Nord, Campaign No. 13, stn DW1067,
19°55.8’S
,
163°52.8’E
,
28 m
,
23.X.1989
,
14 males
,
1 female
ov. (MNHN-NA).—stn DW1069,
19°59.1’S
,
163°52.5’E
,
3 m
,
23.X.1989
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA).—stn 1072,
19°50’S
,
164°40’E
,
20 m
,
23.X.1989
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA).—
Chesterfield Islands
. CORAIL 2, Plateau des Chesterfield, oust Nouvelle
Caledonia
, Iles Bellona,
VIII.1988,
4
males,
2 females
, 1 ov.) (MNHN-NA).—
Loyalty Islands.
MUSORSTOM 6, stn DW430,
20°21.17’S
,
166°07.25’E
,
30 m
,
17.II.1989
,
1 male
(MNHN-NA 11989).—Mare
Island
, reef,
1 male
,
1 female
(MNHN-NA).
FIGURE 28
.
Stenopus hispidus
(Olivier, 1811)
. Male, Baie de Poya, MNHN. A, carapace, dorsal view; B, abdominal pleomeres, dorsal view; C, telson and uropods. Scale bar = 1.0 mm.
Measurements
(mm). Males, PCL: 5.2–11.0; RCL: 7.1–17.5; TL: 44.1–55.8.—Females, PCL: 11.6–15.0; RCL: 16.8–21.5; TL: 44.1–55.8.—Females ov., PCL: 10.0–13.4; RCL: 12.9–17.0; TL: 38.1–47.0.
Distribution
.
Stenopus hispidus
is the only pantropical species in the infraorder Stenopodidea. Previously recorded from the Western Atlantic from Cape Lookout, North Carolina, throughout the Caribbean and Gulf of
Mexico
to the southern border of
Brazil
(
Williams 1984
); central Atlantic from
Ascension
Island
(
Manning & Chace 1990
); Eastern Pacific from Taboga
Island
,
Panama
(
Goy 1987
,
1992b
); and throughout the tropical and warm temperate Pacific (
Holthuis 1946
).
Coloration
. Good descriptions of the color pattern for this species are given by
Holthuis (1946)
and
Yaldwyn (1968)
.
Laboute & Magnier (1987)
published a color photograph of
Stenopus hispidus
from
New Caledonia
.
Remarks
.
Stenopus hispidus
is a well known species that has become widely recognized as a symbol of tropical marine biodiversity and is not redescribed here. The species has been previously recorded from
New Caledonia
(
Yaldwyn 1968
;
Laboute & Magnier 1987
;
Junker & Poupin 2009
;
Poupin & Junker 2010
). The material examined here was collected between
2–43 m
which is within the recorded depth range for the species: intertidal waters to
210 m
(
Holthuis 1946
).
From
Philippine
material, de Saint-Laurent &
Cleva (1981)
described two juveniles of
S. hispidus
of 17.0 and 18.0 mm total length and they believed the specimen of 17.0 mm represented the first postlarval stage. The present author has examined over
700 specimens
of
S. hispidus
from all areas of its wide zoogeographical distribution. The smallest first postlarval stage or decapodid (
Felder
et al.
1985
) found in this large sample size was a specimen from
Howland Island
,
0°48’N
,
176°38’W
(USNM 25187) measuring
9.6 mm
total length and having rudimentary exopods on the pereiopods. The smallest ovigerous female examined was
25.6 mm
total length. Eighty-four specimens examined were less than 25.0 mm total length, which is, therefore taken as the approximate size at which sexual maturity is reached for this species. Specimens below this length all exhibit the juvenile characteristics attributed to postlarval stages by
Rathbun (1906)
,
Holthuis (1946)
, de Saint-Laurent &
Cleva (1981)
and
Goy (1990)
, which include a relatively longer antennule peduncle, rostrum, sixth abdominal pleuron and propodus of the third pereiopod; less spinous carapace and abdomen; and a very large dorsal median projection on the third abdominal pleuron. Within the
84 juveniles
examined,
57 specimens
, ranging in total length from
9.6– 18.2 mm
, had remnants of larval exopods on the pereiopods. Members of the genus
Stenopus
exhibit extreme plasticity in their larval developmental patterns. This has been demonstrated by laboratory rearings of larvae (
Castro & Jory 1983
;
Goy 1990
;
Fletcher et al. 1995
;
Zhang et al. 1997
) as well as reported size variations of plankton caught larvae (
Gurney 1936
;
Lebour 1941
;
Williamson 1976
). Due to this plasticity, the actual size at metamorphosis may vary by as much as 9.0 mm depending on the duration of larval development and the nutritional state of the metamorphically competent larvae (
Goy 1990
). Postlarval differences between Pacific and Atlantic populations of
S. hispidus
are not yet known.