Shallow-water stenopodidean and caridean shrimps from Abrolhos Archipelago, Brazil: new records and updated checklist
Author
Soledade, Guidomar O.
Author
Fonseca, Mytalle S.
Author
Almeida, Alexandre O.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3905
1
journal volume
10.11646/zootaxa.3905.1.3
5629b484-66c4-4c54-8996-af0744eac849
1175-5326
244578
E7DEECAF-96C5-48E1-8396-3B7063ECA841
Automate
cf.
rectifrons
Chace, 1972
(
Fig. 3
F, 4)
Material examined.
1 n-ov,
02.ix.2013
, Ilha de Santa Bárbara (
17°57’49”S
38°41’53”W
), coll. G.O. Soledade, intertidal, under rocks,
UESC
1558.
FIGURE 4.
Automate
cf.
rectifrons
Chace, 1972
. Female from Ilha de Santa Bárbara, Abrolhos, Bahia, Brazil (UESC 1558). A, frontal region and cephalic appendages, dorsal view (setae omitted); B, same, lateral view (setae partially omitted); C, major cheliped, lateral view (setae omitted); D, same, detail of chela, lateral view; E, minor cheliped, lateral view; F, uropods and telson, dorsal view (setae partially omitted). Scale bars = 1 mm.
Distribution.
Western Atlantic—Mexico (Quintana Roo), possibly
Antigua
;
Brazil
(Bahia and São Paulo?) (
Chace 1972
;
Pires-Vanin
et al
. 1997
;
Anker & Komai 2004
; this study).
Previous records from Abrolhos.
None.
Remarks.
Automate rectifrons
was previously known with certainty only from the
type
locality, Quintana Roo,
Mexico
.
Pires-Vanin
et al.
(1997)
recorded this species from São Sebastião Channel, São Paulo, however, in a species list, i.e. without any morphological account; therefore, the record from São Paulo requires confirmation. The present specimen from the Abrolhos (
Fig. 4
A, B) is the first confirmed record of
A. rectifrons
in
Brazil
and the South Atlantic. Based on its morphological features (e.g., third and fourth pereiopods without stout spiniform setae; stylocerite not exceeding first article of the antennular peduncle),
A. rectifrons
belongs to the
A. evermanni
Rathbun, 1901
species group (see
Anker & Komai 2004
). The Abrolhos specimen differs from the
holotype
specimen of
A. rectifrons
(cf.
Chace, 1972
) in several characteristics. In the Abrolhos specimen, the major cheliped fingers are curved and have a broad gap and sharp teeth on the cutting edges (two on the dactylus and four on the pollex). In the
holotype
of
A. rectifrons
, the fingers are not curved, the gap between them is rather narrow, and the cutting edge of the pollex bears only one proximal tooth (cf.
Chace 1972
). Other divergent characters are the shape of the major cheliped merus (irregular and armed with a sharp tooth on the mesial margin (
Fig. 4
C) vs. semirectangular and unarmed on the mesial margin in Chace’s material) and the uropods (with endopod only slightly overreaching exopod (
Fig. 4
F) vs. strongly overreaching exopod in Chace’s material). It is noteworthy that the Abrolhos is similar in size to the
holotype
, at cl 3.0 mm and cl 3.5 mm, respectively. Thus, the above-noted differences between the Abrolhos specimen and the
holotype
may be of some taxonomic significance. However, more material needs to be collected in the Caribbean Sea and in
Brazil
to draw more definitive conclusion on the status of the Brazilian populations.