Brachyuran crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the remote oceanic Archipelago Trindade and Martin Vaz, South Atlantic Ocean
Author
In, First Published
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-06-02
5146
1
129
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5146.1.1
11755334
7626155
52C3E5E3-80B6-49DB-BC9C-194560D491F7
Amphithrax hemphilli
(
Rathbun, 1892
)
(
Figs. 19A–I
,
20A, B
)
Mithrax hemphilli
Rathbun, 1892: 263
[
Type
locality:
Indian Key
,
Florida
].
Trindade and Martin Vaz specimens.
1 male
(
MZUSP 40714
)
,
1 female
(
MZUSP 39862
),
Trindade Island
,
Enseada dos Portugueses
,
Farol
,
20º29’52.3’’S
,
29º19’15.6”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
17.iv.2014
,
12.9 m
.
1 juvenile
male (
MZUSP 40790
),
23.x.2014
,
12.5 m
, on
Favia
sp.
1
male (
MZUSP 40135
),
ibidem
, POIT, from the stomach of a spotted grouper fished at night,
C.H. Guimarães
coll.
24.i.2012
. 1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 39852
),
ibidem
,
Ponta da Calheta
,
20º30’18.72’’S
,
29º18’31.67”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
05.xi.2014
,
13.9 m
.
1 juvenile
male (
MZUSP 33736
),
ibidem
,
20º30’18.72’’S
,
29º18’31.67”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
11.xi.2014
,
16 m
. 1 male (
MZUSP 33735
)
,
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP 39907
),
ibidem
,
20.x.2014
,
17 m
. 1 juvenile female (
MZUSP 40583
),
ibidem
,
Enseada
das
Orelhas
,
20º29’40.2’’S
,
29º20’32.9”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
24.vii.2018
,
11.3 m
.
1 juvenile
male (
MZUSP 39838
)
,
1 juvenile
(
MZUSP 39846
),
ibidem
,
1.vii.2016
,
9.2 m
.
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP 39832
),
ibidem
,
21.vii.2015
, associated with calcareous sponge,
15 m
. 1 male (
MZUSP 40600
),
ibidem
,
Ilha da Racha
,
20º30’26.5’’S
,
29º20’48.0”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
30.vii.2018
,
23 m
. 1 juvenile (
MZUSP 39916
),
ibidem
,
1.vii.2016
,
21.4 m
.
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP 39837
),
ibidem
,
1.vii.2016
,
21.4 m
.
1 juvenile
(
MZUSP 33821
),
ibidem
,
Ponta da Cachoeira
,
20º30’31.18’’S
,
29º20’39.59”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
21.vii.2015
,
19 m
. 1 male
,
2 juvenile
females (
MZUSP 40665
), 2 ovigerous females (
MZUSP 40728
),
ibidem
,
Enseada da Cahoeira
,
Farrilhões
,
20º31’29.6’’S
,
29º19’52.0”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
8.vii.2013
,
9.5 m
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 39677
),
ibidem
,
20º31’22.4’’S
,
29º19’52.0”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
22.vii.2015
,
22.6 m
.
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP 41133
),
Martin Vaz Archipelago
,
20º28’38.61’’S
,
28º51’14.66”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
25.i.2019
,
13.1 m
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 40198
),
ibidem
,
20º28’11.51’’S
,
28º51’25.01”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
25.i.2019
,
19.1 m
.
1 female
(
MZUSP 40721
),
ibidem
,
20º28’38.61’’S
,
28º51’14.66”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
25.i.2019
,
13.1 m
.
Size of largest male: cl
32 mm
, cw
34 mm
; largest female: cl
32 mm
, cw
36 mm
.
Comparative material examined.
United States
:
holotype
, immature female (
USNM 15823
),
Florida
,
Indian Key
, no further details.
Brazil
:
Pernambuco
:
1 male
, 2 ovigerous females,
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP 8328
),
Fernando de Noronha Archipelago
,
Ilha de Lucena
,
Buraco do Inferno
,
P.S. Young
coll.,
3.vii.1986
.
Bahia
:
3 males
,
1 female
(
MZUSP 28077
)
,
Ilha de Boipeba
,
Praia de Bainema
, stn 1,
13º37.807’S
,
38º53.625’W
,
M. Tavares
coll.,
15.ix.2012
, intertidal.
Espírito Santo
:
1 male
(
MZUSP 18003
)
,
Vitória
–
Trindade Seamount Chain, R
/V “Marion Dufresne”,
TAAF
MD55/
Brésil Expedition
,
Dogaressa Bank
, stn 25 DC43,
20º50.9’S
,
33º44.6’W
,
17.v.1987
,
63 m
.
Distribution.
Florida, Antilles, Caribbean coast of
Colombia Venezuela
and
Brazil
(
Maranhão
all way south to
Rio de Janeiro
) (
Vélez 1978
;
Wagner 1990
;
Melo 1996
;
Cruz Castaño & Campos 2003
;
Assugeni
et al.
2017
). Brazilian oceanic islands: Rocas Atoll (
Paiva
et al.
2007
and references therein). This is the first record of
A. hemphilli
from Fernando de Noronha, the Vitória–Trindade Seamount Chain (Dogaressa Bank) and Trindade and Martin Vaz.
Amphithrax hemphilli
has also been reported from the Pleistocene of
Barbados
(
Klompmaker
et al.
2015
).
Ecological notes.
Amphithrax hemphilli
is a rather common species in hard-bottom communities in northeastern
Brazil
and yet very little is known about its ecology. It has been reported from the tide mark down to
60 m
inhabiting coralline and stone reefs, sand reefs of
Phragmatopoma caudata
, calcareous algae, dead corals, but also coral rubble, limestone debris, and even
Thalassia
beds on the Caribbean coast of
Colombia
(
Vélez 1978
;
Wagner 1990
;
Melo 1996
;
Felder
et al.
2009
;
Santos
et al.
2012
;
Giraldes
et al.
2015
;
Lane-Medeiros
et al.
2021
). In Trindade we found a juvenile female associating with a calcareous sponge and the scleractinian coral
Favia
sp.
Juveniles and adults were commonly found with bits of sponges and organic debris mixed with fragments of minerals attached to the carapace and walking legs P2–P5 (
Fig. 19A, E
), some juveniles were heavily decorated with sponges. Seemingly, the decorating behavior change with ontogeny in
A. hemphilli
(see
Hein & Jacobs 2016
about the spider crab
Oregonia gracilis
).
Freitas
et al.
(2017)
showed that the red grouper
Epinephelus morio
(Valenciennes)
feeds heavily on crustaceans, including
A. hemphilli
. In Trindade, a large specimen (MZUSP 40135) was recovered from the stomach of a spotted grouper. In the Caribbean,
Octopus vulgaris
Cuvier
preys upon a variety of invertebrates, including
A. hemphilli
(see
Anderson
et al.
2008
).
FIGURE 19.
A–I,
Amphithrax hemphilli
(
Rathbun, 1892
)
. A, Male, cl 26 mm, cw 27 mm (MZUSP 39677). B, C, Male, cl 25 mm, cw 27 mm (MZUSP 40198). D, Male, cl 17.6 mm, cw 17.5 mm (MZUSP 33735). E, Juvenile male, cl 13.9 mm, cw 12.4 mm (MZUSP 33736). F, Juvenile female, cl 11.5 mm, cw 10.1 mm (MZUSP 39837). G, Juvenile male, cl 9.5 mm cw 8.1 mm (MZUSP 39838). H, Juvenile, cl 6.5 mm cw 5.1 mm (MZUSP 39916). I, Juvenile, cl 6.1 mm cw 4.5 mm (MZUSP 39846). A, B, D–I, Habitus, dorsal view. B, Same, ventral view. Photographs by A. Pol.
Remarks.
The shape, tuberculation and sharpness of the spines of the carapace vary considerably in
A.
hemphilli
(Figs. 19A–I, 20A, B). In some specimens the carapace tubercles are clustered into strong granular humps and the carapace anterolateral spines are distinctly blunt, such as in the female USNM 21948 from coastal Bahia, Brazil (
Rathbun 1925
: pl. 139, fig. 2), and in the males and females MZUSP 28077 also from coastal
Bahia
. The Trindade and Martin Vaz specimens vary in a similar way, although less prominently. In the male MZUSP 40714, for instance, tubercles are arranged into humps and the anterolateral spines are less blunt. However, the male MZUSP 40135 has strong carapace humps. The proportions and spinulation of the carapace vary with growth and development (see also
Vélez 1978
). Juvenile and immature specimens are usually much longer than wide and the ornamentation of the carapace is very dissimilar from that of full-grown specimens. Juveniles and immatures have much longer and sharp spines, which additionally are provided with spinules in the juveniles. The orbital spines are long and sharp in juveniles, but short and blunt with age (
Figs. 19A–I
,
20A, B
).
The roughness (stony aspect) of the body, chelipeds and walking legs enhance crypticity by matching the background. Only the cheliped propodus and fingers are smooth and the propodus is also slightly compressed laterally, so that the propodus and fingers fit closely between the smooth ventral surface of the body and the substratum and are, therefore, concealed when the cheliped is folded beneath the body.