The names of decapod and stomatopod Crustacea from Tahiti, French Polynesia, established by Anthony Curtiss in 1938 and 1944
Author
Ng, Peter K. L.
Author
Eldredge, Lucius G.
Author
Evenhuis, Neal L.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2011-11-16
3099
43
56
journal article
45981
10.5281/zenodo.206896
b4c7e4b1-cc25-42ef-91ae-a205918bf357
1175-5326
206896
Cancer poiae
Curtiss, 1938
[
otéa
]
Cancer dentatus
Herbst, 1785: 186
.
Cancer poiae
Curtiss, 1938: 177
,
n. syn
.
The description of this edible species is rather brief: “the body and legs are brown above, spotted with whitish … the pincers are short, and equal to one another in size. The upper shell has sharp edges. The eyes are brown. The legs have some scattered black and whitish hairs upon them” (
Curtiss 1938: 177
) but fits well with
Etisus dentatus
(Herbst, 1785) (Xanthidae)
. This species is common in Tahiti, and is often eaten, as observed by Curtiss. A second species of
Etisus
also occurs in
French Polynesia
,
E. splendidus
Rathbun, 1906
, but this species is less common, has a red carapace, and does not have the colours and patterns described by Curtiss (see
Poupin & Juncker 2010
).