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
Percnon gibbesi
(H.
Milne Edwards, 1853
)
(
Fig. 52A–F
)
Acanthopus gibbesi
H.
Milne Edwards, 1853: 180
[
Type
locality: Antilles].
Trindade and Martin Vaz specimens.
1 male
(
MZUSP 40247
)
,
1 male
(
MZUSP 40249
),
Trindade Island
,
Ilha da Racha
,
20°30’26.5”S
,
29°20’48.0”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
30.vii.2018
,
23 m
. 1 juvenile male (
MZUSP 40244
),
ibidem
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
16.vii.2013
,
20.8 m
.
1 juvenile
male (
MZUSP 40329
),
ibidem
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
12.vii.2012
,
30.3 m
.
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP 40166
),
ibidem
,
Enseada da Cachoeira
,
Farrilhões
,
20°31’29.8’’S
,
29°19’52.0”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
21.xi.2017
,
11.3 m
.
1 male
,
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP 33827
),
ibidem
,
20°31’22.4’’S
,
29°19’52.0”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
9.vii.2013
,
10.4 m
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 40164
),
ibidem
,
Mendonça
coll.,
23.vii.2015
,
17 m
. 1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 33824
),
ibidem
,
Enseada
das
Orelhas
,
20°29’40.2’’S
,
29°20’32.9”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
1.xi.2014
,
12 m
. 1 male (
MZUSP 39608
),
ibidem
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
8.viii.2018
,
9 m
. 1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 40260
),
ibidem
,
Enseada
dos
Portugueses
, SECOM/ ECIT,
20°30’20.9’’S
,
29°18’43.7’’W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
4.vii.2016
,
11.4 m
.
1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 42002
),
ibidem
,
Enseada
dos
Portugueses
,
20°30’17.7’’S
,
29°18’56.7’’W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
11.vii.2012
,
11 m
. 1 male (
MZUSP 40168
),
ibidem
,
Enseada da Cachoeira
,
Praia
do M,
20°30’53.8’’S
,
29°20’19.2’’W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
27.xi.2017
,
10.4 m
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 41240
)
,
3 males
,
1 female
(
MZUSP 41241
),
ibidem
,
Ponta do Monumento
,
20°30’53.8’’S
,
29°20’19.2’’W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
13.vii.2012
,
8.1 m
.
2 females
(1 ovigerous) (
MZUSP 41242
),
ibidem
,
20°30’10.3’’S
,
29°20’36.1’’W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
16.vi.2012
,
12.1 m
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 33837
),
ibidem
,
Praia das Tartarugas
,
20°30’54.1’’S
,
29°18’18.2’’W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
5.vii.2013
,
tide pool. 1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 39614
),
ibidem
,
20°29’46.4’’S
,
29°20’35.4’’W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
6.viii.2018
,
9.5 m
.
1 megalopa (
MZUSP 40569
),
ibidem
,
Ponta Norte
,
Crista do Galo
,
20°29’14.8’’S
,
29°20’13.9”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
21.v.2014
.
1 male
(
MZUSP 40255
),
Martin Vaz Archipelago
,
20°30’45.7’’S
,
29°18’21.9”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
23.vii.2013
,
13 m
. 1 ovigerous female (
MZUSP 40169
),
ibidem
,
Ilha
do
Norte
,
20°28’11.51’’S
,
28°51’25.01”W
,
J.B. Mendonça
coll.,
25.i.2019
,
19.1 m
.
Size of largest male: cl
21 mm
, cw
19 mm
; largest female: cl
18.9 mm
, cw
17.8 mm
.
Comparative material examined.
Percnon gibbesi
: Western Atlantic:
Barbados
:
1 male
(
MZUSP
28062),
Christ Church
,
Bridgetown
, Turtle Beach,
13°04’30.77’’S
,
59°36’16.88”W
, L.R.L. Simone coll.,
13.x.2012
.
Brazil
: Rocas Atoll:
1 male
(
MZUSP
12473),
1 female
(
MZUSP
12477), R.L. Moura and R.S. Rosa coll.,
vii.1995
. Fernando de Noronha Archipelago:
1 juvenile
female (
MZUSP
41243), inside sponge,
iii.1998
, no further details.
2 males
(
1 juvenile
) (
MZUSP
8333),
ibidem
, Ponta Air
France
, P.S. Young coll.,
2.xii.1986
.
1 female
(
MZUSP
7236),
ibidem
, Buraco do Inferno, S.A. Rodrigues coll.,
30.x.1985
.
1 juvenile
male (
MZUSP
20569),
ibidem
, Praia das Caieiras,
3°50’11’’S
,
32°23’53.4”W
, L.R.L. Simone and C.M.
Cunha
coll.,
8.iii.2009
. Central Atlantic:
Ascension Island
:
1 male
(
USNM
256690), south of Collyer Point, stn 6A–76, R.B. Manning coll.,
14.vii.1976
.
1 female
(
USNM
256691),
ibidem
, McArthur Point, stn ASC-1B–76, R.B. Manning coll.,
11.vii.1976
.
Venezuela
and
Brazil
(Rocas Atoll, Fernando de Noronha, and Trindade and Martin Vaz) (
Pocock 1890
, as
Leiolophus planissimum
Herbst
;
Coelho & Ramos 1972
, as
Percnon planissimum
(Herbst)
;
Rodriguez 1980
;
Williams 1984
;
Melo 1996
;
Alves
et al.
2008
;
Felder
et al.
2009
). This is the first record of
Percnon gibbesi
from Rocas Atoll and Trindade and Martin Vaz. Central Atlantic:
Ascension and Saint Helena
islands (Miers 1881;
Manning & Chace 1990
). Eastern Pacific: Baja California to
Chile
, including the Galapagos Islands (
Rathbun 1918
;
Garth 1946
;
Williams 1984
). Eastern Atlantic: one occasional record from off the west coast of
Portugal
, near Sesimbra (
Paula & Hartnoll 1989
);
Azores
,
Cape Verde
slands, Canary Islands and
Morocco
to
Angola
(
d’Udekem d’Acoz 1999
;
Manning & Chace 1990
;
González 2016
;
2018
). Invasive to the Mediterranean Sea, through the Strait of
Gibraltar
, from
Oran
Bay (
Algeria
) eastward to the Levantine coast (
Relini
et al.
2000
;
Yokes & Galil 2006
;
Ilan
et al.
2015
;
Stasolla
et al.
2016
;
Hussein
et al.
2020
, and references therein).
Ecological notes.
Percnon gibbesi
(
Fig. 52A–F
) inhabits rocky, stone beaches and reefs from the splash zone down to
30 m
in its native range (
Rathbun 1918
;
Garth 1946
; this study). It is commonly found in association with the sea urchin
Diadema ascensionis
Philippi
, sometimes two crabs per host (
Williams 1984
;
Hayes
et al.
1998
; this study),
Echinometra
(
Manning & Chace 1990
)
, and occasionally inside sponges (see above under material examined). Urchins and their boreholes can provide structurally complex microhabitats (
Schoppe & Werding 1996
), especially in areas which tend to be poor in reef builders, such as Trindade and Martin Vaz. In Trindade,
Diadema ascensionis
is known to provide microhabitat and shelter for several species, including other decapods (Tavares
et al.
2017 as
D. antillarum
) and fishes (
Giglio
et al.
2018
). There,
P. gibbesi
has been found living independently of
D. ascensionis
or both underneath the urchin on the bottom of the borehole and alongside the hole’s wall (
Fig. 52F
).
Ovigerous females are known from May to September in the Gulf of Mexico (
Williams 1984
); February in Galapagos (
Garth 1946
); February, March, April and August off West Africa (
Manning & Holthuis 1981
); and
June 2012
,
November 2014
,
July 2016
,
August 2018
and
January 2019
either in Trindade or Martin Vaz (see above un- der material examined). A megalopa (
MZUSP
405969) was recovered in Trindade in
May 2014
. The zoeal stages, megalopa and first crab instar were described by
Paula & Hartnoll (1989)
. The larval development goes through six stages zoeae (perhaps seven) in
P. gibbesi
and the late zoeal stages and megalopa are apparently more concentrated near the sea surface (
Paula & Hartnoll 1989
). This behavior lend support to the hypothesis that the currents that enter the Mediterranean through the Strait of
Gibraltar
transported
P. gibbesi
larvae that ultimately settled (
Pipitone
et al.
2001
).
In the Mediterranean basin (see above under distribution),
P. gibbesi
has been found frequently in small aggregations of 2 to 5 individuals, between 0 and
8 m
.
Gently sloping rocky bottoms with crevices and encrusting algae are apparently preferred (
Deudero
et al.
2005
;
Félix-Hackradt
et al.
2018
).
Puccio
et al.
(2006)
suggested that
P. gibbesi
is strictly herbivorous based on a dietary analysis from stomach contens of a population from
Sicily
, while others have found that it feeds on macroalgae (brown, green and red) and animal materials including pagurids and other crustaceans, polychaetes, gastropods, and presumably jellyfish (
Deudero
et al.
2005
;
Sciberras & Schembri 2008
). Ovigerous females are known from May to October in the Maltese Islands (
Sciberras & Schembri 2008
). Estimates based on pleon morphology suggested that the sexual maturity in
P. gibbesi
is reached at cl
15–16 mm
in Maltese waters, although an ovigerous female at cl
14 mm
has been reported from southern
Italy
. Egg mass was found to range from 254 to 32,040
281 eggs
.
Percnon gibbesi
and
Pachygrapsus marmoratus
were found to be syntopic on the Maltese coast, but agonistic interactions between the two species were rarely observed in the field (
Sciberras & Schembri 2008
, and references therein). Contrary to the western Atlantic populations (including Trindade and
Ascension
),
P. gibbesi
has not been reported associating with sea urchins in the Mediterranean.
Remarks.
Percnon
lacks the characteristic grapsoid rhomboidal gap between the third maxillipeds which exposes the mandibles when closed. However, the genus was removed from the grapsoid family
Plagusiidae
(see
Ng
et al.
2008
) by
Schubart & Cuesta (2010)
essentially based on molecular data and larval morphology (see also
Guinot
et al.
2018
).
In
Percnon
, the male gonopore opens so close to the coxo-sternal articular condyle that it appears to be appendicular (
Guinot
et al.
2013
;
Kienbaum
et al.
2018
). However, no dissections have been carried out so far to find whether the male ejaculatory duct passes between the coxal muscles (heterotreme condition) or opens straight on the thoracic sternite 8 without connecting the P5 coxa (thoracotreme condition). Our dissections based on fresh mate- and hence devoid of any sclerotized protective covers. The soft penial tissues are only protected by the pleon, which completely covers the penis and closely seals the sterno-pleonal cavity. The lateral margin of the fused pleonal somites 3–5 expands laterally at the level of the P5 coxa to cover the penis almost completely. It additionally expands laterally into a small triangular protrusion which fits close into the space left between the sternite 8 and the coxosternal articular condyle of P5. This triangular protrusion helps to cover and hence protect the penis. The sternite 8 is shallowly concave laterally to receive the lateral end of the pleonal somite 2 expanded laterally to cover the P5 coxa partially.
In
Percnon gibbesi
, the vulva opening on thoracic sternite 6 is not obliterated by an operculum or a sternal vulvar cover (see also
Guinot
et al.
2013
and references therein).
Small males (e.g. MZUSP 40247, cl
6.2 mm
, cw
5.2 mm
) and females of
P. gibbesi
lack the characteristic patch of feathered setae along dorsomesial side of the adult male cheliped merus.