Morphological and phylogenetic evidence for a new species of Parasesarma De Man, 1895 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Sesarmidae) from the Malay Peninsula, previously referred to as Parasesarma indiarum (Tweedie, 1940)
Author
Shahdadi, Adnan
Author
Ng, Peter K. L.
Author
Schubart, Christoph D.
text
Raffles Bulletin of Zoology
2018
2018-11-19
66
739
762
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5363335
2345-7600
5363335
67DA8444-6F26-4675-AE8C-D12B626DB2AB
Parasesarma indiarum
(
Tweedie, 1940
)
(
Figs. 2B
,
3B
,
7–9
)
Sesarma bidens
var.
indica
De
Man, 1902: 541
(preoccupied name).
Sesarma
(
Chiromantes
)
bidens indica
:
Tesch, 1917: 135
.
Sesarma
(
Chiromantes
)
indiarum
:
Campbell, 1967: 5
(in key).
Sesarma bidens indiarum
Tweedie, 1940: 93
(replacement name for
Sesarma bidens
var.
indica
De
Man, 1902
; pre-occupied by
Sesarma indica
H. Milne-Edwards, 1837
).
Sesarma
(
Chiromantes
)
indiarum
:
Serène, 1968: 107
.
Perisesarma indiarum
:
Lim et al., 2008: 106
;
Ng et al., 2008: 222
(in list); Davie, 2010: 205 (in key);
Shahdadi & Schubart, 2015: 1084
(table).
Parasesarma indiarum
:
Shahdadi & Schubart, 2017: 535
.
Material examined.
Lectotype
:
1 male
(29.0 × 25.0 mm) (
RMNH
.
CRUS
. D.141),
Ambon Moluccas
,
Indonesia
, coll. 1863 (= S
146 in
Table 1
)
.
Paralectotypes
:
2 males
,
2 females
(
RMNH
.
CRUS
. D.141)
,
11 males
,
1 female
(
RMNH
.
CRUS
.
D.19),
same locality as lectotype. Other material:
6 males
(largest 13.5 ×
10.8 mm
, 13.1 ×
10.5 mm
),
5 females
(largest, ovigerous, 13.5 ×
10.8 mm
) (
ZRC 2018.0737
), Passo, Teluk
Ambon, Ambon, Moluccas
,
Indonesia
, coll.
D.A. Nugroho
,
26 March 2013
.
Diagnosis.
Medium-size species (up to
30 mm
carapace width); carapace subrectangular, slightly broader than long. Front moderately deflexed, with broad, relatively deep, median concavity, postfrontal lobes prominent, median lobes broader than lateral ones, separated by median furrow; dorsal carapace regions clearly indicated, anterolateral margin with sharp exorbital angle and well-developed epibranchial tooth. Chelipeds homochelous; large in males, upper surface of palm with 2 transverse pectinated crests, dorsal surface of dactylus with 10–12 low, distinct, transversely broad tubercles without transverse sulcus. Ambulatory legs relatively short, broad. Male pleon triangular with telson slightly longer than basal width. G1 relatively long, straight, apical corneous process long, bent at angle of about 60° to longitudinal axis, arched in cross section, aperture subterminal. Female pleon broadly rounded, vulva in anterior edge of sternite 6, with operculum rounded.
Remarks.
The species has long been part of
Perisesarma
until
Shahdadi & Schubart (2017)
placed it in
Parasesarma
. The type material of
Sesarma bidens
var.
indica
De
Man, 1902
, was collected in 1863 from
Ambon Moluccas
,
Indonesia
, by E. W. A. Ludeking, and deposited in two separate jars in the RMNH. All specimens are
syntypes
, as De
Man (1902)
did not select a
holotype
. As
Tweedie (1940)
proposed
Sesarma bidens indiarum
as a replacement name for De
Man’s (1902)
subspecies, all of De Man’s
syntypes
are the types for Tweedie’s taxon. As part of our revision of the genera
Parasesarma
and
Perisesarma
, the best preserved male specimen is here selected as the
lectotype
of the species (see also
Shahdadi & Schubart, 2017
: table 1).
Fig. 7.
Parasesarma indiarum
, lectotype male (29.0 × 25.0 mm) (RMNH. CRUS. D.141). A, overall habitus; B, carapace, dorsal view; C, anterior thoracic sternum and pleon; D, pleon; E, posterior thoracic sternum and pleon.
Fig. 8.
Parasesarma indiarum
, lectotype male (29.0 × 25.0 mm) (RMNH. CRUS. D.141). A, carapace, front view; B, left chelar pectinated crests; C, right chela, outer view; D, right chela, dorsal view; E, left G1, ventral view; F, denuded left G1, apical part, ventral view; G, front view of apical part of G1 and aperture.
The records of “
P. indiarum
” from Borneo, Sumatra and Java and New
Guinea
(
Tesch, 1917
;
Tweedie, 1936
,
1940
,
1950
) all need to re-examined in the context of the present restriction of the species for the population in
Ambon
. The material from Borneo (Labuan) are slightly different morphologically from both
P. indiarum
sensu stricto
and
P. peninsulare
new species
, and its status will need to be re-evaluated.
Distribution.
Parasesarma indiarum
was originally described from
Ambon and Ternate
islands (
Indonesia
) (De
Man, 1902
) and later reported from New
Guinea
, south coast of Java (
Tesch, 1917
),
Singapore
, both coasts of the Malay Peninsula,
West Sumatra
(
Tweedie, 1936
,
1940
) and Labuan in Borneo (
Tweedie, 1950
). As noted above, only the record from the
type
locality (
Ambon
) is
P. indiarum
sensu stricto
with those from the Malay Peninsula referred to a new species instead.