A new species of Ancylomenes Okuno & Bruce, 2009 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pontoniinae) from the Kimberley region, Western Australia
Author
Bruce, A. J.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2011-09-08
3018
66
68
journal article
1175-5326
Ancylomenes batei
sp.
nov.
(
Fig. 1
)
Material examined.
Ovig. female,
holotype
(
WAM
C46160), male
allotype
(
WAM
C46161),
1 ♂
, 2 ov.
♀
paratypes
(
WAM
46576),
Western Australia
,
Long Reef
,
13°54.108`S
125°47.465`E
, stn. 49/K10-Adhoc,
22 October 2010
, coll.
A. Hosie
, L. Betterridge, scuba,
5 m
;
1 male
, 1 ovig. female,
paratypes
(
QM
W29053), same collection data; 1 ovig. female,
paratype
(
OUMNH
.
ZC
. 2011.02.0066), same collection data; 1 ovig. female,
paratype
(
RMNH
D 24753), same collection data.
Diagnosis.
Rostrum
arched, dental formula 8–9/1; carapace with 1 postorbital tooth; third abdominal somite sharply produced posteriorly, not carinate; distolateral margin of proximal segment of antennular peduncle rounded; ophthalmic somite with straight, slender, tapering interocular process; fingers of second pereiopod about 0.75 of palm length, with conspicuous diastema proximally flanked by well-developed anterior and posterior teeth, cutting edges distally entire; carpus of second pereiopod shorter than palm; dactyli of ambulatory pereiopods biunguiculate; propods of ambulatory pereiopods with several long ventral spines, 2–2–1–1–1
.
Measurements
(in mm).
Holotype
female, CL, 3.4; carapace and rostrum, 6.5; total body length, 19.5; major second pereiopod chela, 7.1, minor second pereiopod chela, 2.0; length of ova, ~0.5.
Allotype
male, CL, 2.8; carapace and rostrum, 4.8; total body length, 17.5; major second pereiopod chela, 3.6, minor second pereiopod chela, 2.4.
Systematic position.
Most closely resembling
Ancylomenes holthuisi
(
Bruce 1969
)
(see
Bruce 1969
,
1982
), from which
A. batei
sp. nov.
may be readily distinguished by the morphological details of the fingers of the second pereiopod chelae.
Okuno (2004)
re-examined the
holotype
female of this species (NHM 1982 45b) and noted that “the cutting edges in
P.
holthuisi
show distinct proximal concavities, thus, the closed fingers appear to gape proximally”. So far,
A. holthuisi
is the only species of this genus reported to have these proximal concavities. Okuno’s figures show that the concavities are provided with a single small acute tooth anteriorly, obsolescent on the dactylus, without any tooth posteriorly (
Okuno 2004
, fig. 6CD). In
A. batei
sp. nov.
, a similar proximal concavity is present and the dentition is more strongly developed. The anterior teeth are larger and blunt, that on the fixed finger slightly recurved. On each finger, the posterior margin of the concavity is marked by a well-developed, small, blunt tooth. In
A. holthuisi
, the minute dactylar teeth oppose each other almost exactly, but in
A. batei
sp. nov.
, the fixed finger tooth is more distally positioned than the dactylar tooth (
Bruce 1982
, fig. 7;
Okuno 2004
, fig. 6CD). The ambulatory dactyls in
A. batei
sp. nov.
and
A. holthuisi
are similar but the propodal spines are longer in
A. batei
sp. nov.
, where they distinctly exceed the width of the distal propod, contrasting with
A. holthuisi
, in which they are only about 0.8 of the distal propod width.
FIGURE 1.
Ancylomenes batei
sp. nov.
,
ovigerous female holotype, Long Reef, WAM 46576. A, carapace and rostrum. B, rostrum. C, third abdominal somite, profile. D, ophthalmic somite. E, second pereiopod. F, same, chela. G, same, proximal cutting edges of fingers, setae omitted. H, third pereiopod, propod and dactyl. I, same, dactyl.
Ancylomenes holthuisi
(
Bruce, 1969
)
, holotype, NHM 1982 45b. J, second pereiopod chela, fingers (redrawn from
Okuno 2004
).
Host.
No data.
Colouration.
No data.
Etymology.
Named in honour of Charles Spence Bate (1819–1889, a British dentist who, in addition to describing the Caridea of the Challenger Expedition (1872–76), also described, as
Anchistia aesopia
, the first species of the genus
Ancylomenes
from Gulf
Saint Vincent
, South Australia (
Bate 1863
).
Remarks.
The addition of
A. batei
sp. nov.
increases to 18 the number of
Ancylomenes
species
known from the Indo-West Pacific region. Of these 12 are now known from Australian waters:
A. adularans
(Bruce, 2003)
,
A. aesopius
(
Bate, 1863
)
,
A. holthuisi
(
Bruce, 1969
)
,
A. grandidens
(Bruce, 2005)
,
A. kuboi
Bruce 2010
,
A. magnificus
(Bruce, 1979)
,
A. okunoi
Bruce, 2010
,
A. speciosus
(
Okuno, 2004
)
,
A. tenuirostris
(Bruce, 1991)
,
A. tosaensis
(Kubo, 1951)
,
A. venustus
(Bruce, 1990)
, and
A. batei
sp. nov.