New species of squat lobsters of the genus Munida from Australia
Author
McCallum, Anna W.
Author
Ahyong, Shane T.
Author
Andreakis, Nikos
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2021
2021-12-31
80
113
152
http://dx.doi.org/10.24199/j.mmv.2021.80.06
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2021.80.06
1447-2554
12214129
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EA21667A-77A5-411D-9C1A-23ECFFF3D505
Munida julumunyju
sp. nov.
http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:A4CFAE49-1832-
4C56-BDED-A68F843BB9F4
Figures 3B–D
,
6
,
7
Munida rubridigitalis
. — Poore et al., 2008: 20, unnumbered fig.
(upper right) — McEnnulty et al., 2011: app. 1, 2.
Type material.
Holotype
:
WAM
C78559
, female cl
22.4 mm
, pcl
15.8 mm
),
Western Australia
,
Onslow L
19 transect,
20° 07.962'S
,
114° 58.71'E
to
20° 07.584'S
,
114° 58.416'E
,
415–470 m
, SS05/2007/15,
11 June 2007
.
Paratypes
(all
Western Australia
):
NMV
J56082
,
1 female
(cl
24.4 mm
, pcl
16.3 mm
), collected with holotype
;
NMV
J55979
,
1 male
(cl 22.0 mm, pcl 15.0 mm), 1 ovigerous female (cl
18.8 mm
, pcl
13.3 mm
),
Dampier
L20 transect,
19° 43.776' S
,
115° 21.216' E
to
19° 43.56' S
,
115° 20.598' E
,
389–423 m
, SS05/2007/34,
12 June 2007
;
NMV
J55061
,
1 juvenile
(cl
9.2 mm
, pcl
10.8 mm
),
Carnarvon
,
24° 33.12' S
,
112° 15.12' E
to
24° 33.804' S
,
112° 15.18' E
,
396–404 m
, SS10/2005/122,
7 December 2005
;
NMV
J55062
,
1 juvenile
(cl
10.9 mm
, pcl
6.6 mm
),
Red Bluff
,
23° 59.196' S
,
112° 32.04' E
to
23° 59.724' S
,
112° 31.74' E
,
411 m
, SS10/2005/130,
8 December 2005
;
WAM
C78560
,
2 males
(cl
22.6 mm
, pcl
14.8 mm
; cl 27.0 mm, pcl
19.2 mm
)
,
1 female
(cl
22.6 mm
, pcl 16.0 mm),
Point Cloates
,
22° 50.808' S
,
113° 20.28'E
to
22° 51.228'S
,
113° 19.98'E
,
420–430 m
, SS10/2005/137,
9 December 2005
;
NMV
J55060
,
1 male
(cl
24.2 mm
, pcl
16.7 mm
),
Ningaloo South
,
22° 04.374' S
,
113° 45.36' E
to
22° 04.968' S
,
113° 45.36' E
,
391–396 m
, SS10/2005/148,
10 December 2005
;
NMV
J55064
,
1 male
(broken rostrum; pcl
10.8 mm
),
Ningaloo South
,
22° 04.314'S
,
113° 45.36' E
to
22° 04.854' S
,
113° 45.36' E
,
387–399 m
, SS10/2005/151,
10 December 2005
;
NMV
J55059
,
1 female
(cl
23.2 mm
, pcl
15.9 mm
),
Ningaloo North
,
21° 58.212' S
,
113° 47.46' E
to
21° 58.806' S
,
113° 47.1' E
,
373–382 m
, SS10/2005/165,
12 December 2005
;
NMV
J55058
,
2 males
(cl 17.0 mm, pcl
11.1 mm
; cl
25.8 mm
, pcl
18.4 mm
),
Barrow Island
,
21° 00.402' S
,
114° 22.86' E
to
21° 00.042' S
,
114° 22.5' E
,
399–408 m
, SS10/2005/172,
13 December 2005
.
Other material examined.
New Caledonia
: MNHN-IU-2014-15475,
2 females
(cl
14.6 mm
, pcl
9.1 mm
; cl 18.5, pcl 11.5),
3 males
(cl 14.3– 16.0 mm, pcl
8.5–10.1 mm
), east coast,
21° 14.84' S
165° 55.49' E
, 450–
Figure 6.
Munida julumunyju
sp. nov.
, holotype, ovigerous female cl 22.4 mm, pcl 15.8 mm (WAM C78559): A, carapace and abdomen, dorsal view; B, right chela, dorsal view; C, right antenna and antennule, ventral view; D, sternum; E, telson; F, rostrum, lateral view.
Munida julumunyju
, New Caledonia, male cl. 18.2, pcl 12.2 (MNHN-IU-2014-15475): G, rostrum, lateral view. A–D, G = 5 mm, E–F = 2 mm.
Figure 7.
Munida julumunyju
sp. nov.
, holotype, ovigerous female cl 22.4 mm, pcl 15.8 mm (WAM C78559). A, right P2 dactylus, lateral view; B, right P2, lateral view; C, right P3, lateral view; D, right P4, lateral view; E, left maxilliped 3, lateral view. Scale A–E = 2 mm.
490 m, HALIPRO 1 CP869, 23,
March 1994
;
MNHN-IU-2014-15474,
1 female
(cl
15.8 mm
, pcl
10.3 mm
),
Norfolk
Ridge
,
22° 10' S
167° 15.2' E
,
495–515 m
, BIOCAL CP109,
9 September 1985
.
Description.
Carapace. Length 0.9 × greatest width, widest at midlength. Dorsal surface with main transverse ridges mostly uninterrupted, with secondary transverse striae between main ridges; ridges and striae lined with short, non-iridescent setae. Gastric region with 3–6 pairs of epigastric spines, longest pair behind supraocular spines. Hepatic region with short striae; small parahepatic spine sometimes present. Anterior part of branchial region between cervical groove and postcervical groove with about 6 ridges and some shorter striae; posterior part of branchial region with about 12 transverse ridges (excluding posterodorsal ridge). Cardiac region with 3 or 4 main transverse ridges. Intestinal region with 2 or 3 striae; posterodorsal ridge distinct, with secondary stria. Frontal margin inclined posteriorly at 105° from midline. Lateral margin slightly convex; anterolateral spines parallel, horizontal, just reaching sinus between rostrum and supraocular spine; marginal hepatic spine anterior to cervical groove, much shorter than anterolateral spine; branchial margins with 5 spines. Rostrum laterally compressed; dorsal margin straight, inclined dorsally, ventral margin strongly convex, deepest slightly anterior to midlength, length 0.4–0.5 × pcl; supraocular spine 0.4 × length of rostrum. Epistomial ridge straight, ending at antennal gland; mesial protuberance distinct.
Thoracic sternum. Median length of sternal plastron (sternites 4–7) 0.5 × width of sternite 7. Sternites 4–5 with striae; sternite 6 with few striae. Sternite 3 0.4 width of sternite 4. Sternite 4 anterior margin subtrapezoid, narrowly contiguous with sternite 3.
Abdomen. Somite 2 with 8 small spines evenly spaced along anterior ridge. Somites 2–4 with about 5, 7 and 12 uninterrupted striae behind anterior ridge, respectively, and squamae at lateral margins. Somite 6 posteromedian margin almost straight. Telson with numerous transverse squamae; greatest width 1.7 × median length; anterolateral margin concave.
Eye. Maximum corneal diameter 0.3 × distance between anterolateral spines.
Antennule. Basal article (distal spines excluded) not overreaching corneae; distolateral and distomesial spines subequal; 2 lateral spines, proximal smaller, longer lateral spine exceeding distal spines.
Antenna. Article 1 with distomesial spine reaching midlength of article 2. Article 2 with distomesial spine reaching distal margin of article 4; distolateral spine almost reaching distal margin of article 3. Article 3 and 4 unarmed.
Maxilliped 3. Ischium 1.8 × merus length, with flexor distal spine. Merus with large spine and small distal spine on flexor margin; extensor margin unarmed.
P1. 1.6–1.9 pcl (females), 1.7–2.1 pcl (males), covered in plumose setae and iridescent setae in inner margin; merus 0.6–0.7 pcl (females), 0.7–0.8 pcl (males), with row of 5 small spines on dorsal margin; distomesial spine reaching midlength of carpus. Carpus 0.4 (females), 0.4–0.5 (males) × merus length, length 0.9–1.1 × width, with 5 spines along the mesial margin. Propodus 1.2–1.3 (females), 1.1–1.6 (males) × merus length, dactylus longer than palm, 0.5 × total propodus length; dactylus and pollex outer margin unarmed.
P2–4. Relatively stout, with scales on lateral surface of meri, carpi and propodi; extensor margin with plumose setae and iridescent setae. Meri shorter posteriorly (P3 merus 0.9 × P2 merus length, P4 merus 0.8 × P3 merus length). P2 1.8–2.2 × pcl; merus 0.6–0.8 × pcl, length 4 × width, 2.6–3.0 × carpus length and 1.3–1.6 × propodus length, extensor margin with 11–17 spines, flexor margin with acute ridges and well-developed distal spine; carpus with 2 large spines and 2 or 3 smaller spines on extensor margin, distal spine on flexor margin; propodus length 5 × height, with 6–8 movable flexor spines; dactylus 0.7–0.9 × propodus length, curved, length 5–6 × width, extensor margin densely lined with stiff long setae on distal half, flexor margin with 8–12 spines, space between spines increasing distally, unarmed along distal 1/5. End of P2 carpus almost reaching end of P1 merus. P3 with similar spination and article proportions as P2; merus slightly shorter than P2 merus (0.9); propodus and dactylus as long as those of P2. P4 length 0.8 × P2 length; merus 0.5 × pcl; merocarpal articulation reaching hepatic marginal spine of carapace.
Egg diameter.
0.5 mm
.
Colour.
Carapace and abdominal somites 2–3 orange, remaining abdomen and telson white. Rostrum white with red subdistal spot, supraocular spines orange. Chelipeds and walking legs with transverse white/pale orange and dark orange bands; distal half of palm and proximal half of cheliped fingers orange, distal half of fingers of cheliped white; dactyli of walking legs white.
Genetic data.
COI and 16S; see
Table 1
.
Etymology.
Named
julumunyju
with approval of the Kariyarra people. The word julumunyju means prawn in Kariyarra language; used as a noun in apposition.
Remarks.
Munida julumunyju
sp. nov.
is very similar to
M. rubridigitalis
Baba, 1994
, described from
Queensland
,
Australia
. Both species have a laterally compressed rostrum with a red mark and red cheliped fingers, the second abdominal somite with 8 or 9 spines along the anterior ridge and subequal distal spines on the basal antennular article. Comparison of
M. julumunyju
with
paratypes
of
M. rubridigitalis
and additional specimens from eastern
Australia
found that the two species differ chiefly in the shape of the rostrum. The rostrum of both species is laterally compressed, but shallower and more evenly tapered in
M. rubridigitalis
.
In
M. rubridigitalis
,
the ventral rostral margin is gently convex with the dorsal and ventral margins parallel for the proximal half or slightly more, after which they gently converge to the apex. In
M. julumunyju
sp. nov.
, however, the rostrum is deeper, with the dorsal and ventral margins distally diverging, reaching the greatest depth slightly anterior to the midlength and then converging to the apex, making the ventral margin more strongly convex than in
M. rubridigitalis
. In addition,
M. rubridigitalis
usually has a spine on the mesial margin of the antennal article 2 (occasionally present only on one side), which is always absent in
M. julumunyju
. Colour-in-life may also be helpful in distinguishing these species. The new species has a red patch on the pterygostomian flap below the linea anomurica, which is noted as absent in
M. rubridigitalis
by
Baba (1994)
. In
M. julumunyju
sp. nov.
the fingers are completely red with a white tip, whereas
M. rubridigitalis
is described with only the distal half of the fingers red.
We examined
six specimens
identified as
M. rubridigitalis
from
New Caledonia
in the collections of the MNHN, and herein we identify these specimens as
M. julumunyju
sp. nov.
These specimens agree with
M. julumunyju
sp. nov.
in rostral form and lack of a spine on the mesial margin of antennal article 2. Specimens reported and figured from
New Caledonia
and the
Loyalty Islands
as
Munida
sp.
by Macpherson (1994: fig. 13b, 90) also agree with
M. julumunyju
in rostral form and the colour of the fingers, which are described as red with a white tip. Sequence divergence between
M. julumunyju
sp. nov.
and a New Caledonian specimen of
“
M. rubridigitalis
”
(MNHN- IU-2014-15474) is 4% (COI) and 0.6% (16S). Thus, further study is required to determine if other reported specimens of
“
M. rubridigitalis
”
from the New Caledonian region are conspecific with, or distinct from,
M. julumunyju
sp. nov.
The apparently disjunct distribution of
M. julumunyju
sp. nov.
suggests that it can be expected to occur at intermediate localities, possibly off southern
Indonesia
and
Papua New Guinea
.
Distribution.
Presently known from off Western Australia,
373–
450 m
.
New Caledonia
,
450–
515 m
.
Loyalty Islands
,
540 m
.