Review of grapsoid families for the establishment of a new family for Leptograpsodes Montgomery, 1931, and a new genus of Gecarcinidae H. Milne Edwards, 1837 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura, Grapsoidea MacLeay, 1838)
Author
Guinot, Danièle
Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, EPHE, case postale 53, 57 rue Cuvier, F- 75231 Paris cedex 05 (France) guinot @ mnhn. fr (corresponding author)
guinot@mnhn.fr
Author
Ng, Ngan Kee
Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 14 Science Drive 4, Singapore 117543 (Republic of Singapore) dbsngnk @ nus. edu. sg
dbsngnk@nus.edu.sg
Author
Rodríguez Moreno, Paula A.
Direction générale déléguée aux Collections, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, case postale 30, 57 rue Cuvier, F- 75231 Paris cedex 05 (France) martin-lefevre @ mnhn. fr Dedicated to the memory of Michael Türkay (1948 - 2015)
lefevre@mnhn.fr
text
Zoosystema
2018
2018-12-21
40
26
547
604
journal article
9255
10.5252/zoosystema2018v40a26
2697b081-f3fa-4256-a62d-f084ee352b1c
1638-9387
4336858
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E018714D-7CCF-4AB8-A88A-EF033530CA75
Genus
Epigrapsus
HelIer, 1862
TYPE
SPECIES. —
Epigrapsus politus
Heller, 1862
by monotypy.
OTHER SPECIES. —
Epigrapsus notatus
(Heller, 1865)
.
DIAGNOSIS
Carapace with lateral border defined in third part, and with weak subproximal indentation; no posterolateral striae. Proepistome as small plate inserted under lower frontal margin (
Tavares 1989
: figs 5, 6). Orbit not closed laterally (
Tavares 1989
: fig. 6), suborbital area granulated; suborbital crest very long, descending obliquely (instead of joining external angle of orbit), consisting of minute, close striae (stridulatory pars stridens), rubbing on ridge lined by short setae (plectrum) located on inner margin of P1 merus, present in both sexes. Male chelae with only minor heterochely or with clear heterochely (palm strongly inflated and with large gap between fingers). Thoracic sternum widened; sternite 1 small, triangular, seemingly fused with semi-ovate sternite 2 that bears medially setose transversal depression; suture 2/3 straight; sternites 3
+
4 not restricted at level of P1, thus with rather straight, obliquely directed margins; suture 7/8 short; sternite 7 wide; sternite 8 very wide, due to posterior emargination that does not reach sternite 7; only a minute portion of sternite 8 is dorsally exposed (below setae in
E. notatus
)
when pleon is folded; no median bridge. Median line on sternite 8 and extending on whole sternite 7; its distal portion bumping at level of suture 6/7 into a median, weakly raised area that superficially units both sides of sternal plate and becomes the bottom of sterno-pleonal cavity. Pleon triangular, with short somite 6; long telson. Male gonopore emerging rather far from P5 coxo-sternal condyle and suture 7/8, sternite 7 joining sternite 8 for a rather long distance. Locking button remarkably large and inflated, occupying more than the middle of sternite 5, with strongly granulated prominence; pleonal socket with markedly calcified margin. Presence of conspicuous setal coxal pouches between P3/P4.
REMARKS
Epigrapsus
, unusual among gecarcinids with regards to the relatively small size at <
40 mm
cw and the flatter carapaces of the two known species,
E. politus
and
E. notatus
(see
Türkay 1974a
;
Ng
et al.
1998
; Ng 2003;
Liu & Jeng 2005
;
Fujita 2017
), was always considered apart from other land crabs.
E. villosus
Ng, 2003
is actually a junior subjective synonym of
E. notatus
(see
Naruse
et al.
2018b
).
The disposition of the genital male region of
Epigrapsus
, with the gonopore remote from the P5 coxa, differs from those of
Cardisoma
,
Discoplax
and
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
and is closer to those of other gecarcinids
Gecarcinus
,
Johngarthia
and
Gecarcoidea
studied below.The larval morphology (
Cuesta
et al.
2002
,
2007
) shows close relationships of
Epigrapsus
with this second subclade of gecarcinids. In contrast, the opened orbit with a long suborbital crest (see
Ng
et al.
1998
b: fig. 2c), forming a pars stridens, looks more like the disposition of
Discoplax
, but the direction of suborbital crest is opposite: joining the orbit via a short granulous line in
Discoplax
, vs longer, obliquely descending, not connected to orbit in
Epigrapsus
. The presence in
Epigrapsus
of a thick setal coxa pouch between P3/ P4 is unique to
Gecarcinidae
. Species of the first gecarcinid subclade, i.e.,
Cardisoma
,
Discoplax
and
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
, lack setal coxal pouches and do not show distinct external terrestrial adaptations, except the inflated lateral regions of carapace to accommodate the the highly modified respiratory structures. The second gecarcinid subclade including
Gecarcinus
(
Fig. 7
A-C),
Johngarthia
and
Gecarcoidea
(
Fig. 7
E-G) have dense tufts of hydrophilic setae that are located along the margins of the pleon and at its junction with the carapace (see Terrestrial adaptations of grapsoids).
Two
types
of male chelae have been found in the two species of
Epigrapsus
by
Hartnoll
et al.
(2017
: figs 3-5, tables 2-4). In both
E. notatus
and
E. politus
, males either have morphologically similar chelae with minimal heterochely, or show a clear heterochely with different morphologies in the major and minor chelae; the proportion of heterochelous males increases in the larger mature size classes. Progressive polymorphism (i.e., when different chelar morphologies succeed each other within the mature phase, as recorded in
Johngarthia lagostoma
) needs to be confirmed.
Some aspects of the reproduction of both
Epigrapsus
species are also unusual: the fast and vigorous larval release behaviour (ovigerous females shake their whole body laterally to release the larvae instead of using fanning motions of the pleon) and the choice of surge channels as release sites (
Liu & Jeng 2005
). The affinities of
Epigrapsus
are so ambiguous to the point of questioning its status.
FIG. 7. —Thoracic sternum and frontal view:
A -D
,
Gecarcinus ruricola
(Linnaeus, 1758)
, ♂ 55.0
×
76.0 mm, Cuba, MNHN-IU-2017-8392 (= MNHN-B13155);
E -H
,
Gecarcoidea lalandii
H. Milne Edwards, 1837
, ♂ 52.0
×
73.3 mm, Papua New Guinea, MNHN-IU-2013-13254:
A
,
E:
thoracic sternum (brushed) with pleon;
B
,
F
, thoracic sternum (brushed) without pleon;
C
,
G:
genital region with gonopore and penis,
D
,
H
, front, proepistome, cephalic appendages, orbit and mxp3. Scale bars: 10 mm.
LARVAL CHARACTERS AND MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY
OF THE TWO GECARCINID SUBCLADES
Morphological features of
Gecarcinus
,
Gecarcoidea
and
Epigrapsus
allow differentiation of two distinct gecarcinid subclades. In the cladistic analyses of
Tavares (1989)
, which showed a sistergroup relationship of Gecarcinidae-Grapsidae,
Gecarcinidae
was separated in at least two subclades:
Cardisoma
+
Discoplax
and
Gecarcinus
(including
Johngarthia
)
+
Gecarcoidea
, with
Epigrapsus
seemingly closer to the second group.
The recent data from larval morphology or genetic analyses must take into account that
Cardisoma hirtipes
is hereby considered to be not a
Cardisoma
or a
Discoplax
and is assigned, instead, to another genus that we introduce,
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
The results of our proposals for the new generic names of gecarcinids are provided in
Table 1
.
Larval characters emphasize the need to split the family
Gecarcinidae
(
Willems 1982
; Shokita & Shikatani 1990). According to
Cuesta
et al.
(2002)
zoeal features supported the recognition of two major groups:
Epigrapsus
,
Gecarcinus
and
Gecarcoidea
on one hand, and
Cardisoma
(
C. guanhumi
,
C. carnifex
) and
Tuerkayana hirtipes
n. comb.
(as
Discoplax
) on the other hand, the setation of the maxillar endopodite separating the latter group from the rest of the
Gecarcinidae
. Based on overall similarities of zoeal morphology,
Cuesta
et al.
(2002)
and
Cuesta & Anger (2005)
suggested affinities of the group
Gecarcinus
+
Gecarcoidea
+
Epigrapsus
with
Varunidae
, whereas
Cardisoma
(our
Cardisoma
sensu
stricto
) and
Tuerkayana hirtipes
n. comb.
(as
Discoplax
) shared with
Sesarmidae
antennal and pleonal morphologies, as well as the setation pattern of the maxillar endopodite. A new review of zoeal features of gecarcinids, with more complete data (
Cuesta
et al.
2007
: tables 5, 6) distinguished the same two groups: one with
Cardisoma
sensu
stricto
(
C. guanhumi
,
C. carnifex
,
C. armatum
) and
Tuerkayana hirtipes
n. comb.
(as
Discoplax
), and a second group with
Epigrapsus
,
Gecarcinus
,
Gecarcoidea
, and
Johngarthia
; interestingly, this paper shows that the megalopa of
Tuerkayana hirtipes
n. comb.
(as
Discoplax
) differs from that of
Cardisoma
sensu
stricto
, which supports the distinction of
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
Genetic studies by
Schubart
et al.
(2006)
recovered
Cardisoma
as basal, followed by
Gecarcoidea
-
Gecarcinus
.
N. K.
Ng
et al.
(2007)
, noting that the orbital structure and the gonopore position were extremely variable within gecarcinids, recovered two groups:
Cardisoma
sensu
stricto
(
C. carnifex
,
C. crassum
)
+
“
Discoplax
” (i.e.,
Tuerkayana hirtipes
n. comb.
and
T
.
rotundum
n. comb.
), and
Gecarcinus
+
Gecarcoidea
.
The molecular and larval analysis of
Schubart & Cuesta (2010)
demonstrated that the status of the apparently paraphyletic
Gecarcinidae
was still unresolved, with
Cardisoma
and
Discoplax
forming a sister-group to
Gecarcinus
and
Gecarcoidea
.
Van der Meij & Schubart (2014
: fig. 2) concluded that
Gecarcinidae
did not cluster together and also recovered two groups:
Cardisoma carnifex
+
Tuerkayana hirtipes
n. comb.
(as
Discoplax
) and
Gecarcinus lateralis
+
Gecarcoidea lalandii
. Using molecular data from three markers (mitochondrial 12S and 16S rRNAs, and nuclear histone H3) and covering a total of 15 thoracotreme families,
Tsang
et al.
(2018)
, as
Chu
et al.
(2015)
, confirmed the polyphyly of
Grapsoidea
and
Ocypodoidea
, as well as that of Pinnotheroidea De Haan, 1833.
Tsang
et al.
(2014
: fig. 1) recognised a
Gecarcoidea
clade (
G. natalis
+
G. lalandii
) and a sister clade
Cardisoma
-
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
(as
Discoplax
).
Tsang
et al.
(2018
: fig. 2) recognised two gecarcinid clades: a
Gecarcoidea
clade (
G. lalandii
and
G. natalis
) and a
Cardisoma
clade, actually including two genera:
Cardisoma
for
C. crassum
and
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
for their “
Discoplax hirtipes
”.
BIOLOGY OF
GECARCINIDAE
According to
Liu & Jeng (2007)
biological aspects showed the same divergent tendency, the length of the breeding season being longer in species of
Cardisoma
(including
Cardisoma
sensu
stricto
and
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
) compared to other gecarcinids. In terms of overall pattern of gecarcinid breeding migrations, opposing ends of the spectrum are presented by cavernicolous
Discoplax longipes
(eggs are laid and incubated in the caves where the adults live, and the females with ripe eggs migrate directly to the sea; no males migrate; see
Ng & Guinot 2001
) and by
Gecarcoidea natalis
, the iconic “
Christmas Island
red crab”(males and females migrate to the sea in similar numbers; only after both dip in the sea, does courtship and mating occur; see
Hicks 1985
;
Hartnoll
et al.
2010
).
Johngarthia lagostoma
(mating and laying occur at all phases of the migration, and males migrate towards the sea in decreasing proportion with distance) and
Gecarcinus ruricola
(migrating crabs are mostly female with predominance of ovigerous females, so some females mate and lay eggs on the landward side, others on the seaward side; migrating females on average larger than migrating males) have a median position (
Hartnoll
et al.
2006a
, b, 2007).
The relationships within
Gecarcinidae
can also be examined in relation to their landward migration stages, their degree of terrestrialisation.
Gecarcinus
,
Gecarcoidea
and
Johngarthia
form a group with markedly terrestrial habit: the megalopa is the landward migration stage in
Gecarcinus
and
Johngarthia
(the megalopa of
Gecarcinus ruricola
being the most terrestrially adapted megalopa described to date for locomotion on land: it is the returning stage from the sea into fully terrestrial habitats before moulting to the first crab instar (see
Hartnoll & Clark 2006: 162
; Rodríguez-Rey
et al.
2016). On the contrary, the first crab in
Cardisoma
sensu
stricto
and
Tuerkayana
n. gen.
(as “
Discoplax hirtipes
”) form a second group, with less terrestrial habit.
Tuerkayana celeste
n. comb.
migrates up streams as the megalopa and only emerges onto land as the first crab (
Hartnoll
et al.
2014
, as
Discoplax
).