Revision of the family Chasmocarcinidae Serène, 1964 (Crustacea, Brachyura, Goneplacoidea)
Author
Ng, Peter K. L.
Author
Castro, Peter
text
Zootaxa
2016
4209
1
1
182
journal article
37321
10.11646/zootaxa.4209.1.1
2de5b7bf-3975-458a-b200-07ec69f4e013
1175-5326
272646
849BAB5C-464A-4B4A-A586-5742411EDC01
Genus
Chasmocarcinus
Rathbun, 1898
Chasmocarcinus
Rathbun, 1898a
: 284
; 1901: 9 [diagnosis]; 1918: 54 [diagnosis].—
Serène, 1964a
: 257
; 1964b: 186 [in list].— Ng
et al.
2008: 76 [in list].—
De Grave
et al.
2009
: 32
[in list].—Castro
et al.
2010: 41.—
Guinot
et al
. 2013
: 44
, 113, 114.
Type species
.
Chasmocarcinus typicus
Rathbun, 1898
(gender masculine) (
=
Chasmocarcinus rathbuni
Bouvier, 1917
)
Other species included
:
Chasmocarcinus arcuatus
Coelho & Coelho, 1998
Chasmocarcinus chacei
Felder & Rabalais, 1986
Chasmocarcinus cylindricus
Rathbun, 1901
Chasmocarcinus gemmatus
n. sp.
Chasmocarcinus hirsutipes
Coelho & Coelho, 1998
Chasmocarcinus latipes
Rathbun, 1898
(
=
Chasmocarcinus ferrugineus
Glassell, 1936
)
Chasmocarcinus longipes
Garth, 1940
(
=
Chasmocarcinus panamensis
Serène, 1964
)
Chasmocarcinus meloi
Coelho & Coelho, 1998
Chasmocarcinus mississippiensis
Rathbun, 1931
Diagnosis
. Carapace subtrapezoidal, high; front bilobed, with shallow to well-defined median cleft; anterolateral margins arcuate, variously granular, without distinct lobes or teeth. Epistome slightly depressed; semicircular or widely rectangular median lobe with median fissure, semicircular or straight lateral margins with or without lower margin. Eye peduncle filling orbit, short, mobile; cornea reduced, pigmented. Third maxillipeds not filling buccal cavern when closed; merus oval to broadly oval, outer margin rounded, even or slightly elevated anteriorly, anteroexternal angle rounded; ischium quadrate or rectangular, about same length or longer than merus. Pterygostomial region bulging, clearly visible from dorsal view (
Fig. 5
C) or only gently convex, not visible from dorsal view (
Fig. 5
D). Chelipeds subequal in length, slightly dissimilar in female, heteromorphic in males; cutting margins of major chela of both sexes with broad, blunt teeth, largest most proximal usually on upper, lower cutting margins; fingers of
minor
chela of both sexes subcircular in cross-section, scissor-like, with small, often pointed teeth; inner margin of cheliped carpus with or without tooth; ventral surface of cheliped merus smooth, without teeth, in both sexes. P2, P3 meri with short teeth or granules along posterior margin, meri of other ambulatory legs with microscopic granules, unarmed. P5 dactylus upcurved, often with spur-like subdistal extension. Fused thoracic sternites 1, 2 broadly triangular, long; fused thoracic sternites 3, 4 relatively broad. Male thoracic sternite 8 short, quadrate; “supplementary plate” short, rectangular; structures tightly appressed with most of penis concealed. Male pleon with rectangular somite 6, fused somites 3–5 nearly straight; telson proportionally short; postero-lateral regions as in rest of somite or clearly swollen. Sterno-pleonal cavity of male deep, press-button for pleonal holding as small, short tubercle posterior to thoracic sternal suture 4/5 near edge of sterno-pleonal cavity. G1 stout, distal segment broad or straight, with spinules. G2 straight, long, slender distal segment; shorter than G1. Somites of female pleon with convex lateral margins; telson proportionally short. Sterno-pleonal cavity of female moderately shallow, vulvae close together in shallower portion of thoracic sternite 6.
Remarks
. There appears to be several groups of species in
Chasmocarcinus
as defined at present, although only
C. obliquus
Rathbun, 1898
, and
C. peresii
Rodrigues
de
Costa
, 1968
, possess distinct suites of carapace, male pleonal, gonopodal, and/or cheliped characters that warrant their transfer to their own genera (
Deltaplax
n. gen.
and
Amboplax
n. gen.
, respectively). Two species,
C. typicus
Rathbun, 1898
, and
C. gemmatus
n. sp.
are distinct in having a carapace in which the lateral margins are not distinctly cristate, with the carapace appearing subovate from frontal view; and the third maxilliped ischium is relatively more elongated and slender, leaving a large gap between them even when closed, with the mandibles more clearly exposed (
Figs. 28
A, B; 29A). The antennular articles of
C. typicus
are also proportionately much longer (
Fig. 21
A) than any of the other
Chasmocarcinus
species (including
C. gemmatus
n. sp.
,
Fig. 21
G). These character states are not clear-cut, however, with species like
C. chacei
Felder & Rabalais, 1986
, and
C. longipes
Garth, 1940
, possessing intermediate character states in the carapace shape and third maxillipeds.
Chasmocarcinus latipes
Rathbun, 1898
, is also unusual in that its ambulatory legs are proportionately short, the posterior margin of the epistome has a subtriangular median lobe and the pterygostomial region is not prominently bulging, not being clearly visible from dorsal view (
Fig. 5
D). In other
Chasmocarcinus
species, the ambulatory legs are proportionately longer, the posterior margin of the epistome has a more rounded or subtruncate median lobe and the pterygostomial region is bulging and clearly visible from dorsal view (e.g.,
Fig. 5
C). We nevertheless do not regard this as useful generic characters. Certainly the taxonomically important G1 and G2 structures do not show any distinct pattern to support separating these species into separate genera for the time being.
The major chelae of adult male
Chasmocarcinus typicus
and
C. gemmatus
n. sp.
are unusual compared to all other congeners in that the fingers are conspicuously elongated and curved, with the submarginal parts of the cutting edge of the dactylus lined with dense short setae (
Figs. 35
A, C; 36A). The adult male fingers are also distinctly curved in
Chasmocarcinus arcuatus
, forming a large gap when closed (
Fig. 35
E), but they are relatively shorter than those of
C. typicus
and
C. gemmatus
n. sp.
A prominently upcurved P5 dactylus in present in all
Chasmocarcinus
species, although this character is also present in Indo-West Pacific genera like
Camatopsis
,
Chasmocarcinops
,
Chinommatia
n. gen.
,
Statommatia
n. gen.
, and
Notopelta
n. gen.
A subdistal spur on the P5 dactylus appears in some species (
C. chacei
,
C. cylindricus
,
C. latipes
, and
C. mississippensis
; see
Felder & Rabalais 1986
) but not all species of
Chasmocarcinus
. This spur is, however, absent in all other chasmocarcinid genera. Its size varies among individuals, however, tending to be more developed in males, and seemingly eroded or broken off in some specimens.
Distribution
.
Western
Atlantic and Tropical
Eastern
Pacific regions.