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
Chinommatia bruuni
(Serène, 1964)
n. comb.
(
Figs. 14
G‒J; 25C, D; 32B; 43C, D; 53C; 60B; 75E‒I; 87E)
Hephthopelta bruuni
Serène, 1964a
: 248
, fig. 17, pl. 22, fig. B [
type
localilty:
Vietnam
]; 1968: 92 [in list].—Ng
et al.
2008: 76 [in list].
FIGURE 14.
Overall dorsal view of species of
Chinommatia
n. gen.
A,
C. cavimanus
, Philippines: holotype male 11.4 × 13.9 mm (USNM 46413); B,
C. cavimanus
, Philippines: male 10.1 × 12.2 mm (ZRC 2015.228); C,
C. cavimanus
, Philippines: female 7.6 × 9.0 mm (ZRC 2015.225); D,
C. cavimanus
, Philippines: male 8.1 × 10.2 mm (ZRC 2015.228); E,
C. cavimanus
, Philippines: female 7.4 × 8.6 mm (ZRC 2015.227); F, South China Sea: male 6.1 × 7.3 mm (IOCAS-MBM166773); G,
C. bruuni
, Vietnam: holotype female 4.0 × 5.0 mm (after Serène 1964: pl. 22B); H,
C. bruuni
, Indonesia: male 3.4 × 4.0 mm (ZMUC CRU-1524); I,
C. bruuni
, Malaysia: male 4.3 × 5.5 mm (ZRC 2013.0020); J,
C. bruuni
, Malaysia: female 5.5 × 7.2 mm (ZRC 2013.0020).
FIGURE 15.
Overall dorsal view of species of
Chinommatia
n. gen.
and
Notopelta
n. gen.
A,
Chinommatia littoralis
, Indonesia: holotype female 3.5 × 4.9 mm (NNM-ZMA); B,
Chinommatia bicuspida
n. sp.
, Papua New Guinea: holotype male 10.7 × 12.9 mm (MNHN-IU-2011-0954); C,
Chinommatia bicuspida
n. sp.
, Fiji: male 12.7 × 10.6 mm (MNHN-IU-2013- 9056); D,
Chinommatia bicuspida
n. sp.
, Papua New Guinea: paratype female 16.7 × 20.4 mm (MNHN-IU-2011-3461); E, F,
Chinommatia turpis
n. sp.
, Vanuatu: holotype male 3.1 × 4.3 mm (MNHU-IU-2013-9044); G, H,
Notopelta mortenseni
, Indonesia: holotype male 5.0 × 6.9 mm (ZMUC CRU-7397); I,
Notopelta mortenseni
, Indonesia: female 5.9 × 4.1 mm (ZMUC CRU-007768).
Type material
(not examined). Holotype female (4.0 × 5.0 mm) (depository unknown), Vietnam, Nahtrang.
Other material examined
.
Malaysia
.
2 males
, larger (4.3 ×
5.5 mm
)
,
5 females
, largest (5.5 ×
7.2 mm
) (
ZRC
2013.0020
), offshore
Bintulu
, northern
Sarawak
, stn F28 oilfield,
T.S. Leong
coll., 2000s.
Indonesia
.
1 male
(3.4 × 4.0 mm) (
ZMUC
CRU-
1524
),
Java
Sea south of
Borneo
, GALATHEA EXPEDITION,
60 m
.
Papua New Guinea
.
1 male
(6.5 ×
5.1 mm
) (
USNM
1277740
), HELIX-79, stn M-47,
06°41’54”S
,
147°50’E
,
5‒30 m
,
Alpha Helix
, G. Hendler
coll.,
17.06.1979
.
?
Philippines
.
Mindanao
,
Coronado Bay
,
1 female
(cl
3.9 mm
, carapace damaged) (
WAM
)
, PELE EXPEDITION,
46‒128 m
,
10.02.1964
.
Diagnosis
. Carapace (
Fig. 14
G‒J) subtrapezoidal, convex, 1.3 wider than long; front slightly bilobed; anterolateral margins slightly arcuate, pubescent, minutely granular with pointed tubercle in males. Eye peduncle (
Fig. 25
C, D) filling orbit, thick, long, mobile; cornea reduced, with reduced pigmentation. Epistome (
Fig. 25
C, D) with short, semicircular median lobe with deep median fissure; short, slightly semicircular lateral margins. Third maxilliped (
Fig. 32
B) merus ovate, anteroexternal angle rounded, ischium rectangular, about same length as merus. Proportionally long ambulatory legs (
Fig. 14
G‒J). Chelipeds (
Figs. 14
G‒J; 43C, D) subequal in length, slightly dissimilar in females, heteromorphic in males; fingers of
minor
chela (
Fig. 43
D) subcircular in cross-section, scissor-like, cutting margins with sharp teeth; most proximal teeth on cutting margin of major chela of males (
Fig. 43
C) with short teeth of about same size. Ventral surface of cheliped merus with row of sharp tubercles. Inner margin of cheliped carpus with short tooth (
Fig. 14
G‒J), posterior inner margin angular (
Fig.
14
I, J). Fused thoracic sternites 1, 2 (
Fig. 53
C) semicircular, broad, long. Male pleon (
Figs. 53
C; 60B) with proportionally long telson, posterior portion of somite 3–5 proportionally narrow. G1 (
Fig. 75
E‒G, I) slender, distal segment straight, with short spinules. G2 (
Fig. 75
H) about 3/4 G1 length, curved, slender, distal segment short. Female telson (
Fig. 87
E) proportionally long. Vulvae wide, located relatively close together on outer margins of cavity close to suture 5/6, visible when pleon not tightly closed.
Remarks
.
Chinommatia bruuni
is an atypical member of the genus in that the posterior inner margin of the cheliped carpus is angular (
Fig.
14
I, J) (rounded in congeners) and the vulvae are more laterally positioned such that they are visible when the pleon is not tightly closed (
Fig. 87
E). In all other morphological aspects, notably the form of the gonopods, however, it agrees with the current definition of the genus so it is best placed in
Chinommatia
.
Serène (1964a: 184)
noted that the holotype female (and his only) specimen of
Hephthopelta bruuni
was from the Gallardo Collection and not collected by the Th. Mortensen Expedition, and therefore not part of the ZMUC material. In his description of the species (
Serène 1964a: 248–252, fig. 17, pl. 22B
), he did not indicate where the specimen was from, the only data being “E. 43.764, Coll. Gallardo. St. 1542”. In his discussion of the genus, he fortunately recorded: “
H. bruuni
nov. sp. (Nhatrang, Viet Nam)” (
Serène 1964a: 240
) so we know it is actually from Vietnam. He did not indicate the eventual depository of the holotype. It is not in ZMUC or MNHN. It is possible the specimen and was possibly returned to Gallardo or to some institution in Vietnam. Also inexplicable is the status of the small male specimen from Java, now in ZMUC (ZMUC CRU-1524). It had been identified by Serène and is part of the Mortensen Expedition material but was not mentioned in
Serène (1964a)
. As such it is not a paratype.
A small, badly damaged female specimen without pereiopods from the
Philippines
(WAM) clearly belongs to
Chinommatia
(mobile, long eye peduncles and similar carapace shape with a row of tubercles along the anterolateral margin) is provisionally referred to
C. bruuni
. It lacks the small, pointed anterolateral tubercle present in a similarly sized male specimen of
C. bruuni
(3.4 × 4.0 mm, ZMUC CRU-1524).
Identification
of the present male specimens from
Java
and
Sarawak
, east
Malaysia
with
C. bruuni
is based entirely on the figures by
Serène
(1964a)
, which are of the female
holotype
.
Neither
are we completely certain that the
ZMUC
specimen (from
northern Java
) is conspecific with the
ZRC
specimens from
Sarawak
. The G1 of the largest of the
Malaysian
males (4.3 ×
5.5 mm
,
ZRC
2013.0020
;
Fig.
75
I) is similar to that of the Java male (3.4 × 4.0 mm,
ZMUC
CRU
1524
;
Fig. 75
E) except that the apex of the latter is more flared. While this may be a consequence of size differences, more material is certainly needed before firm conclusions can be drawn.
While their gonopods are very different,
C. bruuni
superficially resembles
Notopelta mortenseni
in its general carapace and pereiopodal features, especially when females are compared. Female specimens of
N. mortenseni
do not possess the characteristic long spur on the basis-ischium of
minor
cheliped. Male and female specimens of
C.
bruuni
, however, can still be distinguished by their proportionately less broad carapace (
Fig. 14
G–J) (broader in
N. mortenseni
;
Fig. 15
G, I), the denticular anterolateral margin is clearly marginal (
Fig. 14
G–J) (submarginal in
N. mortenseni
;
Fig. 15
G–I); the inner subdorsal margin of the chela is entire (
Fig. 14
G, I, J) (with several distinct granules in
N. mortenseni
;
Figs. 15
G, I, 45A); and the vulvae are proportionately smaller and more rounded (
Fig. 87
E) (larger and ovate in
N. mortenseni
;
Fig. 87
G).
Distribution
.
Western
Pacific Ocean (
Vietnam
to
Papua
New Guinea
; questionably
Philippines
). Depth:
5–
60 m
.