New records and one new species of Callichiridae (Crustacea, Axiidea) from the Indo-West Pacific, with keys to species of Corallianassa, Lepidophthalmus and Neocallichirus
Author
Poore, Gary C. B.
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2023
Mem. Mus. Vic.
2023-05-10
82
71
95
http://dx.doi.org/10.24199/j.mmv.2023.82.04
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2023.82.04
1447-2554
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5F38D3B8-2255-4559-8C5E-76FE24409F13
Corallianassa coutierei
(
Nobili, 1904
)
Material examined
.
Papua New Guinea
,
Madang
and
Kavieng
areas, intertidal sandflats,
MNHN
IU-2013-7073
*,
MNHN
IU-2014-991
,
MNHN
IU-2014-1089
,
MNHN
IU-2014-2711
*,
MNHN
IU-2014- 10010
* (
3 males
,
2 females
, 3.0–
5.5 mm
)
.
Diagnosis.
Rostrum horizontal; carapace anterolateral spines evenly tapered, slightly curved inwards. Maxilliped 3 ischium-merus twice as long as wide; merus tapering; propodus, free distal margin transverse. Major cheliped ischium lower margin with 4–6 oblique spines increasing in length distally; merus lower margin with row of blunt tubercles; palm as long as wide or slightly longer than wide, upper margin obscurely carinate along proximal two-thirds. Minor cheliped merus lower margin smooth; palm 1.5 times as long as wide, rectangular; fingers as long as palm, curved. Uropodal endopod twice as long as wide; anterior margin evenly convex; posterior margin convex; apex broadly rounded, flat. Uropodal exopod posterior margin almost straight; proximal article with sharp spine overlapping endopod and smaller accessory proximal lobe. Telson tapering to about two-thirds basal width from basal lobes, 1.7 times as wide as long; posterior margin evenly slightly convex; dorsal surface with about 6 pairs of fine setae in row on transverse ridge.
Distribution.
Western, Central and Eastern Indo-Pacific [
type
locality:
Djibouti
] (see
Dworschak, 2018
).
Remarks
.
Komai et al. (2015)
and
Dworschak (2018)
reviewed the complicated history of this nameand recognised the species as distinct from
C. borradailei
, with which it had been confused. All specimens from
Papua New Guinea
are small and lack the carinate chelipeds that characterise
C. borradailei
.
Corallianassa coutierei
is best diagnosed by the short obsolete carina along half the upper margin of the major cheliped palm and the denticles (not spines) on the lower margin of the major cheliped merus. Genetic diversity among individuals from
Papua New Guinea
and
Philippines
is low (
Robles et al., 2020
).
Sakai (1999)
designated and illustrated
Nobili’s (1904)
specimen from
Djibouti
(
MNHN
Th75) as the
lectotype
. Other
syntype
specimens came from Périm and Aden.
Callianassa placida
De
Man, 1905
is a well accepted synonym (
Ngoc-Ho, 2005
; Komai et al., 215) but records of
Callianassa
(
Callichirus
)
placida
from
Clipperton
I., northeastern Pacific (
Chace, 1962
), and from Isla Clarion,
Mexico
(
Hernández-Aguilera et al., 1986
) are referable to
Corallianassa xutha
Manning, 1988
.