An annotated and illustrated checklist of the porcelain crabs of Panama (Decapoda: Anomura)
Author
Ferreira, Luciane Augusto De Azevedo
0000-0003-1683-9962
Author
Anker, Arthur
0000-0002-5350-4267
arthuranker7@gmail.com
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-09-27
5045
1
1
154
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5045.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5045.1.1
1175-5326
5532178
B12C62E3-70D0-4989-BB1A-F4A75C492D8F
Petrolisthes quadratus
Benedict, 1901
(
Figs. 71
,
90F
)
Petrolisthes quadratus
Benedict, 1901: 134
, pl. 3, fig. 4;
Haig 1956: 18
;
Haig 1962: 179
;
Chace & Hobbs 1969: 121
, figs. 32, 43a;
Werding 1977: 204
, fig. 23;
Rodríguez
et al.
2005: 565
;
Hiller
et al.
2006: 553
;
Poupin & Lemaitre 2014: 21
, fig. 4D, E;
Diez & Lira 2017: 447
;
Poupin 2018: 151
.
Material examined
.
None
from
Panama
.
Extra-limital
material.
French Antilles
:
1 male
, cl cw indet. (
FLMNH
UF 31974
), Saint Martin,
Sta.
STM-024,
Pinel Island
,
18°06’26.7”N
,
63°01’02.2”W
, intertidal, leg.
M. Bemis
,
13.04.2012
(fcn BSTM-0492)
.
Previous records from
Panama
.
Haig (1956)
.
Distribution
. West Atlantic:
USA
(Florida),
Mexico
,
Belize
,
Cuba
,
Puerto Rico
,
Bahamas
, N, E and S Less- er Antilles,
Panama
(Bahía de Caledonia),
Colombia
and
Venezuela
(e.g.
Werding 1977
;
Rodríguez
et al
., 2005
;
Poupin & Lemaitre 2014
;
Diez & Lira, 2017
;
Poupin 2018
).
Ecology
. Largely intertidal, known depth range
0–1 m
; on coral substrate, in tide pools, among rocks and coral rubble, especially common at splash zone on sand near piles of rocks (
Chace & Hobbs 1969
;
Werding 1977
;
Poupin & Lemaitre 2014
;
Poupin 2018
).
FIGURE 69
.
Petrolisthes polymitus
Glassell, 1937
: A, B, ovigerous female (cl 4.0 mm, cw 4.1 mm) from Las Perlas Islands, Panama (MZUSP 33956), dorsal (A) and ventral (B) views [photographs by AA].
FIGURE 70
.
Petrolisthes polymitus
Glassell, 1937
: A, male (cl cw indet.) from Ciudad de Panamá, Panama (not deposited), dorsal view; B, C, female (cl 4.5, cw 4.7) from Isla Afuerita, Coiba Archipelago, Panama (FLMNH UF 57718), dorsal (B) and ventral (C) views [photographs by AA].
Remarks
.
Petrolisthes quadratus
belongs to an exclusively American group of species of
Petrolisthes
with an unarmed carapace, relatively smooth, subrectangular P1 carpi and short, stubby ambulatory legs (P2–P4), which also includes the transisthmian
P. tonsorius
Haig, 1960
and
P. tridentatus
Stimpson, 1895
, the recently described western Atlantic
P. virgilius
Hiller & Werding, 2019
(see below and
Fig. 88D
), and a number of eastern Pacific taxa (see also
Hiller
et al.
2006
;
Hiller & Werding 2019
). The morphological distinctiveness and validity of
P. quadratus
and
P. tonsorius
, presumably the most closely related species based on morphological grounds, were discussed by
Werding (1977)
. The two species can be most easily separated from each other by the shape of the P1 carpus and P3 merus, and the proportions of the P2–P4 meri (
Werding 1977
).
Chace & Hobbs (1969)
provided a detailed description of the colour pattern of
P. quadratus
from
Dominica
, whereas
Werding (1977)
and
Poupin & Lemaitre (2014)
found
P. quadratus
to be somewhat variable in colour. Most
Werding’s (1977)
specimens from Santa Marta,
Colombia
, were sandy yellowish, with the P1 darker and often with an olive tinge; however, in some individuals, the carapace was speckled with brown spots. Similarly,
Poupin & Lemaitre (2014)
stated that in the specimens from
Guadeloupe
, the carapace and P1 may be either brown speckled with white or uniform creamy white sandy pale; the P2–P4 are transversely banded with white and pale brown (see their fig. 4D). The herein illustrated specimens from
Saint Martin
and
Bonaire
(
Figs. 71
,
90F
) conform well to the previously described colour patterns (see
Poupin & Lemaitre 2014
: fig. 4D for the other colour variant).
Haig (1956)
did not report on the colour pattern of her single female specimen from Bahía de Caledonia, presently the only known record from
Panama
. However, she noticed that it “differs from the rest of the material examined in having a brush of pubescence on the outer surface of the left hand”, thus leaving some doubts about this record.