Establishment of a new genus for Asthenognathus gallardoi Serène & Soh, 1976 within Gaeticinae Davie & N. K. Ng, 2007 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Varunidae)
Author
Naruse, Tohru
Author
Clark, Paul F.
text
Zootaxa
2009
1987
61
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.185447
6eea5d17-fe50-492c-b862-16eebfc3b055
1175-5326
185447
Gopkittisak
n. gen.
Asthenognathus
—
Serène & Soh, 1976
: 27
(part);
Jiang
et al
., 2007
: 77
(part).
Type
species
:
Asthenognathus gallardoi
Serène & Soh, 1976
, by present designation.
Diagnosis.
Carapace elliptical, dorsal surface with transverse ridges; posterior lateral facet present. Short infraorbital margin extended downwards from external orbital angle, ventral side of orbit demarcated by suborbital crista, continuous laterally as far as below lateral end of anterior lateral epibranchial crista of dorsal surface. Epistome short. Eyes well-developed. Antennule basal article large. Antennal basal article reaching lateral frontal angle, inner orbital tooth reaching middle to lateral frontal angle. Third maxillipeds less than two-thirds of buccal cavern when closed; ischium and merus subrectangular, these segments divided by oblique border; carpus attached to lateral half of distal margin of merus, propodus and dactylus attached to distal end of respective proximal segment; dactylus with long setae, reaching concavity of thoracic sternites 1–3. Male thoracic stenites 1/2 fused, stenite 3 demarcated from stenites 1/2 and 4, female thoracic stenites 1/ 2 and 3/4 fused respectively, both male and female thoracic stenites medially concave. Male third to sixth abdominal segments functionally fused.
Etymology.
The genus is named in memory of Mrs Pharadee (Gop) Uchuphab and Mr Kittisak Raksasri who perished when the Tsunami swept through the Ranong Coastal Research Station, Ranong Province,
Thailand
on
26 December 2004
. They are both missed, but still remembered. The name is an arbitrary combination of two first names and the gender is neuter.
Remarks.
Peter K.L. Ng
et al
. (2008) stated that
Asthenognathus gallardoi
Serène & Soh, 1976
should not be assigned to
Asthenognathus
, as it is markedly different from the
type
species (
A. inaequipes
) in the transversely more elongated elliptical shape of the carapace and the presence of the transverse ridges on the carapace (
Fig. 1
a, b;
Serène & Soh, 1976
: Fig. 28B, Pl. VIII A;
Ghani & Tirmizi, 1991
:
Fig. 1
A, B;
Jiang
et al
., 2007
:
Fig. 1
a). These morphological differences warrant that
A. gallardoi
should be placed in its own genus.
Gopkittisak
,
new genus
, is here established to accommodate
A. gallardoi
.
Systematic position of
G. gallardoi
is also problematic. Davie & N.K. Ng (2007) recently established the subfamily
Gaeticinae
for
Gaetice
Gistel, 1848
and
Sestrostoma
Davie & N.K. Ng, 2007
. The diagnostic characters of this subfamily are: 1) long setae for suspension feeding on the palp of the third maxilliped, 2) a longitudinal sulcus on the anterior segments of the sternum for the long setae of the palp of third maxilliped, and 3) fused third to sixth male abdominal segments. Among these characters,
G. gallardoi
share the long setae of the palp of the third maxilliped and the fused male abdominal segments (
Fig. 2
a;
Serène & Soh, 1976
: Fig. 28A;
Ghani & Tirmizi, 1991
:
Fig. 1
C, F;
Jiang
et al
., 2007
:
Fig. 1
d, e). Although
G. gallardoi
lacks the longitudinal sulcus on the anterior segments of the sternum, the anterior part of the sternum is gently concave so that the long setae can be accommodated. Furthermore,
Gaetice
and
Gopkittisak
share a markedly oblique border of the merus and ischium of the third maxilliped. The presence of these similar characters indicates that it is best to place
Gopkittisak
within
Gaeticinae
.
Paracleistostoma fossulum
Barnard, 1955
, also possesses the transverse ridges on the dorsal surface of the carapace (P.K.L. Ng
et al
., 2008: 229). The systematic position of
P. fossulum
is uncertain, however.
Barnard (1955)
placed it under
Ocypodidae
, but
Manning & Holthuis (1981: 209)
stated that" [
P. fossulum
is] certainly no
Paracleistostoma
and possibly not even an ocypodid". Peter K.L. Ng
et al
. (2008) argued that the chela and the third maxilliped of
P. fossulum
is unlikely that of any
Camptandriidae
, and they transferred it to the
Varunidae
, although they treated it as "Subfamily incertae sedis".
Gopkittisak gallardoi
is similar to
P. fossulum
in the presence of the dorsal ridges, but
G. gallardoi
can be differentiated from
P. fossulum
by the characters listed in Table 1.
Monod (1933)
described
Asthenogathus atlanticus
from Atlantic side of
Morocco
. The
holotype
of
A. atlanticus
possesses
Gopkittisak
-
type
of the third maxilliped, with oblique border between merus and ischium and long setae from dactylus (
Monod, 1933: Fig. 8A, B
). He described the male abdomen as 7-segmented, but it is not certain whether it is functionally fused or completely segmented. Further study may prove that
A. atlanticus
is indeed a member of
Gaeticinae
. In that case, a new genus is needed to accommodate
A. atlanticus
as it is different from other gaeticine genera. The taxonomic statuses of the specimens subsequently recorded as “
A. atlanticus
” are also unclear.
Monod (1956)
reported
6 specimens
of
A. atlanticus
from West Africa (
2 ♂
and 2 Ƥfrom
Mauritania
;
1 ♂
from
Senegal
; 1 Ƥ from the
Gold Coast
). Although at least the female specimen from the
Gold Coast
have a similar third maxilliped with the
holotype
of
A. atlanticus
(
Monod, 1956: Fig. 543
), the specimen from
Senegal
possesses a horizontal border between merus and ischium of third maxilluped (
Monod, 1956: Fig. 544
), which is same condition with
Asthenognathus
sensu stricto
. The
Senegal
specimens are more similar to
A. inaequipes
than to
A. hexagonum
in its shape of the carapace, but the ischium of the third maxilliped is shorter than that of
A. inaequipes
, suggesting that it is most probably an undescribed species. Moreover,
Bocquet (1963:
Fig. 1
)
recorded
A. atlanticus
from
France
, but it appears to be a different new species as it has relatively wider carapace and ambulatory meri (
Bocquet, 1963: 74, Fig. 7
).
Asthenognathus atlanticus
has also been recorded from various authors (see
Schmitt
et al
., 1973
;
Fransen, 1991
; d'Udekem
d'Acoz, 1999
). A taxonomic revision is necessary for the Atlantic
Asthenognathus
-like species.
TABLE 1.
Characters distinguishing
Gopkittisak gallardoi
from
Paracleistostoma fossulum
Barnard, 1955
.