The names of decapod and stomatopod Crustacea from Tahiti, French Polynesia, established by Anthony Curtiss in 1938 and 1944
Author
Ng, Peter K. L.
Author
Eldredge, Lucius G.
Author
Evenhuis, Neal L.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2011-11-16
3099
43
56
journal article
45981
10.5281/zenodo.206896
b4c7e4b1-cc25-42ef-91ae-a205918bf357
1175-5326
206896
Cancer hassoni
Curtiss, 1944
[
kouá
]
Alpheus parvirostris
Dana, 1852b: 22
.
Cancer hassoni
Curtiss, 1944: 29
–30
,
n. syn
.
Curtiss (1944: 630)
noted that “The Tahiti zebra shrimp … lives in the sea, among the coral … The first pair of legs are provided with pincers; the left one is larger than the right, and is shaped not much unlike that of the lobster of the North Atlantic … the body is transparent, the thorax having three black rings around it, and a broader one at the rear; the abdomen is also transparent with black rings around it. These black rings or bands cross the body, that is, they are vertical, and not lengthwise …. was seven-sixteenths of an inch in length” (
Curtiss 1944: 29–30
). The description of the chelipeds strongly suggests that
Cancer hassoni
is a species of snapping shrimp (
Alpheidae
). One very common and relatively small alpheid living in coral and coral rubble is known from Tahiti,
Alpheus parvirostris
Dana, 1852
, and its colour pattern agrees extremely well with Curtiss’s description (A. Anker, personal communication).