Revision of the family Euryplacidae Stimpson, 1871 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Goneplacoidea)
Author
CASTRO, PETER
Author
NG, PETER K. L.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2010-02-26
2375
1
1
130
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2375.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.2375.1.1
1175-5326
6282702
Eucrate formosensis
Sakai, 1974
(
Figs. 2E, F
;
8A–F
;
14J–L
)
Eucrate formosensis
Sakai, 1974: 94
[
Taiwan
]. —
Ng
et al
. 2008: 78
[in list].
Eucrate alcocki
—
Sakai 1976: 535
[in key], 536, pl. 192, fig. 2 [
Taiwan
]. —
Ng
et al
. 2001: 34
[discussion], fig.
7g
[colour] [
Taiwan
]. — Hsueh & Huang 2001: 130 [in key], 132, figs. 8G, 16 [
Taiwan
]. (not
Eucrate alcocki
Serène
, in
Serène & Lohavanijaya, 1973
)
Eucrate crenata
—
Shen & Jeng 2005: 150
, 152, colour photographs [
Taiwan
]. [not
Eucrate crenata
(De Haan, 1835)
]
Type
material.
Unknown. No specimens of
E. formosensis
Sakai, 1974
, are listed as part of T. Sakai’s material deposited at the
Kanagawa
Perfectural Museum (
Muraoka 1998
) or at the Forschunginstitut Senckenberg, Frankfurt, so it is probable that the
type
material is no longer extant.
Type
locality.
Taiwan
,
Kaoshiung County
.
Material examined.
Taiwan
.
Kaoshiung County
,
Tung-Kang
fishing port,
P. K. L. Ng
coll.,
05.08.1996
:
2 females
,
13.6 mm
×
15.9 mm
,
22.2 mm
×
27.1 mm
(
ZRC 1993.739
)
.
Taichung
County
,
Wuchi
fishing port,
gill net
,
15 m
,
06.12.1991
:
1 male
,
22.9 mm
×
28.3 mm
(
ZRC 2008.1355
)
.
Penghu
Bay, Y. L
. Shen coll.,
6.10.2007
:
1 male
,
19.8 mm
×
24.1 mm
(ASIZ-74623)
.
Diagnosis.
Third anterolateral tooth absent or reduced as slight elevation, carapace with relatively long posterolateral borders (
Figs. 2E
;
8A, B
). P5 propodus slender (
Figs. 2E, F
;
8A, B
). Small red-brown dots through most of carapace (
Fig. 2E
), larger spots in juveniles (
Fig. 2F
).
Remarks.
Eucrate formosensis
was described as a new species mostly on account of its unique colour pattern (
Sakai 1974: 94
). Although it was distinguished by Sakai from
E. sexdentata
, with which it shares the general shape of the carapace, and
E. dorsalis
, the colour pattern of the new species was the only reliable way to identify it.
FIGURE 8.
Eucrate formosensis
Sakai, 1974
; A, C–F, male (19.8 mm × 24.1 mm) (ASIZ-74623), Taiwan, Penghu; B, female (22.2 mm × 27.1 mm) (ZRC 1993.739), Taiwan, Kaohsiung. A, B, overall views; C, anterior portion of male thoracic sternum and abdomen; D, posterior portion of male thoracic sternum and abdomen; E, frontal view showing orbits and antennae; F, outer surface of right chela.
No differences were found in the morphology of the G1 of the three species. The G1 of
E. formosensis
(
Fig. 14J, K
) and
E. dorsalis
(
Fig. 14G, H
) were described by
Sakai (1976: 537)
as being slender and thin along the anterior half of their lengths, in contrast to that of
E. sexdentata
(
Fig. 15D, E
), where it was described as slender and thin only along the anterior third. Examination of the G1 of several specimens of the three species did not show any reliable differences.
Sakai (1976)
could not find any morphological differences between
E. formosensis
and
E. alcocki
and placed his species in synonymy with the later (see
Ng
et al
. 2001: 34
). Both species are indeed morphologically very similar but the colour pattern of
E. formosensis
, small red-brown spots throughout most of the carapace and chelipeds (
Fig. 2E, F
), is different from that of
E. alcocki
(
Fig. 2C
). We opt to retain
E. formosensis
as a distinct species as originally described by Sakai until additional material is collected and/or DNA analysis is carried out.
The whereabouts of the
holotype
of
E. formosensis
is unknown (see above). The only type specimen was collected by T. Watabe of the Manazuru Marine Laboratory (
Sakai 1974: 94
) and it is possible that the specimen was returned to the collector. Although we believe the type is probably no longer extant, we also do not see an urgent need to select a
neotype
as the species is not known outside Taiwanese waters, and fresh specimens cannot be mistaken for any other species owing to their distinct coloration.
Colour pattern.
Small red-brown dots throughout at least the anterior half of the carapace (
Fig. 2E
;
Sakai 1976
: pl. 192, fig. 2 [colour];
Ng
et al
. 2001
: fig.
7g
;
Shen & Jeng 2005: 150
, 152, [colour photographs], as
E. crenata
). The dots remain visible for a relatively long time in specimens preserved in alcohol.
Li Kuan-Xin from the Peikuan Crab Museum in northern
Taiwan
gave the second author a photograph (
Fig. 2F
) of an unidentified
Eucrate
species
collected off Tahsi, Ilan Province, which we believe is
E. formosensis
. Unfortunately, the specimen was not preserved after it died in an aquarium. The dense pattern of similarly sized spots on the specimen, which was about
1.5 cm
in carapace width, is characteristic of
E. formosensis
. We are of the opinion that the spots get proportionately smaller as the specimen grows in size, eventually developing into the finely spotted pattern seen in adults (
Fig. 2E
). The absence of larger spots on the carapace of the small Taiwanese specimen argues against it being
E. alcocki
.
Distribution.
Only known from
Taiwan
thus far. Depth: shallow subtidal to at least
15 m
.