Reports on the results of the N. Oc. “ Prof. W. Besnard ” expeditions to the southern coast of Brazil under the Revizee Program: Chirostylidae and Galatheidae (Crustacea: Decapoda: Anomura)
Author
De, Gustavo A. S.
Author
Melo-Filho
text
Zootaxa
2006
1238
1
22
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.172833
9495bafa-1e3f-4a15-a2d0-97f6f1d28861
11755326
172833
Munida iris
A. MilneEdwards, 1880
?
Munida caribaea
Stimpson, 1860
: 244
.
Munida iris
A. MilneEdwards, 1880
: 49
;
A. MilneEdwards & Bouvier, 1894
: 256
; 1897: 21, pl. 2, figs. 2–7; 1900: 285;
Benedict, 1902
: 310
;
Chace, 1942
: 33
; 1956: 15;
Springer & Bullis, 1956
: 15
;
Bullis & Thompson, 1965
: 9
;
Pequegnat & Pequegnat, 1970
: 131
;
Coelho & Ramos, 1972
: 171
; Williams & Wigley, 1977: 9, figs. 1, 2, tab. 1;
Coelho; RamosPorto & Calado, 1986
: 137
, 140, 149;
Takeda, 1983
: 89
;
Lemaitre, 1984
: 427
, tab. 1;
Poupin, 1994
: 35
;
EscobarBriones & Soto, 1993
: 111
, tabs. 1, 2;
MeloFilho, 1998
: 394
;
Melo, 1999
: 188
, figs. 117, 118 a–e; Melo
Filho, 1999
: 395
, fig. 11;
MeloFilho & Melo 2001a
: 1184
, fig. 6; 2001b: 1150, figs. 16, 17; 2001c: 45.
?
Munida caribaea
. —
Smith, 1881
: 428
; 1883: 40, pl. 3, fig. 11; 1884: 355; 1886: 643. [
non
Munida caribaea
A. MilneEdwards & Bouvier, 1894
: 256
; 1897: 25 (=
Munida irrasa
A. MilneEdwards, 1880
)].
Munida
sp. Indet. —
Smith, 1882
: 22
, pl. 10, fig. 1.
Munida iris rutllanti
ZariquieyAlvarez, 1952
: 217
, fig. 8
Munida iris iris
. —
Wenner & Boech, 1979
: 110
, tab. 1; Wenner, 1982: 322;
Williams, 1984
: 233
, fig. 168;
Abele & Kim, 1986
: 35
, figs. d, e, 403.
Munida rutllanti
. —
GarcíaRazo, 1996
: 738
.
Material examined
EUA: New
England
— USS “Fish Hawk”, est.
871, 207m
, 5 ex. (MNHN969).
Brazil
: São Paulo — N.Oc. “Prof. W. Besnard”, st.
6684, 511 m
, 1 ex. (
MZUSP
13206).
Recognition characters
Carapace with margins arched. Outer orbital spine followed by 6 lateral spines. Gastric area with epigastric row of spines. One parahepatic spine on each side of carapace. Branchial areas armed with 1 or 2 spines on each side. One to 3 postcervical spines on each side, with or without inserted spinules. Remainder of carapace unarmed. Supraocular spines long. Abdominal tergite 2 with anterior margin armed with 1 pair of spines. Remaining abdominal tergites unarmed. Peduncle of antennule with inner terminal spine little longer than outer spine. Peduncle of antenna with segment 1 (basis) armed with 1 inner terminal spine, segment 2 with 1 inner terminal spine and 1 outer terminal spine and segment 3 armed with 1 inner terminal spine. Third maxilliped with long spine on ventral (flexor) margin of merus. Sternum with armed margins.
Distribution
Western Atlantic: Virginia, Carolinas, Gulf of
Mexico
(southeast coast),
Cuba
(north coast), Cay Sal Banks, Lesser Antilles (
Barbados
),
Mexico
(off Cozumel),
Guiana
,
Brazil
(Alagoas, São Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul) and
Uruguay
(north of the Rio de la Plata). E astern Atlantic: Gulf of Cadiz, Canaries, African Coast (
Western Sahara
,
Mauritania
),
Cape Verde
Islands. Western Mediterranean (
Spain
,
Morocco
); 45–1303 meters depth, though usually between 200 and 400 meters.
Remarks
Munida iris
is similar to
M. irrasa
, differing from it in the larger adult, armed second abdominal tergite, and the presence of one spine on the ventral (flexor) margin of the merus of the third maxilliped. Following
ZariquieyAlvarez (1952)
, most authors treated the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean populations of
M. iris
as a subspecies (
M. iris rutllanti
). GarcíaRaso (1996), without presenting justifications, treated
M. iris rutllanti
as
M. rutllanti
. The populations of the Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic are not isolated, since the Strait of
Gibraltar
does not seem to be an effective boundary for most decapods (Almaça 1985;
MeloFilho 1997
).
Munida iris
is a species with an amphiAtlantic pattern of distribution. That pattern is possible, according to the model of
Scheltema (1966
,
1968
&
1971
), by means of larval transport through the North Atlantic. This also occurs in other species of the genus (
M. microphthalma
A. MilneEdwards
and
M. sanctipauli
Henderson
). The material examined establishes the first record of
M. iris
off the São Paulo coast.