Annotated and updated checklist of marine crabs (Decapoda: Brachyura) of Mozambique supported by morphological and molecular data from shelf and slope species of the “ MOZAMBIQUE ” surveys
Author
Muñoz, Isabel
0000-0003-1055-0754
eli.munoz@ieo.es
Author
García-Isarch, Eva
0000-0003-3027-382X
eva.garcia@ieo.es
Author
Cuesta, Jose A.
0000-0001-9482-2336
jose.cuesta@icman.csic.es
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-10-19
5056
1
1
67
journal article
3930
10.11646/zootaxa.5056.1.1
6e7f4e75-9f6c-43d8-bd88-4ceb637afe60
1175-5326
5577887
D20A249C-1CA4-45F8-8677-D2011A8380A4
Charybdis (Goniohellenus) smithii
MacLeay, 1838
(
Figures 14F
,
16
)
Material examined.
M08, Stn.
76, 222m
,
♂
64×
44.6mm
(IEO-CD-MZ08/1794-1), 16S (
MZ
424974
)
,
COI (
MZ
434822
)
;
♂
58×
40.7mm
(IEO-CD-MZ08/1794-2), 16S (
MZ
424975
)
,
COI (
MZ
434822
)
.
Habitat and distribution.
Charybdis smithii
is a semi-pelagic species that spends a considerable part of its life in the water column (Turkay & Spiridonov 2006), extending its pelagic habitat from the mixed layer to upper mesopelagic waters (
Romanov
et al
. 2009
) at depths between 60 and
450m
.
It is distributed along the western and northern Indian Ocean, from off
South Africa
,
Madagascar
,
Somalia
,
Seychelles
,
Maldives
, Saya de Malha, Gulf of Aden, Red Sea, Bay of Bengal (
Apel & Spiridonov 1998
;
Turkey
& Spiridonov 2006), although most of the crabs are found in the western basin of the Indian Ocean (Romanov
et al
. 2008).
C. smithii
is common in the pelagic provinces of the western Indian Ocean, where they are driven to, by the wind monsoon regime. Based on the nutritive value determined for this species,
Kumar
et al.
(2019)
raised the possibility of its potential exploitation as a commercial resource.
Results and remarks.
These
two male
specimens agree well with the descriptions and figures in
Apel & Spiridonov (1998)
and
Turkey
& Spiridonov (2006). They were collected during the 2008 survey at
222m
depth. This is the first record of
C. smithii
off
Mozambique
. Ng & Takeda (1999) reported that two closely allied species,
C. smithii
and
Charybdis omanensis
, differ in many morphometric and gonopodal characters. Türkay & Spiridonov (2006) reviewed the deep-water species belonging to
Charybdis
subgenus
Goniohellenus
, and described a new subspecies,
C. (G.) omanensis septentrionalis
Türkay & Spiridonov, 2006
restricted to the central and southern Red Sea and further extended to the Arabian Sea and
India
(Josileen
et al.
2018). The diagnostic characters used for the identification of our specimens as
C. smithii
instead the subspecies
C. omanensis septentrionalis
, based on Türkay & Spiridonov (2006) are: posterolateral angles of the carapace nearly rounded instead almost forming a right-angle, as described for
C. omanensis septentrionalis
(see
Figure 16A
); the carapace not densely pilose and without the frontal patches of granules neither protogastrics areas with short bands of three–four lines of granules described for
C. omanensis septentrionalis
; tips of G1 of the
two males
are not twisted downwards as they are for
C. omanensis septentrionalis
(
Apel & Spiridonov 1998
)
(see
Figures 16B,C
).
FIGURE 16.
Charybdis smithii
♂, IEO-CD-MZ08/1794-1. A, Carapace (Scale bar: 1cm); B,C, G1 (Scale bars: 1mm).
Colouration observed.
Both male specimens were reddish, with smooth carapace without granular patches, as described by Turkay & Spiridonov (2006). The tubercles on the chelipeds were dark red. Some irregular white spots were bordering the upper zone of the epibranchial region, with the shape of a semicircle. This colour pattern was not described by
Apel & Spiridonov (1998)
or
Turkey
& Spiridonov (2006). The finger tips were deep brown. After preservation in ethanol, the specimens turned to beige with some pinkish patches, the finger tips remaining brown.
DNA barcodes.
The 16S and the COI sequences of the
two specimens
present the same haplotypes that fits 100% with the 16S and COI sequences of
C. smithii
(
KX
060404
,
KX060191
) from the same specimen (MNHB27685) from
Oman
(
Negri
et al
. 2018
). However, also de COI sequences fit 100% with the three sequences of
C. omanensis septentrionalis
(
KY
651228
-
KY651230
) uploaded to Genbank by Josileen
et al
. (unpublished).