Nematocarcinus Milne Edwards, 1881 (Crustacea, Decapoda) from Southwestern Atlantic, including the Southern Mid-Atlantic Ridge area
Author
Cardoso, Irene A.
Author
Burukovsky, Rudolf N.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3887
3
437
458
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3887.4.3
e023892e-777b-4516-9172-bda52809531a
1175-5326
229361
870D25CE-9C00-4D63-B4B4-077253C4DC6F
Nematocarcinus rotundus
Crosnier & Forest, 1973
(
Figures 5–7
)
(to synonymy before 1973 see
Crosnier & Forest, 1973
: 105)
Nematocarcinus rotundus
—
Wenner, 1979
: 380
;
Takeda & Okutani, 1983
: 53
;
Squires, 1990
: 105
;
Burukovsky, 2001b
: 1440
; 2003: 144; 2004: 558; 2012: 173.
Material examined.
Oceanprof I: A–12,
22o12´S
/
39o47´W
,
1640 m
,
1 female
(10.93),
MNRJ
23449.
Habitats. Hab 12,
22o13'S
/
39o53'W
,
978 m
,
1 female
(20.9),
MNRJ
21777; Hab 13,
21o40'S
/
39o57'W
,
989 m
,
2 females
(25.3–28.3),
MNRJ
21779; Hab 13,
21o40'S
/
39o57'W
,
989 m
,
6 males
(17.9–23.2),
12 females
(27.05–29.59), 20 ovigerous females (24.8–30.0),
MNRJ
21781; Hab 14,
21o6'S
/
40o8'W
,
990 m
,
1 female
(29.0), 2 ovigerous females (25.0–29.9),
MNRJ
21780; Hab 14,
21o6'S
/
40o8'W
,
990m
,
2 males
(20.1, 20.7),
13 females
(23.0–28.8), 6 ovigerous females (25.9–30.9),
MNRJ
21782; Hab 14,
21o6'S
/
40o8'W
,
990 m
,
9 males
(21.0–23.6),
28 females
(18.2–31.6), 12 ovigerous females (23.3–29.3),
MNRJ
21752; Hab 62,
23o9'S
/
40o50'W
,
1244 m
,
1 male
(21.3),
2 females
(19.2–24.0),
MNRJ
21744.
REVIZEE: D–0503,
19o39’S
/
38o38’W
,
740 m
,
1 female
(19.6), 2 ovigerous females (24.2–24.7),
MNRJ
23450; D–0504,
19o42’S
/
38o36’W
,
278 m
, 2 ovigerous females (23.1, 24.2),
MNRJ
23451; D–0505
19o43’S
/
38o38’W
,
1089 m
, 1 sex not identified (19.4),
MNRJ
23452; D–0506,
19o42’S
/
38o36’W
,
1067 m
,
1 male
(21.7), 2 ovigerous female (23.3–23.6),
MNRJ
23453; E–0499,
13o23´S
/
38o37´W
,
761 m
,
2 males
(16.6–17.5),
4 females
(19.1–23.2), 1 ovigerous female (24.2),
MNRJ
14710; E–0503,
14o37´S
/
38o42´W
,
740 m
,
9 females
(16.3–19.1),
MNRJ
14711; E–0506,
14o36’S
/
38o49’W
,
1067 m
,
14 males
(19.0–24.4),
34 females
(18.9–24.7),
MNRJ
14726; E–0507,
15o08’S
/
38o40’W
,
1026 m
,
11 males
(18.7–23.0),
21 females
(20.2–31.0), 3 ovigerous females (24.5–26.9),
MNRJ
14723; E–0517,
13o22’S
/
38o36’W
,
750 m
,
1 male
(17.3),
5 females
(17.7–21.3),
MNRJ
14713; E–0519,
13o19’S
/
38o19’W
,
1730 m
,
1 male
(18.1),
2 females
(19.0, 24.3),
MNRJ
14718; E–0520,
13o21’S
/
38o16’W
,
2137 m
,
1 female
(24.8),
MNRJ
14717; E–0522,
13º30´S
/
38º38´W
,
1144 m
,
1 male
(18.9),
23 females
(22.5–26.8),
MNRJ
14708; E–0523,
19o42´S
/
38o32´W
,
922 m
,
4 females
(25.4–26.4), 6 ovigerous females (24.4–26.8),
MNRJ
14719; E–0524,
19o43’S
/
38o39’W
,
925 m
,
1 female
(29.5), 6 ovigerous females (24.2–29.7),
MNRJ
14721; E–0527,
19o50’S
/
39o10’W
,
1402 m
,
1 male
(20.7),
2 females
(23.2–24.1),
MNRJ
14704; E–0528,
19o45’S
/
39o03’W
,
1237 m
,
3 males
(20.8–22.8),
MNRJ
14702; E–0535,
19o58'S
/
39o35'W
,
1002 m
,
4 females
(18.2–25.3), 10 ovigerous females (23.4–32.4),
MNRJ
14714; E–0547,
21o46´S
/
39o40´W
,
1799 m
,
1 female
(24.2),
MNRJ
14697.
Description.
Body moderately slender; integument moderately soft, fragile, but not membranous, surface smooth, shiny. Rostrum horizontal, usually reaching second antennular peduncle segment distal margin; rostrum 3–4.4 times shorter than carapace (
Figs. 5
A, B; 6A); distance from rostrum apex to the rostrum distal dorsal tooth is usually similar than that between the remaining rostrum dorsal teeth (
Fig. 5
A, B); rostrum dorsal margin (including postrostral crest) with 10–16 (usually 12–15) teeth; rostrum ventral margin with one well-defined tooth lying in the region of the rostrum under the distal dorsal tooth or slightly ahead of it (
Figs. 5
A, B; 6A).
Eyes normally developed its width larger than the diameter of the eye stalk.
Posterodorsal margin of third abdominal somite poorly developed, rounded. Continuation of its sides when crossing forms an angle close to 120° (
Figs. 5
C, 6B). Fifth abdominal somite pleura widely rounded, without spine or with a poorly developed spine, its sides intersecting at an angle of almost 120° (
Figs. 5
D, 6C, 7A) and their inner sides without tubercles or rolls.
First pereopod merus unarmed, ischium with 2 spines. Second to fourth pereopods merus with one spine. Fifth pereopod merus unarmed.
Distoventral organ at sixth abdominal somite formed by two single parallel rows of long plumose setae, relatively widely spaced, usually extending to anterior margin of spots (
Figs. 6
D; 7B, C); each spot located on a well-pronounced elevation with relatively sharp back and sloping front edges; spots widely oval, about 2 times longer than wide, distance between them similar to the spots width (
Figs. 6
D; 7B–D).
Telson with 6–8 (usually 7–8) pairs of dorsolateral spines; with one accessory spine (
Figs. 6
A, 7E).
Distribution.
At the Western Atlantic Ocean four regions of
N. rotundus
occurrence can be distinguished (
Burukovsky 2001b
;
2012
) (
Fig. 11
). The first region is in the North Atlantic between Long Island and Chesapeake Bay (at depths from
783 to 1960 m
, mostly from
1000 to1500
m
). The second region is between the Northwestern
Bahamas
archipelago and the south of Florida (at depths from
686 to 1875 m
, usually deeper than
1000 m
). The third region is in the Northern Gulf of
Mexico
(at depths from
421 to 1629m
). The fourth region was mentioned by
Takeda & Okutani (1983)
and
Gueguen (1995)
that also found
N. rotundus
in
French Guiana
(07°N/53°W, at
500–1000 m
depth). Herein a fifth region was reconised, the
South Atlantic from off Bahia to Rio de Janeiro states,
Brazil
(at depths from
603 to 960 m
).
Remarks.
Comparing Southwestern Atlantic material with
Burukovsky (2001b
;
2012
) data we observed that most of its features fits very well with that mentioned to
N. rotundus
, as follows: the rostrum length and the number of dorsal teeth; the third abdominal somite dorsal margin and the fifth abdominal somite pleura; at distoventral organ the spots are located on a well-pronounced elevation and the distance between them is similar to the spots width, and the presence of one pair of accessory setae on telson. Some features however present small differences from that observed by
Burukovsky (2001b
;
2012
) as the position of rostrum ventral tooth; spots length and beginning of setae rows at distoventral organ (
Fig. 7
C, D).
Three
Nematocarcinus
species present the fifth abdominal somite with widely rounded pleura (pleura sides intersecting at an angle of almost 120°) and a spine poorly developed or absent:
N. challengeri
Burukovsky, 2006
;
N. kaiensis
Burukovsky, 2000
and
N. rotundus
Crosnier & Forest, 1973
(
Burukovsky 2000b
;
2001b
;
2006b
).
Nematocarcinus rotundus
inhabit in the Western Atlantic,
N. kaiensis
in the Indo-West Pacific (between
13°39'N
–
09°33'S
/120°36'–
133°59'W
, at depths from
200 to 1150 m
) and
N. challengeri
is known for a single specimen with strongly damaged rostrum sampled at Pacific Ocean (
37°49'N
/
166°47'W
, at
5477m
, the deepest record of the genus).
Nematocarcinus rotundus
and
N. kaiensis
can be distinguished by the rostrum shape (
Burukovsky 2000b
). In
N. kaiensis
it is like a sharp blade, raised obliquely upwards (
Burukovsky 2000b
), while in
N. rotundus
it is horizontal, lower than in
N. kaiensis
, with its ventral tooth pushed back a little further from the rostrum tip, and as a rule, it is directed straight ahead and not curved upwards, like in
N. kaiensis
(
Burukovsky 2001b
)
.
Nematocarcinus challengeri
can be distinguished by the absence of spine on the fifth abdominal somite pleura while it is present, instead poorly developed (or absent in few specimens), in the other two species. The form of rostrum in
N. chellengeri
is not known.
Nematocarcinus rotundus
and
N. kaiensis
present a short rostrum, and considering the proximity between the three species probably
N. challengeri
presents also a short rostrum.