New records and description of two new species of carideans shrimps from Bahia Santa Maria-La Reforma lagoon, Gulf of California, Mexico (Crustacea, Caridea, Alpheidae and Processidae)
Author
Salgado-Barragan, Jose
Author
Ayon-Parente, Manuel
Author
Zamora-Tavares, Pilar
text
ZooKeys
2017
671
131
153
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.671.9081
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.671.9081
1313-2970-671-131
9742DC49F9254B4BB44017354BDDB4B5
9742DC49F9254B4BB44017354BDDB4B5
Leptalpheus melendezensis
sp. n.
Figs 6, 7, 8, 9
Material examined.
Holotype: Male (CL 4.1 mm),
Melendez
Island, Santa
Maria-La
Reforma, Sinaloa, Mexico,
24°48'07"N
,
108°03'22.3"W
, sand, 0.2 m at low tide, January 18, 2015, (EMU-10582). Paratype: 1 male (CL 2.9 mm), same data as holotype, (EMU-10583).
Diagnosis.
Frontal margin of carapace broadly rounded, weakly produced, without dorsal crests. Antenna with carpocerite longer than scaphocerite, slightly shorter than antennular peduncle. Major
cheliped
slender; ischium armed with strong ventromesial spine directed upward; fingers slightly twisted laterally, not gaping when closed; without adhesive discs; dactylus with strong proximal tooth on cutting edge, tip acute, crossing distally with tip of pollex; propodus of pereopods 3 and 4 with two ventral spines; propodus of fifth pereopod with two distal rows of setae on ventral margin.
Description.
Frontal margin of carapace (Fig. 6A) broadly rounded, obtuse, weakly produced, carapace smooth, without dorsal crests or carina; eyestalks with anteromesial margin rounded.
Antennular peduncles (Fig. 6A) moderately stout, flattened dorsoventrally; second article longer than broad; stylocerite appressed, not reaching distal margin of first article of the antennular peduncle; ventromesial carina (Fig. 6C) terminating in an upward curving tooth projected beyond the carina; lateral flagellum with two articles.
Figure 6.
Leptalpheus melendezensis
sp. n. Holotype male, CL 4.1 mm (EMU10582); A anterior portion of carapace and cephalic appendages, dorsal view B right antenna, lateral view C tooth on ventromesial carina of first segment of antennular peduncle, mesial view D third maxilliped E second pleopod F detail of masculina and internal appendix G telson, dorsal view H left uropod, dorsal view. Scale bars A, B 1 mm; C, E 0.2 mm; D, G, H 0.5 mm.
Antenna (Fig. 6B) with stout basicerite bearing strong distoventral tooth. Scaphocerite (Fig. 6A, B) ovate, with acute distolateral tooth reaching beyond the anterior margin of blade, blade with mesial margin curved; carpocerite longer than scaphocerite, slightly shorter than antennular peduncle.
Mouthparts not dissected, typical for genus in external view. Third maxilliped (Fig. 6D) with lateral plate on coxa produced upward, not reaching the distal margin of the branchiae; ultimate article with rows of brush-like setae increasing in size distally; exopod longer than first article.
Major
cheliped
(Fig. 7
A-D
) slender; ischium armed with strong ventromesial spine directed upward; merus slender, with concave depression along ventral margin, ventral
margin
minutely granulated; carpus short, cup-shaped, dorsally convex, with two distoventral processes, the external blunt and the mesial tooth-like;
chela
robust, longer than merus; palm 2.5 times as long as fingers, ventrally depressed, narrowing distally, ventral margin with sparse tubercles, dorsal margin smooth; without adhesive discs; fingers slightly twisted laterally, not gaping when closed; pollex with proximal half ventrally deflexed, outer cutting edge (Fig. 7C) armed with two teeth, distal stronger, mesial margin with proximoventral low tubercle and a shallowly excavated projection along proximal two thirds, tip acute, directed upward; dactylus noticeably curved, dorsum smooth, cutting edge with strong proximal tooth, tip acute, crossing distally with tip of pollex.
Figure 7.
Leptalpheus melendezensis
sp. n. Holotype male, CL 4.1 mm (EMU-10582); A
major
first pereopod, outer view B same, inner view C detail of distal portion of same
cheliped
, outer view D same, inner view E minor first pereopod, outer view F detail of same
cheliped
, outer view. Scale bars A, B 1 mm;
C-F
0.5 mm.
Minor cheliped
(Fig. 7E, F) with segments unarmed; merus almost as long as
chela
; carpus short; fingers pointing, slightly longer than palm, median portion of cutting edges armed with 4-5 small, irregularly spaced teeth, tips crossing distally.
Second pereopod (Fig. 8A) unarmed; ischium 0.75 as long as merus; merus shorter than carpus; carpus 5-articulated, articles ratio from proximal to distal approximately 6:2:2:1:4; distal portion of
chela
with long setae.
Third and fourth pereopods (Fig. 8B, C) similar, compressed; third pereopod slightly longer and stouter than fourth, merus slightly longer than combined length of carpus and propodus, ventrodistal margin of carpus with ventrodistal spine, propodus with 2 spines on median and distal ventral margin and sparse long setae along margins; dactylus curve, slender, acute distally, nearly half as long as propodus.
Fifth pereopod (Fig. 8D) slender, not compressed, ventral margin of propodus with 1 median spiniform seta and distal margin with two rows of setae, distalmost larger; dactylus acute, curved.
Figure 8.
Leptalpheus melendezensis
sp. n. Holotype male, CL 4.1 mm (EMU-10582); A second pereopod, lateral view B third pereopod, lateral view C fourth pereopod, lateral view D fifth pereopod, lateral view. Scale bar 0.5 mm.
Male second pleopod (Fig. 6E) with slender appendix masculina, with two subterminal and four terminal setae; appendix interna 0.75 length of appendix masculina (Fig. 6F).
Telson (Fig. 6G) widest in proximal third, slightly tapering distally, dorsal surface with two pairs of strong spines inserted in deep pits close to lateral margins, posterior margin rounded, with two pairs of spiniform setae at posterolateral angles, lateral one much shorter than mesial one, posterior margin with 4 plumose setae.
Uropod (Fig. 6H) with lateral lobe of protopod ending in two small lobes; exopod with posterodistal margin straight, deeply incised, with a large spine near mesial margin.
Habitat.
Sandy beach, associated with burrows of
N. tabogensis
.
Distribution.
Known only from
Melendez
Island,
Bahia
Santa
Maria-La
Reforma, Sinaloa, Mexico.
Etymology.
The name of the species is derived from
Melendez
Island, the type locality.
Remarks.
Leptalpheus melendezensis
sp. n. seemed to be related to
L. mexicanus
because the general plan of
major
cheliped
of both species is similar; they both have a curved, slender merus, short carpus and ventrally depressed manus, narrowing distally, with sparse ventral tubercles and convex dactylus with a strong proximal tooth. However, a detailed analysis reveals differences between the species. The ischium of the
major
cheliped
in
L. melendezensis
sp. n. bears a noticeable ventromesial spine, while in
L. mexicanus
it is absent; pollex and dactylus of the
major
cheliped
do not gape in the new species but form a wide open gape in
L. mexicanus
; the pollex of the
major
cheliped
in
L. mexicanus
is ventrally convex and spoon-shaped at distal end, whereas in the new species it is ventrally concave, with a lateral projection along proximal two
thirds
and acute at its distal end. Other differences are that the carapace of
L. mexicanus
has an acute, carinate triangular rostrum and two small orbital crests above the eyes, whereas in
L. melendezensis
sp. n. the carapace has a blunt, scarcely projected rostrum without a median carina and without supraocular crests; the tooth on the antennular ventromesial carina is more anteriorly projected in the new species; the propodus of pereopods 3 and 4 of
L. melendezensis
sp. n. bears only two ventral spines as opposed to three in
L. mexicanus
; and the fifth pereopod has two distal rows of setae instead of four as in
L. mexicanus
.
Leptalpheus melendezensis
sp. n. is the eighth species assigned to the genus in the eastern Pacific and the fourth recorded from the Pacific coasts of Mexico, and is the
only
eastern Pacific species of
Leptalpheus
that presents a
major
cheliped
without adhesive disks and isquium armed with a ventromesial spine.
Phylogenetic relationships.
The 16S matrix of
Leptalpheus
molecular data consisted of 688 characters. This relationship had a bootstrap support of 64 (Fig. 9). Also an insertion of five base pairs (TATTT) was identified which was not found in other
Leptalpheus
sequences.
Figure 9. ML tree for
Leptalpheus
16S sequences. Numbers in the nodes are 1000 bootstrap iterations result values.
The phylogenetic analysis presented here is a partial contribution to establish a phylogeny of the genus due to the almost total absence of genetic information from other species described in previous works, however this approach and morphological analysis provide sufficient information to recognize that
L. melendezensis
represent a species new to science.