Recent collections of sea spiders (Arthropoda: Pycnogonida) from China seas, with some new records and a checklist of the area
Author
Wang, Jianjia
Author
Lin, Heshan
Author
Huang, Dingyong
Author
Zheng, Xinqing
Author
Liu, Qinghe
Author
Wang, Jianjun
Author
Niu, Wentao
Author
Zhang, Feng
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-06-23
4802
2
361
373
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4802.2.9
1175-5326
3907600
0217F11A-9F04-4029-850B-C85CF13ED72A
Paranymphon spinosum
Caullery 1896
(
Fig. 2-i
)
Paranymphon spinosum
Caullery, 1896: 361–362
, pl. 12: figs. 1–6;
Hedgpeth, 1948: 253
, fig. 41;
Stock, 1978: 204–205
, fig. 5d–g;
Nakamura and Child, 1983: 38
;
Bamber, 1983: 69
, fig. 3 (B);
Stock, 1986: 413
[text], fig. 4;
Hong and Kim, 1987: 149–150
, figs. 8, 9;
Child, 1992: 8
(key), 9 (table), 31–33, fig. 14;
Bamber and Thurston, 1995: 129
(key), 132.
Material examined
Male
(TIO2016DH0501),
East
China
Sea
,
28.41°N
123.67°E
,
79 m
depth
,
12 Dec. 2016
; Male (TIO2019Y1101), Xiamen,
Fujian
,
China
,
24.50°N
118.28°E
,
0.6 m
depth
,
1 Jun. 2019
,
Yaqin Huang
&
Kun Liu
.
Distribution
This species was usually collected from the North Atlantic, but had also been reported in the Northwest Pacific, including the Western Yellow Sea, Western Kyushu and Eastern Honshu (
Nakamura & Child, 1991
). Our specimens extended the species distribution to the Southwest Pacific.
Remarks
There were just four species in genus
Paranymphon
(
Bamber
et al.
2020
)
, and the characteristics for determining and distinguishing them were distinctive.
P
.
spinosum
was very similar to
P. magnidigitatum
Hong & Kim, 1987
with larger chela fingers and two tubercles on the first coxa, and could be easily distinguished with the other two speices,
P. filarium
Stock 1986
and
P. bifilarium
Arango, 2009
which shared the presence of long filiform spurs (
Arango 2009
).
The stellate spines of lateral processes agreed with illustrations of
P. magnidigitatum
(Fig. 10c in
Hong & Kim 1987
) and were different from the Stock’s figures for
P
.
spinosum
(Fig.
5g
in
Stock 1978
). The formula of compound spines on the terminal oviger articles was 4: 4: 1: 1, and slightly different from the illustrations in
Hong & Kim (1987)
which was 4: 4: 2: 1. The swelling of the second palp article was present on the lateral surface (
Fig. 2-i
), and different from the figure in
Hong & Kim (1987
, Fig. 8b) which appeared in ventral view. The third article, slightly longer than the second one, was the longest palp article.
Stock (1978)
described
P. spinosum
as “a variable species” and supposed the variations depend on the age, and also found the differences between the materials from the West Indian and the
type
location, the Bay of Biscay (
Stock 1986
). Given the lack of significant differences and the variations in this species, we consider that this specimens should be temporarily attributed to
P. spinosum
.