The Pinnotheridae of the northeastern Pacific (Alaska to Mexico): zoogeographical remarks and new bivalve hosts (Crustacea, Brachyura, Pinnotheridae)
Author
Campos, Ernesto
text
Zootaxa
2016
4170
2
311
329
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4170.2.5
b4090041-70f8-471a-9457-33057c9f6dfa
1175-5326
265679
ABA0F247-BE66-474F-9905-708E78AEB7EB
Opisthopus transversus
Rathbun, 1893
(
Figs. 3
F–I, 4A–D)
Material examined and new hosts.
1 female
,
Nov. 2014
, from commercial catches,
Ensenada
shellfish market, collected in
Punta Colonet
,
Ensenada
,
Baja
California
,
Mexico
(
30°57'43.65"N
,
116°19'22.44"W
) in
Tivela stultorum
.
FIGURE 1.
A–C, E,
Fabia subquadrata
Dana, 1851
from Todos Santos Bay, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico: A, Female dorsal view, carapace width 6.7 mm; B–C, third maxilliped of female, carapace width 18.3 mm, inner and outer view respectively; F, male abdomen, carapace width 9.5 mm, dots indicate the area covered by setae. D–E,
F. c o nc h ar u m
(Rathbun, 1853) from California, U.S.A.: D, third maxilliped outer view, x 30; E, male abdomen, x 15. C–D after Davidson (1968).
FIGURE 2.
A,
Fabia cocharum
(Rathbun, 1853)
, female showing one line of setae on the ventral margin of the propodus, carapace width 13.4, San Vicente, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico; B,
F. subquadrata
Dana, 1851
, female showing two lines of setae, one submarginal and second on ventral margin of the propodus, carapace width 6.7 mm, Todos Santos Bay, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico.
Distribution.
Santa Cruz,
California
,
U.S.
A to Laguna de San Ignacio,
Baja
California
Sur
,
Mexico
(
Campos & Manning 2000
).
Hosts.
Symbiont in the giant Pacific chiton
Cryptochiton stelleri
(von Middendorff, 1847)
; the gastropods
Aplysia vaccaria
Winkler, 1955
,
Bulla gouldiana
Pilsbry, 1895
,
Conus californicus
Reeve, 1844
,
Lithopoma undosum
(Wood, 1828)
[=
Megastraea undosa
(W. Wood)
],
Megathura crenulata
(Sowerby I, 1825)
,
Navanax inermis
(J. G. Cooper, 1862)
, and
Neverita lewisii
(Gould, 1847)
; the bivalves
Atrina tuberculosa
(G. B. Sowerby I, 1835)
,
Crassadoma gigantea
(J.E. Gray, 1825)
,
Crassostrea gigas
(Thunberg, 1793)
,
Megapitaria squalida
(G. B.
Sowerby I
,
1835
),
Modiolus capax
,
Modiolus
sp.,
Mytilus edulis
(see below),
Nuttallia nuttallii
,
Pholas
sp.,
Platyodon
sp.,
Pseudochama exogyra
(Conrad, 1837),
Tivela stultorum
,
Tresus nuttallii
,
Zirfaea
sp., and
Zirfaea pilsbryi
Lowe, 1931. Also commensal in the tube of the polychaete
Chaetopterus variopedatus
(Renier, 1804), and the cloaca of the holothuroids
Apostichopus californicus
(Stimpson, 1857),
A. parvimensis
(Clark, 1913), and
Molpadia arenicola
(Stimpson, 1857), (Schmitt
et al.
1975; Garth & Abbott 1980
;
Ricketts
et al
.
1980
; Campos
et al.
1992
).
Other hosts.
Garth & Abbott (1980) recorded the species in the Atlantic bivalve
Dinocardium robustum
(Lightfoot, 1786)
, but the presence of this bivalve in the eastern Pacific should be confirmed. Likewise, the record of
Mytilus edulis
needs confirmation since this species is validly reported only from embayments in
California
U.S.A.
Mytilids from open coastal area may belong to
M. galloprovincialis
or
M. trossulus
.
Remarks.
According to Hopkins & Scanland (1964) the occurrence of
O. transversus
in multiple host species is evidence of the non-specificity of this pinnotherid. Although this conclusion is evident, another interpretation is that the species needs more than one host to complete its life history. The generalist behavior along the life history of
O. transversus
probably involves a complex relationship with their invertebrate hosts. Host selection is most probably not by chance. Thus, following Hopkins & Scanland (1964) it is possible to hypothesize that young individuals of
Opisthopus
infest a temporary host like the giant Pacific chiton
Cryptochiton
, moving initially to one or several larger hosts, e.g.
Lithopoma
,
Megathura
, or
Stichopus
, followed by a final selection of a definitive host, e.g.
Crassadoma
,
Molpadia
,
or
Zirfaea
in which crab grow until they reach the adult phase, including ovigerous females. I concur with Hopkins & Scanland (1964) that host selection may be linked to host size, which provides space for growth and shelter; however, different hosts may also provide different
types
of nutrients necessary for development and reproduction.
Because
O. transversus
was recorded in the Gulf of
California
(Glassell 1935a), for the past 20 years I have examined potential hosts in beaches around San Felipe, Puertecitos, and Bahía de Los Angeles, Gulf of
California
,
Mexico
, including species of
Mytilidae
,
Veneridae
,
Solecurtidae
, Cardidae, and
Hiatellidae
, but no pinnotherid assignable to this species have been collected. The juvenile males recorded by Glassell, which were unavailable for study, may belong to
Pinnaxodes gigas
Green, 1992
, a species that morphologically resemble
O. transversus
and inhabits the Gulf of
California
(see below).