A revision of the freshwater crabs of Mt Kenya and the Aberdare Mountains, Kenya, East Africa (Brachyura: Potamoidea: Potamonautidae).
Author
Cumberlidge, Neil
text
Zootaxa
2009
1981
29
42
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.185308
3384d442-ce6a-4db3-bbf3-3201ff8b4ec6
1175-5326
185308
Potamonautes jeanneli
(
Bouvier, 1921
)
(
Figs. 1–16
,
43
,
Table 1
)
Potamon (Geothelphusa) jeanneli
Bouvier, 1921
: 51
–56, figs. 5, 6.
Potamon jeanneli
Chace, 1942
: 214
.
Potamon jeanneli
Capart, 1954
: 834
, fig. 22.
Potamonautes jeanneli
Williams, 1968
: 214
;
Williams, 1991
: 182
.
Type
material examined.
KENYA
: adult male,
Potamon (Geothelphusa) jeanneli
(CW 22, CL 19.5,
CH
7.1, FW
7.4 mm
), mid-altitude forest (
2,400–2,700 m
) on western slopes of Mt
Kenya
,
22.i.1912
(
CH
. Alluaud and R. Jeannel coll.). This specimen was illustrated by
Bouvier (1921, figs. 5, 6)
and is one of four adult males that he referred to as
types
, and is herein designated the
lectotype
(
Figs. 1–16
).
Other material.
KENYA
: Mt
Kenya
, Sirimon River (
0°08'N
,
37°06'E
),
13–15 km
north of Nanyuki on the road to Meru,
3.7 m
wide, up to
0.6 m
deep, part shaded, river bed with rounded stones, some larger blocks,
6 males
(CWs 16.5 to CW
23.6 mm
), one female (CW
14.5 mm
)
8.iii.1962
(T. R. Williams) (NMU EA62.78).
Diagnosis.
Carapace smooth; anterolateral margin behind epibranchial tooth smooth, continuous with posterolateral margin; postfrontal crest missing, epigastric crests low, postorbital crests absent; exorbital tooth low, epibranchial tooth absent; carapace sidewalls smooth; vertical groove meeting anterolateral margin; sternal sulcus s2/s3 complete, horizontal, s3/s4 reduced to two notches; episternal sulci s4/e4, s5/e5, s6/e6, s7/e7 all missing; ischium of third maxilliped lacking vertical groove; first carpal tooth on carpus of cheliped low, second carpal tooth smaller; dactylus of major cheliped slightly arched, closed fingers enclosing long narrow interspace; terminal article of G1 slim, almost straight, distal half curving slightly outward; lateral, medial folds of equal height; distal margin of subterminal segment highest on medial side forming pronounced shoul- der lowest on lateral side; dorsal membrane broad, widest at lateral edge, narrowest at medial edge.
FIGURES 1–9.
Potamonautes jeanneli
(Bouvier, 1921)
adult male (CW 21.2 mm) western slopes of Mt Kenya, Kenya. 1, cephalothorax, carapace and eyes, frontal view; 2, carapace and eyes, dorsal view; 3, carpus and merus of right cheliped, dorsal view; 4, merus of right cheliped, inferior view; 5; right cheliped, frontal view; 6, left cheliped, frontal view; 7, left fifth pereiopod; 8, anterior sternum; 9, abdomen. Scale = 6.6 mm.
Size.
Small-sized species, adult size range from CW 22 to CW
23.6 mm
.
Type
locality.
Kenya
: mid-altitude forest on western slopes of Mt
Kenya
, from a fast-flowing mountain stream in a clearing in a bamboo forest (
2,700 m
asl).
FIGURES 10–16.
Potamonautes jeanneli
(Bouvier, 1921)
adult male (CW 22 mm) western slopes of Mt Kenya, Kenya. 10, left third maxilliped; 11, left mandible; 12, detail of terminal segment of the palp of the left mandible; 13, right G1, ventral aspect; 14, right G1, dorsal aspect; 15, terminal segment turned to show groove; 16, gonopod 2, ventral aspect. Scale = 6.6 mm (10); 2.7 mm (11–16).
Distribution.
Kenya
: Mt
Kenya
(
2,400–2,700 m
asl), from streams in mid-altitude bamboo forest, from the Burguret River on an ascent trail of Mt
Kenya
in a podocarp forest (
2,400 m
asl), and from the Sirimon River.
Natural history.
This species lives in the rivers and streams draining the slopes of Mt
Kenya
and was first collected by members of the French Expedition led by
Ch
. Alluaud and R. Jeannel in 1912. Other material was collected fifty years later from Mt
Kenya
by T. R. Williams as part of an onchocerciasis study in 1962.
Comments.
The male
lectotype
of
Potamon (Geothelphusa) jeanneli
from Mt
Kenya
(CW
22 mm
) was partly figured by
Bouvier (1921, figs 5, 6)
. Although this species was originally described from an adult male the gonopods, anterior sternum, and chelipeds are described here for the first time.
Colosi (1924)
identified a male specimen (CW
28.3 mm
) from Mt Elgon collected by S. A. Lovén,
30.vi.1920
, from a steam at
4,000 m
asl (SMNH 7556 ex. 13215) as
P. (G.) jeanneli
. However, it is by no means certain that this specimen actually belongs to this species, because the sketches provided in the original description and the locality indicate that it might be a misidentified subadult specimen of
P. l o v e n i
(
Colosi, 1924
).
Bott (1955)
included Colosi’s (1924)
P. (G.) jeanneli
from Mt. Elgon in the synonymy of
Potamonautes granviki
,
and treated Bouvier’s (1921)
P. jeanneli
from Mt
Kenya
, as a junior synonym of
Potamonautes (Platypotamonautes) neumanni
(
Hilgendorf, 1898
)
. However, the latter opinion is doubtful. The male
lectotype
of
Telphusa neumanni
(CW
35 mm
) from Ngari Longai, Masailand,
Kenya
, 36°W,
1.5°S
(ZMB 11386) was compared here with the adult male
type
of
P. (G.) jeanneli
from Mt
Kenya
(CW
22 mm
). The G1 of
P
.
jeanneli
(
Figs. 13–15
) is clearly different from that of the
lectotype
of
P
.
neumanni
(
Bott 1955, fig. 14
) and this raises doubts about the validity of Bott’s (1955) synonymization.
Potamonautes jeanneli
is resurrected here from synonymy with
P. (P.) n e u - manni
and both taxa are treated as valid species.
Conservation status.
The conservation status of
P. jeanneli
from Mt
Kenya
is assessed as least concern (LC) because it has an extent of occurrence and area of occupancy that are both in excess of the thresholds for vulnerability (VU) and there are no known widespread threats (IUCN 2004;
Cumberlidge et al. 2009
). Its population is estimated to be stable based on indirect measures such as its representation in museum collections, although it was most recently collected back in 1962