Dynomenidae and Dromiidae (Decapoda, Brachyura) from Guam, Philippine Islands, Tonga and Samoa
Author
Mclay, Colin L.
Zoology Department, Canterbury University, Christchurch, PB 4800 (New Zealand) c. mclay @ zool. canterbury. ac. nz.
text
Zoosystema
2001
23
4
807
856
journal article
6377
10.5281/zenodo.4689208
72669070-3bd6-41be-bd47-f386c83d0927
1638-9387
4689208
Cryptodromia fallax
(
Lamarck, 1818
)
Dromia fallax
Lamarck, 1818: 264
.
Cryptodromia canaliculata
Stimpson, 1858: 240
. —
Ihle 1913: 41
. —
Ward 1941: 1
. —
Lewinsohn 1977: 18
, text fig. 4a-c; 1979: 8, text fig. 2B; 1984: 108.
Cryptodromia fallax
–
McLay 1993: 206
, fig. 18e. — [Not
Ng
et al
. 2000: 159
, fig. 1d (=
C. tumida
Stimpson, 1858
)].
MATERIAL
EXAMINED. —
Guam
.
Gun Beach,
13°27’N
,
144°47’E
,
3-5 m
, fore reef,
5.VII.1999
, coll. L. Kirkendale, 1 (ovig.) 7.9 ×
6.2 mm
(sponge cap) (
UGI
no registration number) (
ZRC
2000.0751).
Western Indian Ocean.
Salomon, Chagos Archipelago, HMS
Sealark
,
5°20’S
,
72°15’E
, no depth, 1905, coll. J. Stanley Gardiner, 1 (ovig.) 10.6 ×
9.3 mm
(
USNM
).
SIZE. — Maximum cw for females is 15.0 mm and the smallest ovigerous female had cw=
6.8 mm
. Clutch size range is 147-
196 eggs
. Mean egg diameter=
0.7 mm
. The female from
Guam
had
144 eggs
, diameter
0.68 mm
, while the female from Salomon had
250 eggs
, diameter
0.7 mm
.
DEPTH AND HABITAT. — Low intertidal to around
3 m
, on sponges. Crabs normally carry pieces of sponge or compound ascidian camouflage.
DISTRIBUTION. — From Red Sea to
Philippine Islands
and from West Pacific to
French Polynesia
. Besides the
Philippines
,
C. fallax
(
Lamarck, 1818
)
, is known from
Japan
and
China
and has been reported from the northern Mariana Island of Maug East, as
C. canaliculata
Stimpson, 1858
, by
Takeda
et al.
1994
.
DISCUSSION
For the full synonymy and description of
C. fallax
see
McLay (1993: 206)
.
McLay (1993)
showed that
C. canaliculata
is a synonym of
C. fallax
, but the status of
Ihle’s (1913)
varieties, “
C. canaliculata
var.
sibogae
” and “
C. canaliculata
var.
obtusifrons
”, was not discussed. It is unclear whether these two varieties should be regarded as separated species. Ihle described the first variety as follows:
Cryptodromia canaliculata
var.
sibogae
Ihle, 1913
is: “A species of small size (mature female 6.5 × 6.0 mm), carapace setose, surface slightly convex, sculptured, gastrocardiac suture distinct. All three rostral teeth acute, similar in length, narrower and sharper than in the typical form (i.e.
C. canaliculata
). Supraorbital, postorbital and suborbital teeth well-developed and sharp, orbital fissure absent. A single welldeveloped anterolateral tooth, behind which the carapace margin is convex, representing the rudiment of the second anterolateral tooth, and a small, but clearly visible, posterolateral tooth. There is a well-developed subhepatic tubercle, but the tubercle on the ridge above the pleural suture is absent. The suprasutural ridge bulges, but is not very distinct, which is one reason for regarding this variety as being different from the typical form. In summary, the
variety
sibogae
is different because of the smaller size, narrow rostral teeth and absence of a distinct tooth on the suprasutural ridge” (translated from German).
Ihle (1913)
notes that it is possible that the specimen of
C. canaliculata
,
mentioned by
De Man (1888a: 403)
, belongs to this variety, because it lacked a suprasutural tubercle.
Comparing his other variety,
Cryptodromia canaliculata
var.
obtusifrons
Ihle, 1913
, with the typical form Ihle described it as follows: “The general body shape and shape of the carapace are the same as in the typical form, as is the sculpturing on the carapace surface. The gastrocardiac suture is very deep. The lateral rostral teeth are more slender, as in the typical form, but the median rostral tooth appears different. This tooth is short, deflexed and ends bluntly (hence the varietal name) so that, in dorsal view, the tooth is only partially visible and the lateral teeth are much longer, projecting further forward than the median tooth. The form of the supra-, infra- and extraorbital (i.e. postorbital corner) teeth, the presence of a subhepatic tubercle, the presence of a groove beside the orbit, the absence of an orbital fissure are all in agreement with the typical form. In contrast to the typical form, the tubercle on the suprasutural ridge is absent in both varieties. In the
variety
obtusifrons
, only one well-developed anterolateral tooth is present, behind which there us only a rudiment of the second tooth. The pereopods of this
variety are
not different” (translated from German). With only one specimen, a small male cl=
7.5 mm
, Ihle believed that its systematic position was uncertain, but did not warrant recognition as a different species.
Subsequently, no other authors have referred specimens to these varieties. The main difference between the two varieties is in the shape and size of the rostral and orbital teeth.
Ihle (1913)
indicated that further specimens are necessary to clearly determine the status of these varieties and this remains true today. Only two specimens were available for the present study and these do not help to resolve this problem. However, it is worth noting that differences in the apparent relative size of the rostral teeth, very much depend upon whether the specimen is viewed exactly horizontal or not. Tilted forward, the median tooth can appear shorter than the lateral teeth, and
vice versa
. Variation in the shape of the rostral and orbital teeth certainly occur within species and thus it may well be that Ihle’s varieties represent no more than intraspecific variations.