Description of Durckheimia lochi n. sp., with an annotated checklist of Australian Pinnotheridae (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura)
Author
Ahyong, Shane T.
Author
Brown, Diane E.
text
Zootaxa
2003
254
1
20
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.156571
063d162c-e41a-4af1-89ab-a678ab3d49f5
11755326
156571
Durckheimia
De
Man, 1889
Durckheimia
de
Man, 1889
: 422 [
Type
species:
D. carinipes
de
Man, 1889
, by monotypy and original designation. Gender: feminine].
Pinnotheropsis
Kubo
, 1939
: 57
[
Type
species:
P. yo ko ta i
Kubo
, 1939
, by monotypy and original designation. Gender: feminine].
Dürckheimia
. —
Tesch, 1918
: 245
, 246, 287. —
Balss, 1922
: 140
[misspelling].
Duerckheimia
. —
Guinot, 1967
: 279
[misspelling].
Diagnosis of females
(males unknown). Carapace subtrapezoid to subcircular, well calcified; regions undefined; dorsum with or without longitudinal median carina; front strongly produced, completely obscuring eyes in dorsal view, with distinct median notch. Third maxilliped endopod with ischium and merus indistinguishably fused; palp 2 or 3segmented; propodus longer than carpus; dactylus (when present) digitiform, inserted near midlength of ventral margin of propodus. Chelae symmetrical. Walking legs similar and symmetrical from left to right; dactyli falcate with spiniform apex.
Included species.
Third maxilliped with 3segmented palp:
D. caeca
Bürger, 1895
from
Palau
(host:
Lima squamosa
Lamarck
,
Limidae
);
D. carinipes
de
Man, 1889
from the Red Sea (host unknown);
D. lochi
n.sp.
from
Australia
(hosts:
Ctenoides ales
(Finlay)
,
Lima lima vulgaris
(Link)
,
Limidae
); and
D. yokotai
(
Kubo
, 1939
)
n.comb.
from
Japan
(hosts:
Lima sowerbyi
Deshayes (Limidae)
,
Chama reflexa
Reeve (Chamidae)
. Third maxilliped with 2segmented palp:
D. besutensis
Serène, 1967
, from Peninsular
Malaysia
(host:
Lithophaga
sp.,
Mytilidae
).
Remarks.
Kubo
(1939)
, apparently unaware of de Man’s (1889), Bürger’s (1895) and Balss' (1922) papers dealing with
Durckheimia
, described a new genus and species from
Japan
,
Pinnotheropsis yokotai
. Like
Durckheimia
,
Pinnotheropsis
was characterised by a carapace with a longitudinal median carina and strongly produced, upturned margins.
Sakai (1955)
synonymised
P. y o k o t a i
with
D. caeca
and therefore
Pinnotheropsis
with
Durckheimia
. Although we concur with the synonymy of
Pinnotheropsis
with
Durckheimia
, we believe
Sakai (1955)
was incorrect to synonymise
P. y o k o t a i
with
D. caeca
. Based on comparison of the account and figures of
D. caeca
by
Bürger (1895)
with that of
P. y o k o t a i
by
Kubo
(1939)
and
Sakai (1976, as
D. caeca
)
, Kubo’s species is clearly distinct, and is herein removed from synonymy.
Durckheimia yokotai
n. comb.
differs from
D. caeca
in the following features: 1) the median carina of the carapace is interrupted by a distinct notch instead of being entire; 2) the anterolateral margins of the carapace are more strongly rounded; 3) the median frontal notch of the carapace is relatively broad and Ushaped instead of narrow and slitlike; and 4) the dactylus of the third maxilliped palp distinctly overreaches instead of just reaching the apex of the propodus. Balss's (1922) record of
D. caeca
from
Japan
requires verification; it is probably based on
D. yokotai
.
Recent revisionary studies on the
Pinnotheridae
(e.g.
Manning 1993a
,
b
,
c
,
Campos 1989
,
1990
,
1996
,
2002
), following
Bürger (1895)
, have increasingly focussed on limb segment proportions, segmentation and morphology of the third maxilliped, and features of the carapace. Principally on the basis of segmentation of the third maxilliped, several recent studies have suggested heterogeneity within
Durckheimia
(see
Manning 1993b
,
Campos 1996
) to the effect that
D. besutensis
should be excluded from the genus.
Serène (1967)
acknowledged the atypical characters of his species, but in determining its generic placement, focussed on the subtrapezoid carapace shape and distinctive frontal carapace margin that united
D. besutensis
with other species of
Durckheimia
. As in other species of the genus, the frontal carapace margin of
D. besutensis
bears a distinct median notch and is strongly produced, completely obscuring the eyes in dorsal view.
Serène (1967)
and
Campos (1996)
together indicated that
Durckheimia besutensis
differs from congeners in having the exopod of the third maxilliped with concave instead of convex margins and a 1 instead of 2segmented flagellum, the presence of a knob or ridge and strong concavities (‘fausse orbite’) dorsolateral to the orbits, distinctly pitted or eroded instead of generally smooth carapace surfaces, subcylindrical meri of the walking legs, and most importantly the 2 instead of 3segmented third maxilliped palp, the absence of a median carina on the carapace, and the absence of upturned lateral and posterior carapace margins.
The median carina of the carapace is broad and blunt in
D. carinipes
, uninterrupted and cristate in
D. caeca
, and cristate but interrupted in
D. yokotai
and
D. lochi
n.sp.
Durckheimia carinipes
,
D. caeca
,
D. lochi
,
and
D. yokotai
all share a 3segmented third maxilliped palp (probably plesiomorphic) and uniquely share the median carina and strongly produced carapace margins that wrap around the front, sides and rear. Therefore, these four species appear to be more closely related to each other than either is to
D. besutensis
. The present recognition of
D. lochi
and
D. yokotai
reinforces the contention that
D. besutensis
is either outside of the main group of
Durckheimia
or erroneously assigned.
If the condition of the carapace front is convergent, then
D. besutensis
is unrelated to
Durckheimia
sensu stricto
rendering the frontal similarities superficial. If, however, the strongly produced front and medially notched frontal margin of the carapace in
D. besutensis
is homologous with that of its congeners, then Serène’s species would be the sister to the remaining species of
Durckheimia
.
Durckheimia carinipes
would thus represent an intermediate between
D. besutensis
and the remaining species of the genus. Either way, the absence of the median carina of the carapace in
D. besutensis
is plesiomorphic as no other pinnotherids bear such a structure. Clearly,
D. besutensis
warrants further study. Irrespective, however, of whether
D. besutensis
is sister to the remaining congeners or only distantly related, it can be excluded from the genus without threatening the monophyly of
Durckheimia
sensu stricto
. Removal of
D. besutensis
will enable a more uniform diagnosis of
Durckheimia
.
Previous workers (de
Man 1889
,
Serène 1967
) have recognised the similarity between the
type
species of
Xanthasia
,
X. murigera
White, 1846
(having a 2segmented third maxilliped palp) and species of
Durckheimia
(those with a 3segmented third maxilliped palp) in the upturned lateral and posterior carapace margins.
Xanthasia murigera
and the 3segmented third maxilliped palp species of
Durckheimia
also share a similar third maxilliped exopod in which the margins are convex and the flagellum is 2segmented. They differ obviously in dorsal carapace ornamentation, the subcylindrical versus dorsally cristate meri of walking legs and segmentation of the third maxilliped palp. Based on
Serène (1967)
,
D. besutensis
resembles
X. murigera
in the following ways: 1) the shape of the segments of the third maxilliped palp — the propodus is spatulate and longer than the carpus, tapering to a blunt apex, and the ischiomerus has a concave outer margin and relatively straight inner margin; 2) the meri of the walking legs are subcylindrical; 3) the carapace is dorsally and ventrally irregularly pitted, but much less so in
X. murigera
; and 4) a ventral knob or ridge is present lateral to the orbits.
Durckheimia besutensis
differs from
X. murigera
in having concave margins and a 1segmented flagellum on the third maxilliped exopod, a strongly pitted and eroded carapace, and most significantly in carapace ornamentation. In
D. besutensis
the lateral and posterior carapace margins are not upturned, the median dorsal tubercle and carinae are absent, and the eyes and outline of the orbits are not visible dorsally. Aside from carapace characters,
D. besutensis
and
X. murigera
bear a strong phenetic resemblance and might ultimately prove closely related.
Xanthasia
itself, however, requires further attention because of the presence of
X. whitei
, de Man, 1887, which has a 3 instead of 2segmented third maxilliped palp. In any case, Serène's species cannot be placed in
Xanthasia
, for
X. murigera
and
D. besutensis
share no unique characters.
Durckheimia besutensis
cannot be accommodated in any existing genus without significant generic modification. The strongly produced frontal carapace margin that completely obscures the eyes from dorsal view, the distinct median frontal notch, and deep excavations dorsolateral to the orbits exclude
D. besutensis
from all other genera.
Durckheimia besutensis
should eventually be removed to a new monotypic genus. Such an action would be premature, however, in lieu of specimens of
D. besutensis
, and that we have neither examined
type
nor other specimens of the poorly known
D. carinipes
(the
type
of the genus). In the absence of further comparative material and phylogenetic data, and in view of the strong similarities in frontal form between
D. besutensis
and other species of
Durckheimia
, we provisionally recognise the unity of the genus. Presently,
Durckheimia
can be distinguished from other pinnotherid genera, by the strongly produced frontal and anterolateral margins of the carapace that completely obscure the eyes in dorsal view, and the presence of a distinct median frontal notch in the carapace. Males are presently unknown for any species of
Durckheimia
.