Taxonomic remarks on the alpheid shrimp genus Triacanthoneus Anker, 2010 with description of a second eastern Pacific species (Malacostraca: Decapoda)
Author
Anker, Arthur
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-05-11
4772
3
450
468
journal article
22253
10.11646/zootaxa.4772.3.2
983953d9-e7f1-48e8-b24d-b004ada2d986
1175-5326
3819706
403F169F-DD66-4A64-8887-571D55066E33
Triacanthoneus armatus
(Anker, 2010)
,
comb. nov.
Figs. 7
,
8
Salmoneus armatus
Anker 2010b: 181
, figs. 3, 4, 14a.
Material examined
.
1 non-ovigerous specimen (cl
3.9 mm
),
FLMNH
UF 51712
,
Panama
,
Bocas del Toro
, Isla
Colón
, STRI
Bay
, in front of
La Cabaña
,
9°21’00.8”N
82°15’45.7”W
, shallow subtidal muddy flat near mangroves, in burrow between mangrove roots, suction (yabby) pump, leg.
P.P.G. Pachelle
,
31 March 2019
[PP 19-125]
.
FIGURE 8
.
Triacanthoneus armatus
(Anker, 2010)
,
comb. nov.
, non-ovigerous specimen (cl 3.9 mm) from Bocas del Toro, Panama (FLMNH UF 51712); living shrimp (missing both chelipeds) in dorsal [A] and lateral [B] views. Photographs by Paulo P.G. Pachelle.
Remarks
. The specimen from STRI Bay of
Isla
Colón, Bocas del Toro, is incomplete, missing both of its chelipeds (
Fig. 8
). Therefore, its identification as
T. armatus
, based essentially on the armature of the carapace (
Fig. 7
), must be regarded as somewhat tentative. The position of the mid-dorsal carapacial tooth at about mid-length of the carapace, the presence of sharp postorbital teeth arising directly from the anterolateral margin of the carapace, the absence of a rostral + dorsal carina, and the presence of a small triangular tubercle on the eyestalk, all suggest that this may indeed represent
T. armatus
.
The morphological resemblance between
T. armatus
, currently only known from
Panama
(
Anker 2010b
; present study), and
T. chapelianus
, known from
Belize
and
Cuba
(Alvarez
et al.
2014;
De Grave
et al.
2017
), requires some attention. As mentioned above, these two species, although being superficially similar, differ in some taxonomically important details. For instance,
T. armatus
can be separated from
T. chapelianus
by the presence of a small triangular tubercle on the dorsomesial surface of the eyestalk; such a tubercle is absent in both the Cuban specimen and the
holotype
of
T. chapelianus
(Alvarez
et al
. 2014: fig. 2C). In
T. armatus
, the carapace does not have a strong mid-dorsal (in fact rostral + mid-dorsal) carina (
Anker 2010b
: fig. 3a), which is well marked in
T. chapelianus
(Alvarez
et al
. 2014: fig. 2A). In addition, the mid-dorsal carapacial tooth appears to be somewhat more advanced, i.e. in a more anterior position, in
T. armatus
, compared to
T. chapelianus
(
Fig. 7
;
Anker 2010b
: fig. 3a, b, m; Alvarez
et al
. 2014: fig. 2A, B;
De Grave
et al.
2017
: fig. 1B). The major chela of
T. armatus
is somewhat stouter and with proportionally shorter fingers, compared to that of
T. chapelianus
, whilst the finger cutting edges bear less than 10 irregular bump-like teeth in
T. armatus
vs
. more than 20 minute teeth in
T. chapelianus
(
Anker 2010b: 4
a–c; Alvarez
et al
. 2014: fig. 3D). Furthermore, in
T. armatus
, the third and fourth pereiopod ischia are armed with two robust cuspidate setae (
Anker 2010b
: fig.
4g
), whilst they are unarmed in
T. chapelianus
(Alvarez
et al
. 2014: fig. 4F, G).