Redescription of Periclimenes brockii (De Man, 1888) (Decapoda: Caridea: Pontoniinae) and other De Man’s type specimens deposited in the collection of the Senckenberg Natural History Museum (SMF), Frankfurt-at-Maine, Germany
Author
Marin, Ivan
Author
Türkay, Michael
text
Zootaxa
2009
2296
39
46
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.191582
5ba22785-9f63-49d4-a5c5-4a49dcdaf3b4
1175-5326
191582
Allopontonia brockii
(
De
Man
, 1888
)
,
comb. n.
(
Fig. 4
)
Anchistia brockii
De
Man
, 1888
: 548
, pl. 22a, fig. 3 [
type
locality:
Ambon
,
Indonesia
]
Periclimenes brockii
.—
Borradaile, 1898: 383.
Periclimenes
(
Harpilus
)
brockii
.—Holthuis, 1952: 88.
Allopontonia iaini
Bruce, 1972
: 7
, figs. 1–4 [
type
locality:
Zanzibar
].
Periclimenes priodactylus
Bruce, 1992: 53
, figs. 1, 7–11 [
type
locality: Queensland,
Australia
]?
Periclimenes signatus
Kemp, 1925: 322
Material.
2 males
,
syntypes
,
ZMG
818,
Indonesia
, Mollukken, Amboina, 07–09.1885, leg. Brock (original label).
Diagnosis.
Medium-sized pontoniine shrimp. Carapace bearing antennal and movable hepatic teeth (
Fig. 4
B, C). Rostrum long and broad; rostral formula 10/0–1 (
Fig. 4
C). First pereiopod with subspatulated chela (
Fig. 4
D), with broad, slightly flattened fingers. Second pereiopod absent in both
syntypes
. Third pereiopod (
Fig. 4
E) with robust segments, propodus long, about 12 times as long as wide, with numerous pairs of small simple spines along ventral margin, with a pair of disto-ventral spines; dactylus (
Fig. 4
F) robust, biunguiculate, with curved triangular unguis and small triangular accessory tooth.
FIGURE 4.
Allopontonia brockii
(De Man, 1888)
, syntypes, ZMG 818: A—general view; B—carapace, dorsal view; C—carapace, lateral view; D—chela of first pereiopod; E—third pereiopod; F—same, dactylus.
Remarks.
Pontoniine shrimp species
Anchistia brockii
De
Man
, 1888
was described on the basis of three
syntypes
coming from J. Brock’ collection from
Ambon
,
Indonesia
(Amboina) (
De
Man
, 1888
). Since, the species has been referred for several times (Borradaile, 1898; Kemp, 1922; Holthuis, 1952; Chace and Bruce, 1993) but no additional freshly collected or museum material was described. Later, Borradaile (1917) transferred the species to the genus
Periclimenes
Costa, 1844
(within subgenus С
ristiger
Borradaile, 1915) and shortly mentioned specimens from the
Maldive islands
with indication of sea urchin as a host. At the same time, no morphological description of these specimens except drawings of maxilla and maxilliped III were given (Borradaile, 1917: pl. 53–54, fig. 8f–i). By our opinion, Borradaile mentioned the species correctly as
Periclimenes
(
Anchistia
)
brockii
is actually a symbiont of sea urchins (see below). But this suggestion need verification by specimen’s examination and Borradaile’s material (1917) is excluded from the synonymy of the species at the present time.
In the collection of the Senckenberg Natural History Museum two of three
syntypes
of
Periclimenes brockii
described by
De
Man
(1888)
are still present. The third, possibly, most complete
syntype
with second pereiopods described by
De
Man
(1888)
is absent and its locality is presently unknown. At the same time, it is known that Dr. Johannes Govertus
De
Man
usually took one of described specimens for his personal collection at the Zoological Museum Amsterdam,
the Netherlands
. During the present survey it was impossible to find the third
syntype
neither in catalog of the collection of the Zoological Museum Amsterdam nor Nationaal Natuurhistorisch Museum - Naturalis (previously Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie), Leiden,
the Netherlands
. Anyway, we hope it could be possibly found later among unsorted or unlabelled material.
By the presence of movable hepatic tooth on carapace
Periclimenes brockii
is clearly referred to the genus
Allopontonia
Bruce, 1972
, being a senior synonym of the
type
species,
Allopontonia iaini
Bruce, 1972
.
Distribution.
Widely distributed in the tropical Indo-Pacific from the east coast of Africa to the tropical west coasts of Americas (
Bruce, 1972
,
1983
,
1987
;
Wicksten & Hernández, 2000
).