A new subfamily, Vulcanocalliacinae n. subfam., for Vulcanocalliax arutyunovi n. gen., n. sp. from a mud volcano in the Gulf of Cádiz (Crustacea, Decapoda, Callianassidae)
Author
Dworschak, Peter C.
Author
Cunha, Marina R.
text
Zootaxa
2007
1460
35
46
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.176412
b9ac3178-ea5f-432e-98d9-1439bf42d3d6
1175-5326
176412
Vulcanocalliacinae
n.subfam.
Diagnosis
: Carapace without dorsal oval, without median carina, without transverse cardiac sulci. Mxp3 ischium-merus 2.5 times as long as broad, dactylus broadened. Plp3–5 biramous, larger than Plp1–2. Epipods present on Mxp3–P4.
Type
genus:
Vulcanocalliax
n.gen.
, by monotypy and present designation.
Remarks
: According to
Sakai (2005)
, the family
Callianassidae
Dana, 1852
includes eight subfamilies, the
Callianassinae
Dana, 1852
,
Callichirinae
Manning & Felder, 1991
,
Eucalliacinae
Manning & Felder, 1991
, Anacalliacinae
Manning & Felder, 1991
,
Calliapaguropinae Sakai, 1999
,
Lipkecallianassinae
Sakai, 2005
,
Bathycalliacinae
Sakai & Türkay, 1999
and
Paracalliacinae
Sakai, 2005
.
Vulcanocalliacinae
n.subfam. shares with
Bathycalliacinae
Sakai & Türkay, 1999
the presence of epipods on Mxp3–P4, but differs from the latter by the absence of cardiac sulci and the absence of a dorsomedian carina. Both subfamilies show a cardiac prominence which is a common character of the family
Ctenochelidae
(sensu
Manning & Felder, 1991
). In
Bathycalliacinae
this cardiac prominence is a distinct swelling close to the posterior border of the carapace (see
Sakai & Türkay, 1999
: figs 1, 2a) and similar to that in the
Ctenochelidae
[e.g. in
Ctenocheles maorianus
Powell, 1949
(NHMW 6733);
Ctenocheles balssi
Kishinouye, 1926
(see
Sakai, 1999a
: fig. 1a); see also
Manning & Felder (1991: figs 2 and 7)
]. In
Vulcanocalliacinae
n.subfam., the swelling is less pronounced and situated more anteriorly between cervical grove and posterior border of the carapace than in the
Ctenochelidae
, similar to the weak cardiac prominence found in some members of the
Eucalliacinae
(e.g.
Calliax doerjesti
Sakai, 1999
b: fig. 28).