Phylogeny and systematics of the Trapeziidae Miers, 1886 (Crustacea: Brachyura), with the description of a new family
Author
PETER CASTRO
Author
PETER K. L. NG
Author
SHANE T. AHYONG
text
Zootaxa
2004
643
1
70
journal article
38783
10.5281/zenodo.158851
83523ad5-7f0f-489d-8531-3b20edd51abc
1-877354-55-4
158851
7EBFF1EF-09C7-4A60-890E-26747C8FBF46
Trapezia guttata
Rüppell, 1830
Trapezia guttata
Rüppell, 1830
: 27
.
Trapezia ferruginea
var.
ceylonica
Chen, 1933
: 109
.
Trapezia davaoensis
Ward, 1941
: 14
, fig. 27.
Trapezia miersi
Ward, 1941
: 15
.
Remarks
. The identity of this species was clarified by
Galil (1988b: 166)
and
Castro (1997a: 82)
but some additional notes are necessary. The questionable conspecificity of
T. ferruginea
var.
ceylonica
Chen, 1933
(
type
locality
Sri Lanka
) with
T. guttata
Rüppell, 1830
(
type
locality Red Sea) follows from Chen's brief comments and schematic figure. Since the three specimens Chen examined are now lost (see discussion for
T. cymodoce
), this cannot be verified.
Miers (1886: 167)
described specimens of
T. guttata
from
Fiji
as having "... carapace and chelipeds ... of a uniform reddish or yellowish brown. The ambulatory legs, but not the chelipeds, are covered with small, distinct, red or brownish spots." The species, however, has a characteristic white to orangewhite carapace that is rounded anteriorly by a thin, redbrown line (see
Castro 1997a
: 80, pl. 2, fig. B; pl. 4) in addition to the spotted ambulatory legs. The redbrown line may fade or it can easily be overlooked in preserved specimens. A light orange carapace and ambulatory legs with orangered spots is characteristic of
T. plana
Ward, 1941
(see
Castro 1997a
: 88, pl. 2, fig. D, as
T
.
punctipes
). Miers' species, however, is undoubtedly
T. guttata
as indicated by the straight anterolateral margins of the carapace, postorbital angles that are acute and directed anteriorly, and long cheliped fingers which cross each other when closed (
Miers, 1886: pl. 12, fig. 1
).
Ward (1941)
, however, was of the opinion that Miers' material belonged to a separate species, to which he applied the name
T. miersi
Ward, 1941
, without any explanation or examination of Miers' specimens. The material of
T. guttata
from the
Philippines
that
Ward (1941)
had on hand was described as a new species,
T. davaoensis
Ward, 1941
.
Castro (1997b: 125)
examined two
paratypes
of
T. davaoensis
(MNHNB 16783) and confirmed that it is conspecific with
T. guttata
. This is also evident from Ward's (1941: fig. 27) photograph of
T. davaoensis
. Both
T. miersi
Ward, 1941
, and
T. davaoensis
Ward, 1941
, are therefore junior subjective synonyms of
T. guttata
Rüppell, 1830
.