Crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Sea off East and Southeast Asia collected by the RV Hakuhō Maru (KH- 72 - 1 Cruise) 1. Sulu Sea and Sibutu Passage
Author
Takeda, Masatsune
Department of Zoology, National Museum of Nature and Science, 4 - 1 - 1 Amakubo, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305 - 0005, Japan E-mail: takeda @ kahaku. go. jp (MT) / h-komatu @ kahaku. go. jp (HK)
takeda@kahaku.go.jp
Author
Ohtsuchi, Naoya
International Coastal Research Center, Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, 1 - 19 - 8 Akahama, Otsuchi, Iwate 028 - 1102, Japan E-mail: ohtsuchi @ g. ecc. u-tokyo. ac. jp
ohtsuchi@g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
Author
Komatsu, Hironori
Department of Zoology, National Museum of Nature and Science, 4 - 1 - 1 Amakubo, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305 - 0005, Japan E-mail: takeda @ kahaku. go. jp (MT) / h-komatu @ kahaku. go. jp (HK)
takeda@kahaku.go.jp
text
Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science. Series A, Zoology
2021
2021-05-21
47
2
65
97
journal article
10.50826/bnmnszool.47.2-65
2434-091X
12759907
09E0EFF3-ABE7-43D7-AA85-DA3BF08E47B9
Ethusa sexdentata
(
Stimpson, 1858
)
Material examined.
RV
Hakuhō Maru
KH-72-1 cruise, sta. 12 (
Sulu
Sea
;
08°19.0′N
,
118°09.1′E
–
08°18.7′N
,
118°08.5′E
;
495–500 m
deep);
3 m
beam trawl; 26 May, 1972; 1 ˁ (
CB
5.5 mm
; CL 6.0 mm)
, NSMT-Cr 28970.
Remarks
. The male specimen at hand agrees well with the males recorded by
Stimpson (1858
,
1907
) in having the sharp external orbital tooth directed obliquely outward, and differs from the females illustrated by
Sakai (1937
, 1965, 1976), in which the external orbital tooth is stout and not tuberculated. In the present male, four frontal teeth are spiniform, weakly directed obliquely outward, and similar to, but shorter than the external orbital tooth; the tip of the frontal inner tooth slightly exceeds the tip of the frontal outer tooth; the tip of the external orbital tooth does not reach the basal part of the frontal teeth. The lateral margin of the carapace is directed obliquely outward, with the laterally convex branchial margin. The distal part of the whip-like G2 is sticking out from the subterminal part of the G1.
In the revision of the subfamily
Ethusinae,
Castro (2005)
extensively studied all the Indo-West Pacific species of
Ethusa
including
E. sexdentata
. According to the monograph,
E. sexdentata
reported by
Chen (1986)
was misidentified and represents a new species, named by
Castro (2005)
as
E. abbreviata
.
Distribution
. Known from
Japan
,
Taiwan
, the East and South
China
Seas, and the
Philippines
; 30–ca.
500 m
deep.