Published July 4, 2012 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Lebbeus zebra

Description

Lebbeus zebra (Leim, 1921)

(Fig. 22A)

Spirontocaris zebra Leim, 1921: 133, pls. 2–3.

Lebbeus zebra. — Holthuis 1947: 10 (part). — Couture & Trudel 1968: 873, fig. 12.— Butler 1980: 186. — Wicksten & Méndez 1982: 118. — Wicksten 1990b: 592.

Not Hetairus zebra Makarov, 1935: 319, fig. 1; = Hetairus fasciatus Kobyakova, 1936; western Pacific species.

Diagnosis. Rostrum narrow, reaching at most to end of first segment of antennular peduncle, with 2–5 dorsal teeth, 1–2 on carapace proper, no ventral teeth. First segment of antennular peduncle with 2–4 spines on dorsal margin, appressed mesioventral spine, second and third segments with dorsal spines, stylocerite not reaching end of spine of second article. Carapace with strong supraorbital tooth, suborbital lobe, strong antennal tooth, small pterygostomian tooth. Third maxilliped with epipod but no exopod. Pereopods 1–3 with epipods. Pereopods 3–5 slender, with stout spinose dactyls. Merus of pereopods 3–5 without spines. Pleura of abdominal somites 1–3 rounded, 4, 5 with small points. Telson with 4 or 5 pairs dorsolateral spines, blunt apex. Total length 49 mm.

Color in life. Conspicuously banded with brownish red to orange stripes on body, appendages (Leim 1921).

Habitat and depth. Rocky subtidal areas, 10–140 m.

Range. Gulf of St. Lawrence to Isles of Shoals, Maine; Bering Sea, Vancouver I. to off Santa Rosa I., California. Type locality not specified. Leim's material came from Passamaquoddy Bay, St. Croix River and Campobello I., New Brunswick and St. Mary's Bay, Nova Scotia.

Remarks. Apparently unaware of the name given to the Atlantic species, Makarov (1935) created a homonym when describing the North Pacific species. Koyakova (1936) re-named the Pacific species, but did not designate any distinctive features that would differentiate it from the Atlantic species. Hayashi (1992: 118, fig, 4) redescribed and illustrated L. fasciatus. Chace (1997: 45, 51) gave the synonymy of Hetairus zebra with Lebbeus fasciatus but did not cite the Atlantic Lebbeus zebra.

Lebbeus zebra is known from very few Pacific specimens. The Pacific and Atlantic specimens of L. zebra are very similar in morphology and habitat. Williams (1984) noted that Atlantic and Pacific specimens differed in the shape of the rostrum, but other species of Lebbeus exhibit considerable variation in this feature. It is likely that L. fasciatus and L. zebra have been confused in the literature. The specimens from Santa Rosa I., California more closely resemble those from St. Mary's Bay, Nova Scotia than those from Vancouver I., British Columbia.

Notes

Published as part of Wicksten, Mary K., 2012, Decapod Crustacea of the Californian and Oregonian Zoogeographic Provinces 3371, pp. 1-307 in Zootaxa 3371 on pages 91-92

Files

Files (3.2 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:093b48d2dcadc3e3356c04f7666404ca
3.2 kB Download

System files (19.8 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:507c7ea5cbc40a860a8f0d740e83f772
19.8 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Hippolytidae
Genus
Lebbeus
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Decapoda
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Leim
Species
zebra
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Lebbeus zebra (Leim, 1921) sec. Wicksten, 2012

References

  • Leim, A. H. (1921) A new species of Spirontocaris with notes on other species from the Atlantic coast. Transactions of the Canadian Institute, Toronto, 13, 133 - 146.
  • Holthuis, L. B. (1947) The Decapoda of the Siboga expedition Part IX: the Hippolytidae and Rhynchocinetidae. Siboga Expeditie, 39 a (8), 1 - 100.
  • Couture, R., & Trudel, P. (1968) Les crevettes des eaux cotieres du Quebec: taxonomie et distribution. Le Naturaliste Canadien, 95, 857 - 885.
  • Butler, T. H. (1980) Shrimps of the Pacific Coast of Canada. Canadian Bulletin of Fisheries and Aquatic Science, 202, 1 - 280.
  • Wicksten, M. K. & Mendez, M. (1982) New records and new species of Lebbeus (Caridea: Hippolytidae) from the eastern Pacific Ocean. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences, 81, 106 - 120.
  • Wicksten, M. K. (1990 b) Key to the hippolytid shrimp of the eastern Pacific Ocean. United States Fishery Bulletin, 88, 587 - 598.
  • Makarov, W. W. (1935) Beschreibung neuer Dekapoden-Formen as den Meeren des Fernen Ostens. Zoologischer Anzeiger, 109, 319 - 325.
  • Hayashi, K. (1992) Studies on the hippolytid shrimps from Japan-VIII. The genus Lebbeus White. Journal of the Shimonoseki University of Fisheries, 40, 107 - 138.
  • Chace, F. A. Jr. (1997) The caridean shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda) of the Albatross Philippine Expedition, 1907 - 1910, Part 7: families Atyidae, Eugonatonotidae, Rhynchocinetidae, Bathypalaemonellidae, Processidae, and Hippolytidae. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 587, 1 - 106.
  • Williams, A. B. (1984) Shrimps, Lobsters, and Crabs of the Atlantic Coast of the Eastern United States, Maine to Florida. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C., 550 pp.