Published November 22, 2022 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Mursia australiensis Campbell 1971

Description

Mursia australiensis Campbell, 1971

(Fig. 1B)

Material examined. RV Hakuhō Maru KH-72-1 cruise, sta. 52, 1 juv. (CB 8.2 mm excluding lateral tubercles, CL 7.4 mm), NSMTCr 30905.

Remarks. The present juvenile specimen referred here to Mursia australiensis agrees well with the descriptions and photographs given by the original author (Campbell, 1971), Galil (1993), and Mendoza and Nugroho (2021). The carapace is narrow and convex in both directions; the anterolateral margin is only weakly convex, and the posterolateral margin is strongly convergent toward the lateral end of the carapace posterior margin. The carapace dorsal surface is densely covered with granules and sculptured with three longitudinal ridges at the median gastric, cardiac and intestinal regions and at each branchial region; three ridges are fringed each with a row of bosses; four bosses in a transverse row at the anterior part of the mesogastric and protogastric regions, four in a longitudinal row on the posterior part of the mesogastric, cardiac and intestinal regions, and three in an oblique row on the branchial region. The carapace posterior margin is narrow, and angulated at each lateral end, its median part being produced into an obtuse tubercle that is slightly smaller than the carapace lateral end. Each lateral tubercle of the carapace is sharp, one fourth as wide as the carapace, and weakly directed posterolaterally and obliquely upward. The tubercle at the distal end of the cheliped merus is also sharp, and as long as or slightly longer than the carapace lateral tubercle, with the basal half directed horizontally and distal half directed posterolaterally.

Mursia aspera Alcock, 1899, recorded by Miyake (1983) from Japan, was tentatavily considered by Galil (1993) to be M. australiensis based on its fresh coloration. However, the species of Mursia generally have a similar color in life, without specific value, and therefore it is presently difficult to determine the true identity of the Japanese specimen.

Distribution. Previously known from Australia (southern Queensland and New South Wales, 100–136 m), New Caledonia (150–320 m) and Indonesia (Sunda Strait and western Java, 234– 281 m). Otherwise, questionably from Tosa Bay, the Pacific coast of Japan, 280 m (Miyake, 1983, as M. aspera).

Notes

Published as part of Arzivian, Arteen, Alrubaie, Ahmad, Yang, Jessica, Lin, Huiyu, Zhang, Eva & Leong, Rupert, 2022, Crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Seas of East and Southeast Asia Collected by the RV Hakuhō Maru (KH- 72 - 1 Cruise) 4. South China Sea, pp. 147-191 in Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science. Series A, Zoology 48 (4) on page 154, DOI: 10.50826/bnmnszool.48.4_147, http://zenodo.org/record/12760084

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
RV, CB
Scientific name authorship
Campbell
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Decapoda
Family
Calappidae
Genus
Mursia
Species
australiensis
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Mursia australiensis Campbell, 1971 sec. Arzivian, Alrubaie, Yang, Lin, Zhang & Leong, 2022

References

  • Campbell, B. M. 1971. New records and new species of crabs (Crustacea: Brachyura) trawled off southern Queensland: Dromiacea, Homolidea, Gymnopleura, Corystoidea, and Oxystomata. Memoirs of Queensland Museum 16: 27 - 48, pls. 2 - 3.
  • Galil, B. S. 1993. Crustacea Decapoda: A revision of the genus Mursia Desmarest, 1823 (Calappidae). In: A. Crosnier (ed.), Resultats des Campagnes MUSORSTOM. Volume 10. Memoires du Museum national d`Histoire naturelle, Paris 156: 347 - 379.
  • Mendoza, J. C. E. and D. A. Nugroho 2021. Deep-water crabs of the families Lyreididae, Raninidae, Calappidae, Ethusidae, and Leucosiidae (Crustacea: Brachyura) collected by the SJADES 2018 cruise in Indonesia, with a description of a new leucosiid species. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, Supplement 36: 181 - 210.
  • Miyake, S. 1983. Japanese Crustacean Decapods and Stomatopods in Color. II. Brachyura (Crabs). Hoikusha Publishing Co., Ltd., Osaka, Japan, viii + 277 pp. (in Japanese).