Nancyplax vossi Lemaitre, Garcia-Gomez, von Sternberg & Campos 2001
Authors/Creators
Description
(Figs. 31 A-G; 32G-K)
Type material. Male holotype, 10.7 mm × 15.7 mm (USNM 308995); 1 male paratype (USNM 308996); 2 males paratypes (USNM 308993); 1 male, 1 female paratypes (USNM 308994); 2 ovigerous female paratypes (UMML 32.8776); 2 males paratypes (UMML 32.9079); 4 males paratypes (UMML 32.9078); 1 male, 2 female paratypes (UMML 32.8775); 1 male paratype (INVEMAR-CRU 2926).
Type locality. Off Venezuela, 11°06.3’N, 68°14.6’W, 95–132 m.
Material examined. Suriname. North of Paramaribo, 07°07’N, 55°08’W, Pillsbury, 11.07.1968: 1 male paratype, 12.1 mm × 17.2 mm, 1 female paratype, 12.1 mm × 17.9 mm (USNM 308994).
Remarks. See Remarks for genus.
Distribution. Western Atlantic, only known from the Caribbean Sea coasts of Colombia to Suriname.
Depth: 55–155 m.
Genus Platyozius Borradaile, 1902
Pseudozius (Platyozius) Borradaile, 1902: 243.
Eucrate — Tesch 1918: 158 (part). — Ng et al. 2008: 78 [in list] (part).
Diagnosis. Carapace (Figs. 33, 34) trapezoidal, almost as wide as long, dorsal surface smooth without clear indication of regions except continuous, curved postorbital ridge between second anterolateral teeth parallel to front, orbits (Fig. 34E; dark colour in live specimens [Fig. 33A–E]; ridge less distinct in small individuals); anterolateral borders arched; front wide, straight, with small median notch, truncate margin but slight transverse sulcus in largest individuals. Three short, triangular teeth posterior to short, obtuse outer orbital angle; second anterolateral teeth largest, dorsally oriented, third smallest, particularly in largest individuals. Orbits moderately short (shorter than front), oblique, spherical (Fig. 35A); thin supraorbital border without notches (small notch may be present in small individuals); inner suborbital lobe, nearly straight margin without notches on thin suborbital border (Fig. 35C); eye peduncles short; large, spherical corneas (Fig. 35A, C). Basal antennal article mobile in small individuals, slightly mobile in larger ones, with disto-lateral process so that orbital hiatus is closed excluding antennal flagellum from orbit (Fig. 35A, C). Merus of third maxilliped auriculiform (Fig. 35A, C). Cheliped fingers moderately stout, slightly longer than swollen propodus (Fig. 35B), tips dark in live individuals (Fig. 33); carpus with tooth on inner margin; scattered setae, no tomentum on anterior margin of carpus. Dorsal margins of ambulatory legs (P2–P5) meri, carpi, propodi unarmed, dactyli slender, smooth, setose; P5 propodus, dactylus proportionally short, flattened (Figs. 33; 34), fringed with scattered, long setae, short spines. Thoracic sternum (Fig. 35D, F, G) wide; thoracic suture 2/3 complete, convex (Fig. 35C, D); 3/4 deep, short, interrupted; 4/5, 6/7, 7/8 interrupted, 5/6 complete (Fig. 35G); median groove on thoracic sternites 7, 8. Sterno-abdominal cavity of male deep, reaching only to median portion of sternite 4 (Fig. 35F). Press-button of male abdominal-locking mechanism as large tubercle near thoracic suture 4/5 (small tubercle present in pre-adult females). Male abdomen narrow, slender (T-shaped), lateral margins of somites 4–6 abruptly narrowing from somite 3 to narrow, pointed telson wide (Fig. 35D, E); somite 3 reaching inner margins of P5 coxae (Fig. 35E), outer margin with semi-circular projection that fits under thoracic sternite 7; no portions of thoracic sternite 8 exposed by closed abdomen, somite 2 transversely slightly shorter than somite 3. G1 long, slender, slightly sinuous, acuminate apex, with small denticles (Figs. 35F; 38A, B); G2 less than one-third of G1, straight, apex with 2 processes: one long, tip obtuse; second much shorter, tip obtuse (Fig. 38C). Male genital opening (gonopore) coxal; coxo-sternal disposition of long penis (Fig. 35F), protected by concave posterior portion of thoracic sternite 7. Vulva ovoid, extending across anterior portion of sternite 6 close to median axis of thorax (Fig. 35G); covered by soft membrane, sternal vulvar cover absent.
Type species. Pseudozius (Platyozius) laevis Borradaile, 1902 (by monotypy, gender feminine).
Remarks. The only species in the genus was described as Pseudozius (Platyozius) laevis by Borradaile (1902: 243). The species, however, is clearly not a member of Pseudozius Dana, 1851 (family Pseudoziidae Alcock, 1898), as noted by Rathbun (1906: 861), who noticed the diagnostic “ridge above, behind, and parallel to the margin”, and adding that the anterior margin of the third maxilliped merus is not notched “as in typical Pseudozius ”. Its affinities with the Euryplacidae were recognized by Tesch (1918: 158), who synonymised Platyozius with Eucrate on account of its “general appearance”. Barnard (1950: 295) synonymised the species, without any comments, with Eucrate sulcatifrons Stimpson, 1858, a junior synonym of E. crenata (De Haan, 1835). This position was followed by Edmondson (1962: 4), whereas Dai et al. (1996: 247) and Ng et al. (2008: 78) treated it as a separate species of Eucrate. The genus Platyozius Borradaile, 1902, is hereby resurrected and a diagnosis is given for the first time.
Species included. Platyozius laevis (Borradaile, 1902) The genus is restricted to the Indo-West Pacific region.
Notes
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Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
Biodiversity
- Collection code
- UMML , USNM
- Material sample ID
- UMML 32.8775 , UMML 32.8776 , UMML 32.9078 , UMML 32.9079 , USNM 308993 , USNM 308994 , USNM 308995 , USNM 308996
- Event date
- 1968-11-07
- Verbatim event date
- 1968-11-07
- Scientific name authorship
- Lemaitre, Garcia-Gomez, von Sternberg & Campos
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Phylum
- Arthropoda
- Order
- Decapoda
- Family
- Euryplacidae
- Genus
- Nancyplax
- Species
- vossi
- Taxon rank
- species
- Type status
- holotype , paratype
- Taxonomic concept label
- Nancyplax vossi Lemaitre, 2001 sec. CASTRO & NG, 2010
References
- Lemaitre, R., Garcia-Gomez, J., Von Sternberg, R. & Campos, N. H. (2001) A new genus and a new species of crab of family Goneplacidae MacLeay, 1838 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura) from the tropical western Atlantic. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 114 (4), 951 - 963.
- Borradaile, L. A. (1902) The Xanthidae and some other crabs. III. Marine crustaceans. In: Gardiner, J. S. (Ed.), The Fauna and Geography of the Maldive and Laccadive Archipelagoes Being the Account of the Work Carried on and of the Collections Made by an Expedition During the Years 1899 and 1900, vol. 1, part 3. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 237 - 271.
- Tesch, J. J. (1918) Goneplacidae and Pinnotheridae. The Decapoda Brachyura of the Siboga Expedition, 2. Siboga-Expeditie, 39 (c 1), livr. 84, 149 - 295, pls. 7 - 18.
- Ng, P. K. L., Guinot, D. & Davie, P. (2008) An annotated checklist of extant brachyuran crabs of the world. Systema Brachyurorum, Part I. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, Supplement 17, 1 - 286.
- Rathbun, M. J. (1906) The Brachyura and Macrura of the Hawaiian Islands. United States Fish Commission Bulletin, 1903 (3), 827 - 930, i - viii, pls. 1 - 24.
- Barnard, K. H. (1950) Descriptive catalogue of South African decapod Crustacea. Annals of the South African Museum, 38, 1 - 837.
- Stimpson, W. (1858) Crustacea Ocypodoidea. Prodromus descriptionis animalium evertebratorum, quae in Expeditione ad Oceanum Pacificum Septentrionalem, a Republica Federata missa, Cadwaladaro Ringgold et Johanne Rodgers Ducibus, observavit et descripsit W. Stimpson, Pars V. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1858 [10], 93 - 110 (39 - 56 in separate).
- Edmondson, C. H. (1962) Hawaiian Crustacea: Goneplacidae, Pinnotheridae, Cymopoliidae, Ocypodidae, and Gecarcinidae. Occasional Papers of Bernice P. Bishop Museum, 23 (1), 1 - 27.
- Dai, A, Cai, Y. & Yang, S. (1996) New species and new records of crabs (Crustacea; Decapoda; Brachyura) from Nansha Islands, China. In: Studies on Marine Fauna and Flora and Biogeography of the Nansha Islands and Neighbouring Waters, 2, 234 - 257. Academia Sinica, Beijing. [In Chinese with English abstract and descriptions]