Catapagurus tuberculosus

Catapagurus tuberculosus (Asakura, 1999) Icelopagurus tuberculosus Asakura, 1999: 382, figures 1–4. Catapagurus tuberculosus : Asakura, 2001: 830, figure 1D, G. Material examined . NSMT-Cr 14370; one male (SL 5.5 mm); Ie Island; ‘ Shodokutsu, (=small cave); 26°42.9∞N, 127°50.1∞E; 20 m; 13 October 19...

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Main Authors: Osawa, M., Takeda, M.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308536
https://zenodo.org/record/5308536
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5308536
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Decapoda
Paguridae
Catapagurus
Catapagurus tuberculosus
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Decapoda
Paguridae
Catapagurus
Catapagurus tuberculosus
Osawa, M.
Takeda, M.
Catapagurus tuberculosus
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Decapoda
Paguridae
Catapagurus
Catapagurus tuberculosus
description Catapagurus tuberculosus (Asakura, 1999) Icelopagurus tuberculosus Asakura, 1999: 382, figures 1–4. Catapagurus tuberculosus : Asakura, 2001: 830, figure 1D, G. Material examined . NSMT-Cr 14370; one male (SL 5.5 mm); Ie Island; ‘ Shodokutsu, (=small cave); 26°42.9∞N, 127°50.1∞E; 20 m; 13 October 1990. NSMT-Cr 14371; one ovigerous female (SL 5.3 mm) and larvae; Ie Island; ‘ Shodokutsu’; 20 m; 26 May 1993. NSMT-Cr 14372; one male (SL 5.1 mm), one ovigerous female (SL 5.8 mm); Ie Island; ‘ Shodokutsu’; 20 m; 27 May 1993. Colour . There are no spots, band or stripes on the creamy white ground colour in the preserved specimens examined. Habitat and behaviour . The type specimens were collected from sandy bottoms, outer side of coral reefs, at depths of 10–20 m (Asakura, 1999). The specimens examined each carried a small gastropod shell with a large aperture, such as Neritopsis radula (Linnaeus, 1758), that protected only its abdomen and part of the posterior carapace of the hermit crab. The shell is too small for the hermit crab to retract the thoracic appendages. The field observations by the collectors revealed that this hermit crab took great leaps and moved rapidly on the bottom of the submarine caves when disturbed. The sediments on the floor of the caves are generally very fine except for organic remains including dead shells of bivalves, gastropods and chitons (Hayami and Kase, 1993). The laterally flattened and broad, saber blade-shaped ambulatory dactyli and small shell of C . tuberculosus may indicate an ability to swim, and an adaptive significance for living on soft bottoms. Distribution . Known only from the Ryukyu Islands (Asakura, 1999; present study), 10– 20 m. Remarks . Asakura (1999) originally described this hermit crab as a new species of Icelopagurus McLaughlin, 1997, but he subsequently transferred the species to Catapagurus A. Milne-Edwards, 1880, in the taxonomic revision of the species of Catapagurus and Hemipagurus Smith, 1881 (Asakura, 2001). Catapagurus tuberculosus is distinguished from the sole congener, C . sharreri A. Milne-Edwards, 1880 from the north-west Atlantic, by having a row of corneous spines each on the dorsal and ventral margins of the ambulatory dactyli instead of a fringe of dense long setae (Asakura, 2001). As discussed by Asakura (1999), marked sexual dimorphism of the chelipeds and abdomen are also observed in the specimens examined. Both chelae of females are distinctly more slender and more compressed than those of males. The carpi of the chelipeds are also distinctly more elongate and more slender in females than males. The abdomen of the female is larger than that of the male. In addition to these sexual dimorphic variations, an intraspecific difference in male pleopods was found in two specimens examined. One specimen (NSMT-Cr 14372, SL 5.1 mm) has a uniramous pleopod and an unequally biramous pleopod with very small endopod on the left side of second and third abdominal somites, respectively. Another specimen (NSMT-Cr 14370, SL 5.5 mm) lacks a pleopod on the second somite and has only a uniramous pleopod on the third somite, the number of pleopods agreeing with that of the type material. Asakura (1999) could not confirm the presence of the fourth left pleopod of females because the abdomen of the female paratype was damaged in the posterior part. Examination of two female specimens (NSMT-Cr 14371, 14372) reveals that they possess a fourth left pleopod that is short and uniramous. The larvae preserved with an ovigerous female in the same specimen bottle (NSMT-Cr 14371) show a prezoea-like appearance, probably accidentally hatched by fixation. The antennule, antenna and maxillipeds of the larvae are folded, and the marginal setae on these appendages and posterior processes of the telson are covered with delicate cuticles and are not well developed. The very small, rudimentary condition of the third maxilliped, and no trace of pereopods, suggest a normal mode of development in this species. : Published as part of Osawa, M. & Takeda, M., 2004, Hermit crabs (Crustacea: Decapoda: Anomura: Paguroidea) from submarine caves in the Ryukyu Islands, south-western Japan, pp. 1097-1132 in Journal of Natural History 38 on pages 1112-1113
format Text
author Osawa, M.
Takeda, M.
author_facet Osawa, M.
Takeda, M.
author_sort Osawa, M.
title Catapagurus tuberculosus
title_short Catapagurus tuberculosus
title_full Catapagurus tuberculosus
title_fullStr Catapagurus tuberculosus
title_full_unstemmed Catapagurus tuberculosus
title_sort catapagurus tuberculosus
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2004
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308536
https://zenodo.org/record/5308536
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.615,-55.615,49.550,49.550)
geographic White Ground
geographic_facet White Ground
genre North West Atlantic
genre_facet North West Atlantic
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/2966FF81FFE3FFF1AD3BBF10FFACFFCD
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
http://publication.plazi.org/id/2966FF81FFE3FFF1AD3BBF10FFACFFCD
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308535
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op_rights Open Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308536
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308535
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5308536 2023-05-15T17:40:24+02:00 Catapagurus tuberculosus Osawa, M. Takeda, M. 2004 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308536 https://zenodo.org/record/5308536 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/2966FF81FFE3FFF1AD3BBF10FFACFFCD https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit http://publication.plazi.org/id/2966FF81FFE3FFF1AD3BBF10FFACFFCD https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308535 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Decapoda Paguridae Catapagurus Catapagurus tuberculosus Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2004 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308536 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5308535 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Catapagurus tuberculosus (Asakura, 1999) Icelopagurus tuberculosus Asakura, 1999: 382, figures 1–4. Catapagurus tuberculosus : Asakura, 2001: 830, figure 1D, G. Material examined . NSMT-Cr 14370; one male (SL 5.5 mm); Ie Island; ‘ Shodokutsu, (=small cave); 26°42.9∞N, 127°50.1∞E; 20 m; 13 October 1990. NSMT-Cr 14371; one ovigerous female (SL 5.3 mm) and larvae; Ie Island; ‘ Shodokutsu’; 20 m; 26 May 1993. NSMT-Cr 14372; one male (SL 5.1 mm), one ovigerous female (SL 5.8 mm); Ie Island; ‘ Shodokutsu’; 20 m; 27 May 1993. Colour . There are no spots, band or stripes on the creamy white ground colour in the preserved specimens examined. Habitat and behaviour . The type specimens were collected from sandy bottoms, outer side of coral reefs, at depths of 10–20 m (Asakura, 1999). The specimens examined each carried a small gastropod shell with a large aperture, such as Neritopsis radula (Linnaeus, 1758), that protected only its abdomen and part of the posterior carapace of the hermit crab. The shell is too small for the hermit crab to retract the thoracic appendages. The field observations by the collectors revealed that this hermit crab took great leaps and moved rapidly on the bottom of the submarine caves when disturbed. The sediments on the floor of the caves are generally very fine except for organic remains including dead shells of bivalves, gastropods and chitons (Hayami and Kase, 1993). The laterally flattened and broad, saber blade-shaped ambulatory dactyli and small shell of C . tuberculosus may indicate an ability to swim, and an adaptive significance for living on soft bottoms. Distribution . Known only from the Ryukyu Islands (Asakura, 1999; present study), 10– 20 m. Remarks . Asakura (1999) originally described this hermit crab as a new species of Icelopagurus McLaughlin, 1997, but he subsequently transferred the species to Catapagurus A. Milne-Edwards, 1880, in the taxonomic revision of the species of Catapagurus and Hemipagurus Smith, 1881 (Asakura, 2001). Catapagurus tuberculosus is distinguished from the sole congener, C . sharreri A. Milne-Edwards, 1880 from the north-west Atlantic, by having a row of corneous spines each on the dorsal and ventral margins of the ambulatory dactyli instead of a fringe of dense long setae (Asakura, 2001). As discussed by Asakura (1999), marked sexual dimorphism of the chelipeds and abdomen are also observed in the specimens examined. Both chelae of females are distinctly more slender and more compressed than those of males. The carpi of the chelipeds are also distinctly more elongate and more slender in females than males. The abdomen of the female is larger than that of the male. In addition to these sexual dimorphic variations, an intraspecific difference in male pleopods was found in two specimens examined. One specimen (NSMT-Cr 14372, SL 5.1 mm) has a uniramous pleopod and an unequally biramous pleopod with very small endopod on the left side of second and third abdominal somites, respectively. Another specimen (NSMT-Cr 14370, SL 5.5 mm) lacks a pleopod on the second somite and has only a uniramous pleopod on the third somite, the number of pleopods agreeing with that of the type material. Asakura (1999) could not confirm the presence of the fourth left pleopod of females because the abdomen of the female paratype was damaged in the posterior part. Examination of two female specimens (NSMT-Cr 14371, 14372) reveals that they possess a fourth left pleopod that is short and uniramous. The larvae preserved with an ovigerous female in the same specimen bottle (NSMT-Cr 14371) show a prezoea-like appearance, probably accidentally hatched by fixation. The antennule, antenna and maxillipeds of the larvae are folded, and the marginal setae on these appendages and posterior processes of the telson are covered with delicate cuticles and are not well developed. The very small, rudimentary condition of the third maxilliped, and no trace of pereopods, suggest a normal mode of development in this species. : Published as part of Osawa, M. & Takeda, M., 2004, Hermit crabs (Crustacea: Decapoda: Anomura: Paguroidea) from submarine caves in the Ryukyu Islands, south-western Japan, pp. 1097-1132 in Journal of Natural History 38 on pages 1112-1113 Text North West Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) White Ground ENVELOPE(-55.615,-55.615,49.550,49.550)