Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974

UROPTYCHUS TOMENTOSUS BABA, 1974 (FIG. 15) Uroptychus tomentosus Baba, 1974: 384, figs 3, 4 [type locality: holotype, ♂, 45°14.3′S, 171°29.2′E, 116 m, ZLKU 15125]. Type material: 1 ♀ (11.3 mm), paratype, south Chatham Rise, 44° 50.3′S, 171° 51.8′E, 118–120 m, 19.vi.1968, FV Kaiyo...

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Main Author: Schnabel, Kareen E.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2009
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5492365
https://zenodo.org/record/5492365
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5492365
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
Chirostylidae
Uroptychus
Uroptychus tomentosus
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Decapoda
Chirostylidae
Uroptychus
Uroptychus tomentosus
Schnabel, Kareen E.
Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Decapoda
Chirostylidae
Uroptychus
Uroptychus tomentosus
description UROPTYCHUS TOMENTOSUS BABA, 1974 (FIG. 15) Uroptychus tomentosus Baba, 1974: 384, figs 3, 4 [type locality: holotype, ♂, 45°14.3′S, 171°29.2′E, 116 m, ZLKU 15125]. Type material: 1 ♀ (11.3 mm), paratype, south Chatham Rise, 44° 50.3′S, 171° 51.8′E, 118–120 m, 19.vi.1968, FV Kaiyo Maru stn 4, coll. K. Baba (ZLKU 15126). Other material examined: Northland Plateau: 1 ♀ (15.0 mm), north of New Zealand, 34° 7.50′S, 172° 47.00′E, 315 m, 13.x.1968, stn F924 (NIWA 23158). 1 ♀ (7.6 mm), 35° 49.00′S, 174° 30.00′E, 80 m (NIWA 9800). Bay of Plenty: 1 ♀ ovig. (8.3 mm), 2 ♀ (6.4, 8.1 mm), 1 ♂ (7.8 mm), from four stations. Chatham Rise: 2 ♂ (13.7, 14.3 mm), 43° 53.40′S, 173° 54.20′E, 400 m, 30.x.1979, stn S177 (NIWA 23143). 1 ♀ (4.3 mm), 44° 0.00′S, 172° 58.20′E, 81– 79 m, 6.x.1962, stn B554 (NIWA 10093). 2 ♀ (12.3, 16.8 mm), 44° 10.20′S, 176° 59.20′W, 278 m, 23.iii.1978, stn Q34 (NIWA 23149). 2 ♂ (9.0, 10.7 mm), 44° 12.30′S, 173° 29.90′E, 327 m, 28.x.1979, stn S156 (NIWA 23148). 1 ♂ (11.7 mm), 44° 57.00′S, 171° 46.00′E, 123 m, 19.i.1970, stn G668 (NIWA 10674). 1 ♀ ovig. (16 mm), 44° 9.00′S, 176° 6.50′E, 126 m, 23.x.1979, stn S134 (NIWA 10099). South-east New Zealand: 3 ♀ ovig. (10.4, 13.0, 16.8 mm), 5 ♀ (8.7–14.8 mm), 6 ♂ (6.7– 15.7 mm), from eight stations. Bounty Islands: 1 ♀ ovig. (14.3 mm), 48° 10.10′S, 179° 30.00′E, 228 m, 20.iii.1979, stn I700 (NIWA 23138). 1 ♂ (12.7 mm), 1 ♀ ovig. (14.3 mm), 1 ♀ (12.7 mm), 48° 12.60′S, 179° 29.10′E, 260 m, 25.ix.1978, stn S62 (NIWA 23144). 3 ♂ (8.5, 9.5, 17.7 mm), 4 ♀ ovig. (13.2–17.3 mm), 48° 9.50′S, 179° 47.00′E, 220 m, 15.iii.1979, stn I680 (NIWA 10900). 1 ♂ (6.4 mm), 48° 9.60′S, 179° 15.90′E, 250 m, 20.iii.1979, stn I701 (NIWA 23055). Diagnosis: Carapace longer than wide, dorsal surface unarmed, covered with fine setae; lateral margins irregular but without spines, concavely divergent, distal portion with ridge. Rostrum 0.4 times as long as remainder of carapace, anteriorly rounded. Pterygostomian flap granulate, anterior portion covered with serrate ridges, with sharp anterior spine. Sternal plastron wider than long along midlength, sternite 3 with round anterior margin and semicircular median notch; sternite 4 entire. Abdomen unarmed, setose. Cornea small. Antenna stout; penultimate article with small distal spine; ultimate article unarmed; scale barely overreaching penultimate article to barely reaching midlength of ultimate article. Maxilliped 3 unarmed. Pereopod 1 (cheliped) slender, three times as long as carapace, setose and unarmed except small distodorsal spine on ischium. Pereopods 2–4 sparsely to strongly setose; meri smooth to irregular on proximal portion of dorsal crest, unarmed; carpi smooth along dorsal margin; propodi with pair of distal movable spines only; dactyli broad relative to length, less than half length of propodus, with three to six spines, loosely arranged, flexor margin with ultimate spine smaller than penultimate, subequal to antepenultimate. Variation: Variations from the original account by Baba (1974) include the length and shape of the antennal scale. The length of the scale ranges from barely overreaching the penultimate to reaching to the middle of the ultimate article of the antennal peduncle, whereas the width of the scale remains 1.6–1.7 times that of the antennal peduncle (1.6 in the paratype) (Fig. 15 shows short scale of ovigerous female of NIWA 10900). More commonly, the scale terminates in a more round tip than illustrated in the holotype. One female (Mu 68–81, NMNZ Cr. 012092, south-east New Zealand) bears two small distal spines on the penultimate article. The new records support Baba’s (1974) remarks on variation regarding the degree of setation of the body and appendages varying from densely setose to moderately setose with no clear pattern related to sex or size. With regards to the spination of the dactyli of the ambulatory legs, specimens most commonly (60%) bear five spines, larger specimens more often bear six spines, and smaller specimens bear three to four spines. Further variation is exhibited in the length–width ratio of the carapace, 1.2 in paratype female, slightly more in smaller specimens (1.3 in 8.5 mm male, NIWA 10900) and slightly less in large specimens (1.1 in 14.3 mm female, NIWA 23138). Females are generally larger than males (range of carapace length for ovigerous females: 10.4 to 17.3 mm, mean 14.6 mm, median 14.3 mm; females: 4.3 to 16.8 mm, mean 11.0 mm, median 11.8 mm; males: 6.4 to 17.7 mm, mean 10.6 mm, median 9.5 mm). Large males show slightly gaping fingers of the cheliped. The female paratype and the large female of the (NMNZ Cr. 012096, south-east New Zealand) are infected with akentrogonid rhizocephalans on the ambulatory legs, the antennae, and the third maxilliped. Additionally, two specimens are infected by kentrogonids beneath the abdomen (two kentrogonids on NIWA 23158; one large sacculinid rhizocephalan on NIWA 23160). Remarks: Uroptychus tomentosus is recognizable by its setaceous body and appendages, round rostrum, small ocular peduncle, rounded frontal margin of the sternal plastron with a U-shaped median notch, short, rounded antennal scale, and the short dactyli of the ambulatory legs with three to six widely spaced spines. The female paratype matches the description of the holotype. It represents the only female of the type series of seven specimens and was collected from close to the type locality and at a similar depth. Uroptychus tomentosus is most similar to Uroptychus pilosus Baba, 1981, which shares the short antennal scale and short P2–4 dactyli. Uroptychus tomentosus differs from Uroptychus pilosus by having a distinct anterolateral and postorbital spine (vs. rounded), a small (sometimes minute) distal spine on the penultimate antennal article (vs. unarmed), and by having three to six spines on the dactyli of the walking legs (vs. only two terminal spines). Distribution: Chatham Rise, east of New Zealand’s South Island (between 43° 09′S and 44° 50′S), at depths of 116– 382 m. This species is one of the more common New Zealand chirostylids and appears to be endemic to the continental shelf of the eastern coast of New Zealand (Fig. 16). Its range is extended to the northern tip of New Zealand (34°08′S) and to the Bounty Islands to the south (48°13′S) from a depth range of 64– 540 m. : Published as part of Schnabel, Kareen E., 2009, A review of the New Zealand Chirostylidae (Anomura: Galatheoidea) with description of six new species from the Kermadec Islands, pp. 542-582 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 155 (3) on pages 570-572, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00449.x, http://zenodo.org/record/5444819 : {"references": ["Baba K. 1974. Four new species of galatheidean Crustacea from New Zealand waters. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 4: 381 - 393, figures 1 - 9.", "Baba K. 1981. Deep-sea galatheidean Crustacea (Decapoda, Anomura) taken by the R / V Soyo-Maru in Japanese Waters. I Family Chirostylidae. Bulletin of the National Science Museum, Tokyo, Series A 1: 111 - 134."]}
format Text
author Schnabel, Kareen E.
author_facet Schnabel, Kareen E.
author_sort Schnabel, Kareen E.
title Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974
title_short Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974
title_full Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974
title_fullStr Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974
title_full_unstemmed Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974
title_sort uroptychus tomentosus baba 1974
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2009
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5492365
https://zenodo.org/record/5492365
long_lat ENVELOPE(-128.761,-128.761,52.837,52.837)
geographic Bay of Plenty
New Zealand
geographic_facet Bay of Plenty
New Zealand
genre Bounty Islands
genre_facet Bounty Islands
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5492365
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5492365 2023-05-15T15:45:54+02:00 Uroptychus tomentosus Baba 1974 Schnabel, Kareen E. 2009 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5492365 https://zenodo.org/record/5492365 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/5444819 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFDDFF8AFFD23C4D317C1C7B0F4CF474 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00449.x http://zenodo.org/record/5444819 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFDDFF8AFFD23C4D317C1C7B0F4CF474 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5444855 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5444857 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5492364 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Decapoda Chirostylidae Uroptychus Uroptychus tomentosus Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2009 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5492365 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00449.x https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5444855 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5444857 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5492364 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z UROPTYCHUS TOMENTOSUS BABA, 1974 (FIG. 15) Uroptychus tomentosus Baba, 1974: 384, figs 3, 4 [type locality: holotype, ♂, 45°14.3′S, 171°29.2′E, 116 m, ZLKU 15125]. Type material: 1 ♀ (11.3 mm), paratype, south Chatham Rise, 44° 50.3′S, 171° 51.8′E, 118–120 m, 19.vi.1968, FV Kaiyo Maru stn 4, coll. K. Baba (ZLKU 15126). Other material examined: Northland Plateau: 1 ♀ (15.0 mm), north of New Zealand, 34° 7.50′S, 172° 47.00′E, 315 m, 13.x.1968, stn F924 (NIWA 23158). 1 ♀ (7.6 mm), 35° 49.00′S, 174° 30.00′E, 80 m (NIWA 9800). Bay of Plenty: 1 ♀ ovig. (8.3 mm), 2 ♀ (6.4, 8.1 mm), 1 ♂ (7.8 mm), from four stations. Chatham Rise: 2 ♂ (13.7, 14.3 mm), 43° 53.40′S, 173° 54.20′E, 400 m, 30.x.1979, stn S177 (NIWA 23143). 1 ♀ (4.3 mm), 44° 0.00′S, 172° 58.20′E, 81– 79 m, 6.x.1962, stn B554 (NIWA 10093). 2 ♀ (12.3, 16.8 mm), 44° 10.20′S, 176° 59.20′W, 278 m, 23.iii.1978, stn Q34 (NIWA 23149). 2 ♂ (9.0, 10.7 mm), 44° 12.30′S, 173° 29.90′E, 327 m, 28.x.1979, stn S156 (NIWA 23148). 1 ♂ (11.7 mm), 44° 57.00′S, 171° 46.00′E, 123 m, 19.i.1970, stn G668 (NIWA 10674). 1 ♀ ovig. (16 mm), 44° 9.00′S, 176° 6.50′E, 126 m, 23.x.1979, stn S134 (NIWA 10099). South-east New Zealand: 3 ♀ ovig. (10.4, 13.0, 16.8 mm), 5 ♀ (8.7–14.8 mm), 6 ♂ (6.7– 15.7 mm), from eight stations. Bounty Islands: 1 ♀ ovig. (14.3 mm), 48° 10.10′S, 179° 30.00′E, 228 m, 20.iii.1979, stn I700 (NIWA 23138). 1 ♂ (12.7 mm), 1 ♀ ovig. (14.3 mm), 1 ♀ (12.7 mm), 48° 12.60′S, 179° 29.10′E, 260 m, 25.ix.1978, stn S62 (NIWA 23144). 3 ♂ (8.5, 9.5, 17.7 mm), 4 ♀ ovig. (13.2–17.3 mm), 48° 9.50′S, 179° 47.00′E, 220 m, 15.iii.1979, stn I680 (NIWA 10900). 1 ♂ (6.4 mm), 48° 9.60′S, 179° 15.90′E, 250 m, 20.iii.1979, stn I701 (NIWA 23055). Diagnosis: Carapace longer than wide, dorsal surface unarmed, covered with fine setae; lateral margins irregular but without spines, concavely divergent, distal portion with ridge. Rostrum 0.4 times as long as remainder of carapace, anteriorly rounded. Pterygostomian flap granulate, anterior portion covered with serrate ridges, with sharp anterior spine. Sternal plastron wider than long along midlength, sternite 3 with round anterior margin and semicircular median notch; sternite 4 entire. Abdomen unarmed, setose. Cornea small. Antenna stout; penultimate article with small distal spine; ultimate article unarmed; scale barely overreaching penultimate article to barely reaching midlength of ultimate article. Maxilliped 3 unarmed. Pereopod 1 (cheliped) slender, three times as long as carapace, setose and unarmed except small distodorsal spine on ischium. Pereopods 2–4 sparsely to strongly setose; meri smooth to irregular on proximal portion of dorsal crest, unarmed; carpi smooth along dorsal margin; propodi with pair of distal movable spines only; dactyli broad relative to length, less than half length of propodus, with three to six spines, loosely arranged, flexor margin with ultimate spine smaller than penultimate, subequal to antepenultimate. Variation: Variations from the original account by Baba (1974) include the length and shape of the antennal scale. The length of the scale ranges from barely overreaching the penultimate to reaching to the middle of the ultimate article of the antennal peduncle, whereas the width of the scale remains 1.6–1.7 times that of the antennal peduncle (1.6 in the paratype) (Fig. 15 shows short scale of ovigerous female of NIWA 10900). More commonly, the scale terminates in a more round tip than illustrated in the holotype. One female (Mu 68–81, NMNZ Cr. 012092, south-east New Zealand) bears two small distal spines on the penultimate article. The new records support Baba’s (1974) remarks on variation regarding the degree of setation of the body and appendages varying from densely setose to moderately setose with no clear pattern related to sex or size. With regards to the spination of the dactyli of the ambulatory legs, specimens most commonly (60%) bear five spines, larger specimens more often bear six spines, and smaller specimens bear three to four spines. Further variation is exhibited in the length–width ratio of the carapace, 1.2 in paratype female, slightly more in smaller specimens (1.3 in 8.5 mm male, NIWA 10900) and slightly less in large specimens (1.1 in 14.3 mm female, NIWA 23138). Females are generally larger than males (range of carapace length for ovigerous females: 10.4 to 17.3 mm, mean 14.6 mm, median 14.3 mm; females: 4.3 to 16.8 mm, mean 11.0 mm, median 11.8 mm; males: 6.4 to 17.7 mm, mean 10.6 mm, median 9.5 mm). Large males show slightly gaping fingers of the cheliped. The female paratype and the large female of the (NMNZ Cr. 012096, south-east New Zealand) are infected with akentrogonid rhizocephalans on the ambulatory legs, the antennae, and the third maxilliped. Additionally, two specimens are infected by kentrogonids beneath the abdomen (two kentrogonids on NIWA 23158; one large sacculinid rhizocephalan on NIWA 23160). Remarks: Uroptychus tomentosus is recognizable by its setaceous body and appendages, round rostrum, small ocular peduncle, rounded frontal margin of the sternal plastron with a U-shaped median notch, short, rounded antennal scale, and the short dactyli of the ambulatory legs with three to six widely spaced spines. The female paratype matches the description of the holotype. It represents the only female of the type series of seven specimens and was collected from close to the type locality and at a similar depth. Uroptychus tomentosus is most similar to Uroptychus pilosus Baba, 1981, which shares the short antennal scale and short P2–4 dactyli. Uroptychus tomentosus differs from Uroptychus pilosus by having a distinct anterolateral and postorbital spine (vs. rounded), a small (sometimes minute) distal spine on the penultimate antennal article (vs. unarmed), and by having three to six spines on the dactyli of the walking legs (vs. only two terminal spines). Distribution: Chatham Rise, east of New Zealand’s South Island (between 43° 09′S and 44° 50′S), at depths of 116– 382 m. This species is one of the more common New Zealand chirostylids and appears to be endemic to the continental shelf of the eastern coast of New Zealand (Fig. 16). Its range is extended to the northern tip of New Zealand (34°08′S) and to the Bounty Islands to the south (48°13′S) from a depth range of 64– 540 m. : Published as part of Schnabel, Kareen E., 2009, A review of the New Zealand Chirostylidae (Anomura: Galatheoidea) with description of six new species from the Kermadec Islands, pp. 542-582 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 155 (3) on pages 570-572, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00449.x, http://zenodo.org/record/5444819 : {"references": ["Baba K. 1974. Four new species of galatheidean Crustacea from New Zealand waters. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 4: 381 - 393, figures 1 - 9.", "Baba K. 1981. Deep-sea galatheidean Crustacea (Decapoda, Anomura) taken by the R / V Soyo-Maru in Japanese Waters. I Family Chirostylidae. Bulletin of the National Science Museum, Tokyo, Series A 1: 111 - 134."]} Text Bounty Islands DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Bay of Plenty ENVELOPE(-128.761,-128.761,52.837,52.837) New Zealand