Plesionika

Key to Asian species of Plesionika 1. Carapace armed with dorsal teeth in two thirds of its length........................... P. spinidorsalis (Rathbun, 1906) - Carapace without dorsal teeth in two thirds of its length.......................................................2 2. Rostrum with high basa...

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Main Authors: Ahamed, Ferdous, Cardoso, Irene A., Ahmed, Zoarder F., Hossain, Md. Y., Ohtomi, Jun
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621115
https://zenodo.org/record/5621115
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5621115
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
Pandalidae
Plesionika
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Decapoda
Pandalidae
Plesionika
Ahamed, Ferdous
Cardoso, Irene A.
Ahmed, Zoarder F.
Hossain, Md. Y.
Ohtomi, Jun
Plesionika
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Decapoda
Pandalidae
Plesionika
description Key to Asian species of Plesionika 1. Carapace armed with dorsal teeth in two thirds of its length........................... P. spinidorsalis (Rathbun, 1906) - Carapace without dorsal teeth in two thirds of its length.......................................................2 2. Rostrum with high basal crest............................................................................3 - Rostrum with low basal crest............................................................................ 6 3. Rostrum unarmed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth) or armed with one or two teeth................. 4 - Rostrum armed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth) with more than two teeth....... P. lophotes Chace, 1985 4. Rostrum unarmed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth)............................................5 - Rostrum armed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth) with one or two teeth...... P. rufomaculata Chan, 2004 5. Rostrum with two subapical teeth...................................................... P. hsuehyui Chan, 2004 - Rostrum without subapical teeth............................................. P. albocristata Chan & Chuang, 2002 6. Rostrum short, not reaching or slightly overreaching level of distal end of antennal scale.............................7 - Rostrum long, far overreaching level of distal end of antennal scale............................................. 12 7. Rostrum unarmed dorsally (excluding that teeth before orbital margin and the subapical teeth)........................8 - Rostrum armed dorsally (excluding that teeth before orbital margin and the subapical teeth)..........................9 8. Rostrum ventral margin with 7–9 evenly distributed teeth between level of eye and tip.................................................................................................... P. erythrocyclus Chan & Crosnier, 1997 - Rostrum ventral margin with about 10 obscure serrations near apex......................... P. brevirostris Bate, 1888 9. Rostrum ventral margin unarmed or with appressed serrations.................................................10 - Rostrum ventral margin armed with teeth.................................................................. 11 10. Rostrum ventral marginunarmed.................................................... P. hypanodon Doflein, 1902 - Rostrum ventral margin with 7–13 appressed serrations becoming obscure anteriorly........... P. acinacifer Chace, 1985 11. Rostrum ventral margin armed with 3–5 teeth in anterior half of rostrum....................... P. kensleyi Chace, 1985 - Rostrum ventral margin armed with 9–10 small teeth...................................... P. persica (Kemp, 1925) 12. Rostrum dorsally unarmed after antennular peduncle.........................................................13 - Rostrum dorsally armed with teeth after antennular peduncle.................................................. 23 13. Fourth pair of pereopods without epipods................................................................. 14 - Fourth pair of pereopods with epipods....................................................................15 14. With epipods on pereopods 1–3...................................................... P. intermedia Chace, 1985 - Without epipods on pereopods 1–3................................................... P. simulatrix Chace, 1985 15. Teeth on rostral crest with barbed tips..................................................... P. pumila Chace, 1985 - Teeth on rostral crest with sharp point....................................................................16 16. Abdominal somite 3 tergum with right angle or acute posterodorsal tooth........................................17 - Abdominal somite 3 tergum posterodorsally rounded and unarmed............................................. 19 17. Rostrum relatively short, about 1.7 carapace length........................................ P. williamsi Forest, 1963 - Rostrum relatively long, more than twice carapace length.....................................................18 18. Third abdominal somite not recurved dorsally; pereopod 3 dactyl usually less than 0.25 as long as propod............................................................................................ P. ensis (Milne-Edwards, 1881) - Third abdominal somite usually with posterodorsal tooth recurved dorsally; pereopod 3 dactyl usually less than 0.25 as long as propod............................................................................. P. reflexa Chace, 1985 19. Rostrum ventrally armed with few teeth (8–23)........................................ P. alcocki (Anderson, 1896) - Rostrum ventrally armed with many teeth (19–53)......................................................... 20 20. Eye kidney shaped.................................................................. P. semilaevis Bate, 1888 - Eye ovoid...........................................................................................21 21. Pereopod 5 propod thread like, extremely long, at least three times as long as carapace...... P. taiwanica Chan& Yu, 2000 - Pereopod 5 propod not thread like, long but less than three times as long as carapace...............................22 22. Telson subequal to abdominal somite 6................................................ P. orientalis Chace, 1985 - Telson longer than abdominal somite 6........................................... P. martia (Milne-Edwards, 1883) 23. Rostrum armed with numerous closely set teeth almost the entire length of both borders............................24 - Rostrum not armed with numerous closely set teeth almost the entire length of both borders......................... 29 24. Abdominal somite 5 pleura with posteroventral denticle......................................................25 - Abdominal somite 5 pleura without posteroventral denticle.................................................. 27 25. Pereopods 1–4 with epipods........................................................... P. indica De Man, 1917 - Pereopods 1–4 without epipods..........................................................................26 26. Posterior 10 ventral rostral teeth corresponding to 8 or fewer dorsal teeth, penultimate segment of maxilliped 3 usually less than 1.5 times as long as terminal segment............................................ P. quasigrandis Chace, 1985 - Posterior 10 ventral rostral teeth corresponding to more than 8 dorsal teeth, penultimate segment of maxilliped 3 more than 1.5 times as long as terminal segment..................................................... P. grandis Doflein, 1902 27. Epipod well developed at maxilliped 3................................................. P. narval (Fabricius, 1787) - Epipod absent or rudimentar at maxilliped 3.............................................................. 28 28. Maxilliped 3 without epipod, rostrum with posterior 10 ventral teeth corresponding to more than 7 dorsal teeth, pereopod 3 dactylus about 0.10 as long as propod............................................. P. longicauda (Rathbun, 1901) - Maxilliped 3 with rudimentary epipod, rostrum with posterior 10 ventral teeth corresponding to less than 8 dorsal teeth, pereo- pod 3 dactylus more than 0.20 as long as propod..................................... P. yui Chan & Crosnier, 1991 29. Rostrum armed dorsally with widely set teeth at basal region and closely set teeth at distal region.....................30 - Rostrum armed dorsally with widely set teeth along its entire length or with very few teeth (1–5) after antennular peduncle level.............................................................................................. 33 30. Pereopods 3–4 without epipods...................................................... P. adensameri (Balss, 1914) - Pereopods 3–4 with epipods reduced or well developed...................................................... 31 31. Pereopods 3–4 with well-developed epipods............................................. P. spinensis Chace, 1985 - Pereopods 3–4 with reduced epipods.................................................................... 32 32. Rostrum dorsally armed with one single fixed tooth before post-orbital margin leveland 16–29 teeth posterior to post-orbital margin level, ventrally armed with 30–43 teeth on ventral border......................... P. crosnieri Chan & Yu, 1991 - Rostrum dorsally armed with 2–4 movable teeth before post-orbital margin level and 27–36 teeth posterior to post-orbital mar- gin level, ventrally armed with 37–52 teeth on ventral border.............................. P. edwardsii (Brandt, 1851) 33. Rostrum armed ventrally with less than 10 teeth........................................................... 34 - Rostrum armed ventrally with more than 10 teeth.......................................................... 37 34. Rostrum armed dorsally with 5 teeth, anterior 3 with barbed tips..................... P. longidactylus Li & Komai, 2003 - Rostrum dorsal teeth not barbed.........................................................................35 35. Rostrum armed dorsally with 5–10 teeth (including that before post-orbital margin level).................................................................................................... P. bifurca Alcock & Anderson, 1894 - Rostrum armed dorsally with more than 10 teeth (including that before post-orbital margin level).................... 36 36. Pereopod 3 with very short dactyl 0.08 to 0.16 times as long as propod....................... P. sindoi (Rathbun, 1906) - Pereopod 3 with long dactyl 0.25 to 0.33 times as long as propod........................... P. fimbriata Chace, 1985 37. Rostrum armed ventrally with 10–15 teeth................................................................ 38 - Rostrum armed ventrally with more than 15 teeth.......................................................... 42 38. Pereopods 2 subequal.................................................................................39 - Peropods 2 unequal.................................................................................. 40 39. Rostrum dorsally armed throughout entire length with 17–18 teeth.......................... P. ortmanni Doflein, 1902 - Rostrum dorsally armed only until the end of scaphocerite level with 10–12 teeth............... P. carsini Crosnier, 1986 40. Rostrum armed dorsally with less than ten teeth......................................... P. assimilis De Man, 1917 - Rostrum armed dorsally with more than ten teeth........................................................... 41 41. Pereopod 2 left carpus with about 110 articles and right carpus with 27 or more articles........... P. binoculus (Bate, 1988) - Pereopod 2 left carpus with 50–94 articles and right carpus with 18–24 articles.................. P. izumiae Omori, 1971 42. Pereopods 2 subequal............................................................ P. parvimartia Chace, 1985 - Peropods 2 unequal.................................................................................. 43 43. Rostrum armed dorsally with 6–7 teeth before antennal peduncle margin level and one isolated tooth in anterior ¼ of rostrum................................................................................... P. unidens Bate, 1888 - Rostrum armed dorsally throughout entire length with 11 –13 teeth.............................................44 44. Rostrum armed dorsally with 11–13 teeth............................................ P. philippinensis Chace, 1985 - Rostrum armed dorsally with 15–23 teeth........................................... P. heterocarpus (Costa, 1871) : Published as part of Ahamed, Ferdous, Cardoso, Irene A., Ahmed, Zoarder F., Hossain, Md. Y. & Ohtomi, Jun, 2017, An overview of the genus Plesionika Bate, 1888 (Decapoda, Caridea, Pandalidae) in Asian waters, pp. 575-593 in Zootaxa 4221 (5) on pages 577-579, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4221.5.6, http://zenodo.org/record/253575 : {"references": ["Chace, F. A. Jr. (1985) The caridean shrimps (Crustcea: Decapoda) of the Albatross Philippine Expedition, 1907 - 1910, Part 3: Families Thalassocarididae and Pandalidae. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 411, 1 - 143. https: // doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00810282.411", "Chan, T. Y. (2004) The \" Plesionika rostricrescentis (Bate, 1888) \" and \" P. lophotes Chace, 1985 \" species groups of Plesionika Bate, 1888, with descriptions of five new species (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pandalidae), in Marshall B. & Richer De Forges B. (eds), Tropical deep-sea benthos, vol. 23. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, 191, 293 - 318.", "Chan, T. Y. & Chuang, S. C. (2002) A new shrimp species of Plesionika Bate, 1888 with high basal rostral crest (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pandalidae) from Taiwan. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 115, 611 - 615.", "Chan, T. Y. & Crosnier, A. (1997) Crustacea Decapoda: deep - sea shrimps of the genus Plesionika Bate, 1888 (Pandalidae) from French Polynesia, with descriptions of five new species. In: A. Crosnier (ed.), Resultats des Campagnes MUSORSTOM, 18. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, (A) 176, 187 - 234.", "Doflein, F. (1902) Ostasiatische Dekapoden. Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Munchen, 21, 613 - 670.", "Chan, T. Y. & Yu H. P. (2000) A new deep - sea shrimp of the genus Plesionika Bate, 1888 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pandalidae) from Taiwan. National Taiwan Museum Special Publication Series, 10, 119 - 127.", "Chan, T. Y. & Crosnier, A. (1991). Crustacea Decapoda: studies of the Plesionika narval (Fabricius, 1787) group (Pandalidae) with description of six new species. In: A. Crosnier (ed.), Resultats Des Campagnes MUSORSTOM, 9. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, (A) 152, 413 - 461.", "Li, X. & Komai, T. (2003) Pandaloid shrimps from the northern South China Sea, with description of a new species of Plesionika (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 51, 257 - 275.", "Omori, M. (1971) Taxonomy and some notes on the biology of a new caridean shrimp, Plesionika izumiae (Decapoda, Pandalidae). Crustaceana, 20, 241 - 256."]}
format Text
author Ahamed, Ferdous
Cardoso, Irene A.
Ahmed, Zoarder F.
Hossain, Md. Y.
Ohtomi, Jun
author_facet Ahamed, Ferdous
Cardoso, Irene A.
Ahmed, Zoarder F.
Hossain, Md. Y.
Ohtomi, Jun
author_sort Ahamed, Ferdous
title Plesionika
title_short Plesionika
title_full Plesionika
title_fullStr Plesionika
title_full_unstemmed Plesionika
title_sort plesionika
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621115
https://zenodo.org/record/5621115
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.127,-61.127,-64.240,-64.240)
geographic Alcock
geographic_facet Alcock
genre narval
narval
genre_facet narval
narval
op_relation http://zenodo.org/record/253575
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op_rights Open Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621115
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4221.5.6
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5621115 2023-05-15T18:50:53+02:00 Plesionika Ahamed, Ferdous Cardoso, Irene A. Ahmed, Zoarder F. Hossain, Md. Y. Ohtomi, Jun 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621115 https://zenodo.org/record/5621115 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/253575 http://publication.plazi.org/id/9C0AFFA09057FF9FE036A42A1509FFB5 http://zoobank.org/1CB61A37-23C5-4041-AB51-0EA76E62770F https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4221.5.6 http://zenodo.org/record/253575 http://publication.plazi.org/id/9C0AFFA09057FF9FE036A42A1509FFB5 http://zoobank.org/1CB61A37-23C5-4041-AB51-0EA76E62770F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621114 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Decapoda Pandalidae Plesionika Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621115 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4221.5.6 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621114 2022-02-08T12:40:44Z Key to Asian species of Plesionika 1. Carapace armed with dorsal teeth in two thirds of its length........................... P. spinidorsalis (Rathbun, 1906) - Carapace without dorsal teeth in two thirds of its length.......................................................2 2. Rostrum with high basal crest............................................................................3 - Rostrum with low basal crest............................................................................ 6 3. Rostrum unarmed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth) or armed with one or two teeth................. 4 - Rostrum armed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth) with more than two teeth....... P. lophotes Chace, 1985 4. Rostrum unarmed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth)............................................5 - Rostrum armed dorsally (excluding basal crest and subapical teeth) with one or two teeth...... P. rufomaculata Chan, 2004 5. Rostrum with two subapical teeth...................................................... P. hsuehyui Chan, 2004 - Rostrum without subapical teeth............................................. P. albocristata Chan & Chuang, 2002 6. Rostrum short, not reaching or slightly overreaching level of distal end of antennal scale.............................7 - Rostrum long, far overreaching level of distal end of antennal scale............................................. 12 7. Rostrum unarmed dorsally (excluding that teeth before orbital margin and the subapical teeth)........................8 - Rostrum armed dorsally (excluding that teeth before orbital margin and the subapical teeth)..........................9 8. Rostrum ventral margin with 7–9 evenly distributed teeth between level of eye and tip.................................................................................................... P. erythrocyclus Chan & Crosnier, 1997 - Rostrum ventral margin with about 10 obscure serrations near apex......................... P. brevirostris Bate, 1888 9. Rostrum ventral margin unarmed or with appressed serrations.................................................10 - Rostrum ventral margin armed with teeth.................................................................. 11 10. Rostrum ventral marginunarmed.................................................... P. hypanodon Doflein, 1902 - Rostrum ventral margin with 7–13 appressed serrations becoming obscure anteriorly........... P. acinacifer Chace, 1985 11. Rostrum ventral margin armed with 3–5 teeth in anterior half of rostrum....................... P. kensleyi Chace, 1985 - Rostrum ventral margin armed with 9–10 small teeth...................................... P. persica (Kemp, 1925) 12. Rostrum dorsally unarmed after antennular peduncle.........................................................13 - Rostrum dorsally armed with teeth after antennular peduncle.................................................. 23 13. Fourth pair of pereopods without epipods................................................................. 14 - Fourth pair of pereopods with epipods....................................................................15 14. With epipods on pereopods 1–3...................................................... P. intermedia Chace, 1985 - Without epipods on pereopods 1–3................................................... P. simulatrix Chace, 1985 15. Teeth on rostral crest with barbed tips..................................................... P. pumila Chace, 1985 - Teeth on rostral crest with sharp point....................................................................16 16. Abdominal somite 3 tergum with right angle or acute posterodorsal tooth........................................17 - Abdominal somite 3 tergum posterodorsally rounded and unarmed............................................. 19 17. Rostrum relatively short, about 1.7 carapace length........................................ P. williamsi Forest, 1963 - Rostrum relatively long, more than twice carapace length.....................................................18 18. Third abdominal somite not recurved dorsally; pereopod 3 dactyl usually less than 0.25 as long as propod............................................................................................ P. ensis (Milne-Edwards, 1881) - Third abdominal somite usually with posterodorsal tooth recurved dorsally; pereopod 3 dactyl usually less than 0.25 as long as propod............................................................................. P. reflexa Chace, 1985 19. Rostrum ventrally armed with few teeth (8–23)........................................ P. alcocki (Anderson, 1896) - Rostrum ventrally armed with many teeth (19–53)......................................................... 20 20. Eye kidney shaped.................................................................. P. semilaevis Bate, 1888 - Eye ovoid...........................................................................................21 21. Pereopod 5 propod thread like, extremely long, at least three times as long as carapace...... P. taiwanica Chan& Yu, 2000 - Pereopod 5 propod not thread like, long but less than three times as long as carapace...............................22 22. Telson subequal to abdominal somite 6................................................ P. orientalis Chace, 1985 - Telson longer than abdominal somite 6........................................... P. martia (Milne-Edwards, 1883) 23. Rostrum armed with numerous closely set teeth almost the entire length of both borders............................24 - Rostrum not armed with numerous closely set teeth almost the entire length of both borders......................... 29 24. Abdominal somite 5 pleura with posteroventral denticle......................................................25 - Abdominal somite 5 pleura without posteroventral denticle.................................................. 27 25. Pereopods 1–4 with epipods........................................................... P. indica De Man, 1917 - Pereopods 1–4 without epipods..........................................................................26 26. Posterior 10 ventral rostral teeth corresponding to 8 or fewer dorsal teeth, penultimate segment of maxilliped 3 usually less than 1.5 times as long as terminal segment............................................ P. quasigrandis Chace, 1985 - Posterior 10 ventral rostral teeth corresponding to more than 8 dorsal teeth, penultimate segment of maxilliped 3 more than 1.5 times as long as terminal segment..................................................... P. grandis Doflein, 1902 27. Epipod well developed at maxilliped 3................................................. P. narval (Fabricius, 1787) - Epipod absent or rudimentar at maxilliped 3.............................................................. 28 28. Maxilliped 3 without epipod, rostrum with posterior 10 ventral teeth corresponding to more than 7 dorsal teeth, pereopod 3 dactylus about 0.10 as long as propod............................................. P. longicauda (Rathbun, 1901) - Maxilliped 3 with rudimentary epipod, rostrum with posterior 10 ventral teeth corresponding to less than 8 dorsal teeth, pereo- pod 3 dactylus more than 0.20 as long as propod..................................... P. yui Chan & Crosnier, 1991 29. Rostrum armed dorsally with widely set teeth at basal region and closely set teeth at distal region.....................30 - Rostrum armed dorsally with widely set teeth along its entire length or with very few teeth (1–5) after antennular peduncle level.............................................................................................. 33 30. Pereopods 3–4 without epipods...................................................... P. adensameri (Balss, 1914) - Pereopods 3–4 with epipods reduced or well developed...................................................... 31 31. Pereopods 3–4 with well-developed epipods............................................. P. spinensis Chace, 1985 - Pereopods 3–4 with reduced epipods.................................................................... 32 32. Rostrum dorsally armed with one single fixed tooth before post-orbital margin leveland 16–29 teeth posterior to post-orbital margin level, ventrally armed with 30–43 teeth on ventral border......................... P. crosnieri Chan & Yu, 1991 - Rostrum dorsally armed with 2–4 movable teeth before post-orbital margin level and 27–36 teeth posterior to post-orbital mar- gin level, ventrally armed with 37–52 teeth on ventral border.............................. P. edwardsii (Brandt, 1851) 33. Rostrum armed ventrally with less than 10 teeth........................................................... 34 - Rostrum armed ventrally with more than 10 teeth.......................................................... 37 34. Rostrum armed dorsally with 5 teeth, anterior 3 with barbed tips..................... P. longidactylus Li & Komai, 2003 - Rostrum dorsal teeth not barbed.........................................................................35 35. Rostrum armed dorsally with 5–10 teeth (including that before post-orbital margin level).................................................................................................... P. bifurca Alcock & Anderson, 1894 - Rostrum armed dorsally with more than 10 teeth (including that before post-orbital margin level).................... 36 36. Pereopod 3 with very short dactyl 0.08 to 0.16 times as long as propod....................... P. sindoi (Rathbun, 1906) - Pereopod 3 with long dactyl 0.25 to 0.33 times as long as propod........................... P. fimbriata Chace, 1985 37. Rostrum armed ventrally with 10–15 teeth................................................................ 38 - Rostrum armed ventrally with more than 15 teeth.......................................................... 42 38. Pereopods 2 subequal.................................................................................39 - Peropods 2 unequal.................................................................................. 40 39. Rostrum dorsally armed throughout entire length with 17–18 teeth.......................... P. ortmanni Doflein, 1902 - Rostrum dorsally armed only until the end of scaphocerite level with 10–12 teeth............... P. carsini Crosnier, 1986 40. Rostrum armed dorsally with less than ten teeth......................................... P. assimilis De Man, 1917 - Rostrum armed dorsally with more than ten teeth........................................................... 41 41. Pereopod 2 left carpus with about 110 articles and right carpus with 27 or more articles........... P. binoculus (Bate, 1988) - Pereopod 2 left carpus with 50–94 articles and right carpus with 18–24 articles.................. P. izumiae Omori, 1971 42. Pereopods 2 subequal............................................................ P. parvimartia Chace, 1985 - Peropods 2 unequal.................................................................................. 43 43. Rostrum armed dorsally with 6–7 teeth before antennal peduncle margin level and one isolated tooth in anterior ¼ of rostrum................................................................................... P. unidens Bate, 1888 - Rostrum armed dorsally throughout entire length with 11 –13 teeth.............................................44 44. Rostrum armed dorsally with 11–13 teeth............................................ P. philippinensis Chace, 1985 - Rostrum armed dorsally with 15–23 teeth........................................... P. heterocarpus (Costa, 1871) : Published as part of Ahamed, Ferdous, Cardoso, Irene A., Ahmed, Zoarder F., Hossain, Md. Y. & Ohtomi, Jun, 2017, An overview of the genus Plesionika Bate, 1888 (Decapoda, Caridea, Pandalidae) in Asian waters, pp. 575-593 in Zootaxa 4221 (5) on pages 577-579, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4221.5.6, http://zenodo.org/record/253575 : {"references": ["Chace, F. A. Jr. (1985) The caridean shrimps (Crustcea: Decapoda) of the Albatross Philippine Expedition, 1907 - 1910, Part 3: Families Thalassocarididae and Pandalidae. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 411, 1 - 143. https: // doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00810282.411", "Chan, T. Y. (2004) The \" Plesionika rostricrescentis (Bate, 1888) \" and \" P. lophotes Chace, 1985 \" species groups of Plesionika Bate, 1888, with descriptions of five new species (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pandalidae), in Marshall B. & Richer De Forges B. (eds), Tropical deep-sea benthos, vol. 23. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, 191, 293 - 318.", "Chan, T. Y. & Chuang, S. C. (2002) A new shrimp species of Plesionika Bate, 1888 with high basal rostral crest (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pandalidae) from Taiwan. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 115, 611 - 615.", "Chan, T. Y. & Crosnier, A. (1997) Crustacea Decapoda: deep - sea shrimps of the genus Plesionika Bate, 1888 (Pandalidae) from French Polynesia, with descriptions of five new species. In: A. Crosnier (ed.), Resultats des Campagnes MUSORSTOM, 18. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, (A) 176, 187 - 234.", "Doflein, F. (1902) Ostasiatische Dekapoden. Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Munchen, 21, 613 - 670.", "Chan, T. Y. & Yu H. P. (2000) A new deep - sea shrimp of the genus Plesionika Bate, 1888 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pandalidae) from Taiwan. National Taiwan Museum Special Publication Series, 10, 119 - 127.", "Chan, T. Y. & Crosnier, A. (1991). Crustacea Decapoda: studies of the Plesionika narval (Fabricius, 1787) group (Pandalidae) with description of six new species. In: A. Crosnier (ed.), Resultats Des Campagnes MUSORSTOM, 9. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, (A) 152, 413 - 461.", "Li, X. & Komai, T. (2003) Pandaloid shrimps from the northern South China Sea, with description of a new species of Plesionika (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 51, 257 - 275.", "Omori, M. (1971) Taxonomy and some notes on the biology of a new caridean shrimp, Plesionika izumiae (Decapoda, Pandalidae). Crustaceana, 20, 241 - 256."]} Text narval narval DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Alcock ENVELOPE(-61.127,-61.127,-64.240,-64.240)