Anoplodactylus petiolatus

Anoplodactylus petiolatus (KrØyer, 1844) For older synonyms and references, see Müller (1993: 239). Anoplodactylus petiolatus : Melzer et al., 1996: 167-171, figures 1 and 2; Ros-Santaella, 2004: 7, figure 6; Bamber and Costa, 2009: 168, figure 2g; Lehmann et al., 2014: 167, figures 47 and 48. Mater...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lucena, Rudá Amorim, Christoffersen, Martin Lindsey
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11127860
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C4812FFFA23A7FFF4359C8E5F9DBFC
Description
Summary:Anoplodactylus petiolatus (KrØyer, 1844) For older synonyms and references, see Müller (1993: 239). Anoplodactylus petiolatus : Melzer et al., 1996: 167-171, figures 1 and 2; Ros-Santaella, 2004: 7, figure 6; Bamber and Costa, 2009: 168, figure 2g; Lehmann et al., 2014: 167, figures 47 and 48. Material examined: Espírito Santo: (UFPB.PYC–126) 1 ♂, Ilha do Boi, intertidal, 01 Nov. 2005, coll. K. Paresque. Diagnosis: Trunk elongate with all segments fused. Lateral processes with rounded tubercles. Scapus of cheliphore slender. Movable finger with one seta on inner and outer margin. Tube of cement gland thin, directed obliquely backwards, beginning in the middle region of femur. Propodus curved. Heel with 2 to 4 spines. Sole almost straight, with 3 or 4 distally curved spines along proximal half, and a cutting lamella on distal half. Main claw slightly curved, thin. Auxiliary claws strongly reduced. Distribution: Brazil (off Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, off Paraná, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Espírito Santo), Argentina, Uruguay, French Guiana, Surinam, Guyana, Bonaire, Venezuela, Curaçao, Caribbean coast of Colombia, Mexico, Bahamas, USA (Florida, Alabama, Texas, Georgia), Sargasso Sea, Cape Verde, Morocco, Mediterranean, Spain, Black Sea, Ireland, United Kingdom, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, Faroe Islands, Russia, Terra del Fuego (Beagle Channel), Chile (Stock, 1986, 1992; Müller, 1993; Bamber and Costa, 2009; Lehmann et al., 2014; Turpaeva and Raiskiy, 2014). Depth: Up to 4825 m deep. Remarks: A . petiolatus and A . maritimus are very similar species (Müller and Krapp, 2009). They may be distinguished, superficially at least, by the more tenuous and slender habitus of the first species, with larger appendages than the second species (Child, 1992). The examined specimen is a little more robust than the specimens illustrated by Stock (1974), Child (1992), and Müller and Krapp (2009). It is very similar to the specimen described by Marcus (1940). It has a cutting lamella on the propodus, the fingers of the chelae ...