Eurycarcinus integrifrons De Man, 1879

Eurycarcinus integrifrons De Man, 1879: 55–56 .—Nobili 1906: 290, pl. XI, fig. 2.— Apel 1994b: 415, 433–434; 1996: 331.— Al-Ghais & Cooper 1996: 425–426.— Naderloo & Sari 2007 a: 344, tab 1.— Naderloo & Türkay 2012: 36.— Naderloo et al. 2013: 449.— Naderloo 2017: 26.11.— Trivedi et al. 2021: 6, fig. 6.

Eurycarcinus orientalis . —Chhapgar 1957: 436–437, pl. 11d–f.—Tirmizi et al. 1986: 8–10, figs. 3 A–D.— Tirmizi & Ghani 1996: 30–32, fig. 10.

Material examined. 1 male, CL 11.10 mm, CW 12.14 mm, 3 females, CL 12.10–15.40 mm, CW 14.11–15.25 mm (ZUTC 10208), Hormoz I., Persian Gulf, 25°35′N, 58°02′E, rocky/coral, coll. H. Ashrafi & K. Golzarian, 11.11.2008 .

Distribution. Northwestern Indian Ocean: Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, Gulf of Aden, South Africa, Pakistan, India.

Remarks. As previously shown by Ng et al. (2018), the genus Eurycarcinus is represented by three species, E. integrifrons de Man, 1879, E. orientalis A. Milne-Edwards, 1867, and E. natalensis (Krauss 1843) . In the past, E. integrifrons and E. orientalis were thought to be synonymous, but in fact they belong to two distinct species (Apel 2001; Ng et al. 2018). Eurycarcinus integrifrons was limited to the northwestern Indian Ocean: Gulf of Aden, Arabian Sea, Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, Pakistan and western India (Apel 2001; Naderloo & Türkay 2012; Naderloo 2017). Canzcan et al. (2010) was the first to report this species from the eastern Mediterranean in Turkey and suggested that it may have entered the region through ballast water. Abdelsalam et al. (2018) recently reported the species from an Egyptian port in southern Turkey. Trivedi et al. (2021) conducted a comprehensive study on the Indian species of Eurycarcinus .