Gilvossius candidus ( Olivi, 1792 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5039.4.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1BDA2D59-E624-4409-AD5F-FBBE0DC71C9F |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038287B4-FFC1-8120-FF6B-79A1FD928968 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Gilvossius candidus ( Olivi, 1792 ) |
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Gilvossius candidus ( Olivi, 1792) View in CoL
( Fig. 1 a, b View FIGURE 1 ; 2 a, c, e, g View FIGURE 2 ; 3 a, c, d, g View FIGURE 3 )
Cancer candidus Olivi, 1792: 51 , pl. 3 fig. 3.
Gebios davyanus Risso, 1822: 243
Callianassa subterranea View in CoL forma pontica Czerniavsky, 1884: 81 (partim).
Callianassa pestae De Man, 1928: 34 , pl. 9, figs. 16-16e.
Callianassa algerica Lutze, 1938: 168 (partim).
Material examined. BLACK SEA : Crimean Peninsula : 2♂♂ ( ZMMU Ma-6193 and Ma-6194), 2 ovigerous ♀♀ ( ZMMU Ma-6195 and Ma-6196)— Kruglaya Bay (Omega), 44°35’51.8”N 33°26’40.8”E, depth 0.5–1.5 m, burrows in sand with sea grass, with yabbi pump, coll. I. Marin, 14.06.2020 GoogleMaps ; 3♂♂, 5 ovigerous ♀♀ ( LEMMI)—same local- ity and date ; 2♂♂, 7 ovigerous ♀♀ ( LEMMI)— Kazachiya Bay , 44°34’10.8”N 33°24’47.1”E, burros in sand with sea grass, with yabbi pump, coll. I. Marin, 10.06.2020 GoogleMaps ; Anapa Area : 1♂, 2 ovigerous ♀♀ ( LEMMI)— Anapa Beach, 44°55’13.4”N 37°18’45.8”E, depth 0.5–1.5 m, burrows in fine sand, with yabbi pump, coll. I. Marin, 7.08.2019 GoogleMaps .
Remarks. The widely distributed species recorded from almost all soft bottom habitats along the northern coasts of the Black Sea , from intertidal to the depth of 30–40 meters, or may be deeper. It is also the largest species among the three callianassid species occurring in the area, reaching to 90 mm in the total body length in adult; males attain larger size than females. Differentiating characters between the present species and the sympatric congener G. tyrrhenus are noted under the account of the latter species.
From the related Gilvossius whitei (K. Sakai, 1999) , presently known only from Croatian coasts, the species can be separated by (after Sakai, 1999; Ngoc-Ho, 2003): the peduncle of antenna I is equal to the peduncle of antenna II ( Fig. 3 a View FIGURE 3 ) (vs. the peduncle of antenna I is distinctly longer than that of antenna II in G. whitei (see Sakai, 1999: Fig. 4a View FIGURE 4 ); the propodus of maxilliped III is about 1.5 times as long as wide, with convex lower border (vs. the propodus of maxilliped III is slender, twice as long as wide, with lower border nearly straight in G. whitei ) and longer telson, which is less than 1.5 times as wide as long ( Fig. 2 c, e View FIGURE 2 ) (vs. about 1.5 times as wide as long in G. whitei ). The species can be also separated by the larger chela in males, with the carpus is distrinctly shorter than propodus, while the propodus is distinctly longer than the dactyls in G. candidus ( Fig. 3 c, d, g View FIGURE 3 ; Sakai, 1999: Fig. 2c, d View FIGURE 2 ), while the carpus is longer than the propodus, and the propodus is almost equal to the dactylus in length in G. whitei (see Sakai, 1999: Fig. 4c View FIGURE 4 ).
For the difference from co-occurring G. tyrrhenus see below.
Parasites. The symbiotic copepods of the genus Clausidium Kossmann, 1874 ( Crustacea: Copepoda : Poecilostomatoida: Clausiididae), probably undescribed species, were found attaching to the carapace and pleon on these shrimps (see Marin & Turbanov, 2016). Unidentified scale worms ( Polychaeta: Polynoidae ) were also found in burrows of these mud shrimps.
Distribution. This species is mainly confined to the Mediterranean with a few records from nearby areas, Cádiz Gulf in southern Spain, and Algarve in southern Portugal ( Kurian, 1956; García Raso, 1983, 1985; Ngoc-Ho, 2003; Sakai, 2011); occurs from intertidal to the depth of 20–30 m on soft substrates from fine sand with or without sea grass to muddy sediments ( Dworschak, 1992). Previously, the species was also recorded from the northern Black Sea (e.g., Bãcescu, 1967; Dolgopolskaya, 1954, 1969; Kobyakova, & Dolgopol’skaya, 1969; Makarov, 1938, 2004; Marin, 2013; Marin & Turbanov, 2016).
ZMMU |
Zoological Museum, Moscow Lomonosov State University |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Gilvossius candidus ( Olivi, 1792 )
Marin, Ivan 2021 |
Callianassa algerica
Lutze, J. 1938: 168 |
Callianassa pestae
De Man, J. G. 1928: 34 |
Callianassa subterranea
Czerniavsky, V. 1884: 81 |
Gebios davyanus
Risso, A. 1822: 243 |
Cancer candidus
Olivi, G. 1792: 51 |