Parasesarma bengalense ( Davie, 2003 )

Pati, Sameer Kumar, Rani, Varghese, Sujila, Pallikkara Subrahmanian & Nadan, Sivasankaran Bijoy, 2019, First confirmed record of the sesarmid crab, Parasesarma bengalense (Davie, 2003) (Decapoda: Brachyura) in Indian waters, Nauplius 27, pp. 1-6 : 3-5

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1590/2358-2936e2019012

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10451029

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0393491B-3D5D-3B33-FEF1-6114FE1B0D80

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Parasesarma bengalense ( Davie, 2003 )
status

 

Parasesarma bengalense ( Davie, 2003) View in CoL

( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 )

Perisesarma bengalense Davie, 2003: 388 View in CoL .

Perisesarma bengalensis — Bouillon et al., 2004: 83 (list).

Perisesarma bengalense — Ng et al., 2008: 222 View in CoL (list); Davie, 2010: 197 (list).

Parasesarma bengalense — Shahdadi and Schubart, 2017: 534 View in CoL (list and new combination).

Material examined. INDIA: MAHARASHTRA — male (12.20 × 9.94 mm) and female (13.67 × 11.04 mm), Malgund, approximately 2 km north of Ganapatipule , Ratnagiri district (17.164°N, 73.259°E), 9 April 1991, coll. S.V. Mulay ( ZSI-WRC C.1286 ) GoogleMaps . KERALA — 2 males (16.10 × 12.94 mm; 11.87 × 9.86 mm) and female (12.52 × 10.52 mm), Thejaswini River, near Palayi Kadavu, Kasaragod district (12.261°N, 75.165°E), 21 October 2018, coll. P.S. Sujila and P.S. Lakshmi (ZSI-WRC C.1910); 2 males (17.13 × 13.99 mm; 11.59 × 9.52 mm), Valiyavattom Island, near Narakkal, Cochin Estuary , Ernakulam district (10.044°N, 76.234°E), 9 March 2019, coll. V. Rani ( ZSI-WRC C.1914 ) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Carapace subrectangular, slightly broader than long (cw/cl 1.2–1.5); regions well defined; postfrontal region with 4 prominent, rounded lobes; medial lobes slightly broader than lateral lobes; lateral lobes not separated from inner orbital rim; front deflexed downwards, margin sinuous; anterolateral margin with large, acutely triangular external orbital tooth and smaller, acutely triangular epibranchial tooth, separated from each other by distinct notch; lateral margins subparallel, slightly concave, with numerous short setae; cornea slightly extending beyond tip of external orbital tooth ( Fig. 2A View Figure 2 ). Male cheliped with 2 transverse pectinate crests on upper surface of palm; primary pectinate crest with 14–18 tall, broad corneous teeth; secondary pectinate crest shorter than primary pectinate crest, with 13–15 relatively shorter corneous teeth; fingers serrated along cutting margins; fixed finger with strong subdistal tooth along cutting margin; dactylus with strong subdistal tooth and prominent medial tooth along cutting margin, and 16–18 almost symmetrical, distinct tubercles on upper surface; proximal 1–10 dactylar tubercles closely spaced, transversely broadened; distal dactylar tubercles relatively widely spaced, rounded; outer surfaces of palm and proximal portion of dactylus relatively more coarsely granular ( Fig. 2B–E View Figure 2 ). Ambulatory legs moderately long, stout ( Fig. 2A View Figure 2 ). Male pleon moderately broad; sixth pleonal somite approximately 2.1 times broader than long ( Fig. 2F View Figure 2 ). G1 moderately stout, gently curved; apical process corneous, relatively shorter and stouter, bent at angle of about 60° from longitudinal axis ( Fig. 2G View Figure 2 ).

Remarks. Parasesarma bengalense mostly resembles P. darwinense (Campbell, 1967) , an endemic species of northwestern Australia, in terms of morphological characters (see Davie, 2003). Parasesarma bengalense is nevertheless distinguished from P. darwinense by the characters of the male cheliped, male sixth pleonal somite, and G1 ( Davie, 2003; 2010).

On the other hand, the molecular data of Shahdadi and Schubart (2017) showed that P.bengalense forms a distinct clade along with P. bidens , P. cricotum (Rahayu and Davie, 2002) , and the more closely related P. guttatum (A. Milne-Edwards, 1869) . Among these, only P. bidens is known to occur in Indian waters with a wider distribution (see Trivedi et al., 2018). The juvenile crabs of P. bengalense are likely to be confused with P. bidens due to similarities in some carapace morphology. For instance, both the species have a prominent epibranchial tooth ( Fig. 2A View Figure 2 ; see De Haan, 1837: pl. 16, fig.4), and the male sixth pleonal somite of P.bengalense is almost equally broad as that of P. bidens ( Fig. 2F View Figure 2 ; see Davie, 2010; De Haan, 1837: pl. 16, fig.4). The male cheliped of both the species, in particular, has long transverse pectinate crests on the upper surface of the palm and distinct tubercles on the upper surface of the dactylus ( Fig. 2A, B, E View Figure 2 ; see Davie, 2010; De Haan, 1837: pl. 16, fig. 4). The dactylar tubercles on the male cheliped, however, are greater in number (16–18), and transversely broadened proximally and rounded distally in P.bengalense ( Fig. 2E View Figure 2 ) whereas these tubercles are lesser in number (12 or 13) and oval in P. bidens (cf. Davie, 2010). In addition, both the primary and secondary transverse crests on the palm of the male cheliped are relatively shorter (14–18 and 13–15 teeth, respectively) in P. bengalense ( Fig. 2B View Figure 2 ) than in P. bidens (19–22 and 15–20 teeth, respectively) ( Davie, 2010).

Parasesarma bengalense is easily distinguished from the other Indian species of Parasesarma ( P. asperum , P. persicum , P. pictum , and P. plicatum ) mainly by its prominent epibranchial tooth with a distinct notch ( Fig. 2A View Figure 2 ) (vs. indistinct epibranchial tooth with an indistinct notch or mostly with a small prominence; see De Haan, 1837: pl. 16, fig. 6; Heller, 1865: pl. 6, fig. 1; Naderloo and Schubart, 2010: fig. 2A; Rahayu and Ng, 2010: fig. 1A; Shahdadi and Schubart, 2017: figs. 1A, C, 2A, C).

Geographical distribution. Parasesarma bengalense is currently known from India (Maharashtra, Kerala and possibly Andhra Pradesh states) (present study; Bouillon et al., 2004), Sri Lanka (Southern and Western provinces) ( Davie, 2003), and Thailand (Ranong and Phuket provinces) ( Davie, 2003; Shahdadi and Schubart, 2017) ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Sesarmidae

Genus

Parasesarma

Loc

Parasesarma bengalense ( Davie, 2003 )

Pati, Sameer Kumar, Rani, Varghese, Sujila, Pallikkara Subrahmanian & Nadan, Sivasankaran Bijoy 2019
2019
Loc

Parasesarma bengalense — Shahdadi and Schubart, 2017: 534

Shahdadi, A. & Schubart, C. D. 2017: 534
2017
Loc

Perisesarma bengalense —

Davie, P. J. F. 2010: 197
Ng, P. K. L & Guinot, D. & Davie, P. J. F. 2008: 222
2008
Loc

Perisesarma bengalensis —

Bouillon, S & Moens, T & Overmeer, I. & Koedam, N. & Dehairs, F. 2004: 83
2004
Loc

Perisesarma bengalense

Davie, P. J. F. 2003: 388
2003
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF