Leptalpheus pereirai Anker & Vera Caripe, 2016
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5466.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B43F7FDA-5E3B-4153-A991-E2A96E582A3B |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DF87CE-FF85-FF90-8CC4-FC524D25E8D2 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Leptalpheus pereirai Anker & Vera Caripe, 2016 |
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Leptalpheus pereirai Anker & Vera Caripe, 2016 View in CoL
( Fig. 30b–d View FIGURE 30 )
Lepalpheus pereirai Anker & Vera Caripe, 2016: 186 , figs. 1–4.
Leptalpheus sp. 1 .— Anker, 2011: 24, figs. 18A–E, 19A, B.
Material examined. Panama: 1 female (cl 4.9 mm), MNHN-IU-2011-5244, Bocas del Toro , Isla Carenero, sandflat with seagrass, 0.5–1 m, coll. A. Anker, J.A. Vera Caripe & J.A. Baeza, 18.11.2006 ; 1 male (cl 8.3 mm), MNHN- IU-2011-5245, Bocas del Toro , Isla Colón, off STRI station dock, seagrass flat, 0.5–1 m, coll. A. Anker & B. Martínez-Guerrero, 14.08.2008 ; 1 ovigerous female (cl 7.5 mm), UF 51705 , Bocas del Toro , Isla Colón, near Playa de Estrellas , coll. M. Leray & P.P.G. Pachelle, 05.04.2019 . Cuba: 1 ovigerous female (cl 6.5 mm), ULLZ 18275 View Materials [ USNM 1706512 About USNM ] , Isla de Pinos (Isla de la Juventud), Cayo Francés, coll. D.L. Felder & J.C. Martínez-Iglesias, 09.06.1995 .
Description. See Anker & Vera Caripe (2016).
Color in life. Semitransparent with sparse red chromatophores; chromatophores densest on antennular and antennal peduncles, dorsal surface of carapace, telson, uropods, major cheliped, and anterior margins of adominal somites where they are organized into diffuse bands; walking legs semitransparent, without chromatophores; eggs yellow ( Fig. 30b–d View FIGURE 30 ; also see Anker & Vera Caripe 2016: fig. 4).
Type locality. Bocas del Toro, Caribbean coast, Panama .
Distribution. Caribbean Sea: Venezuela (Anker & Vera-Caripe, 2016), Panama (Anker & Vera-Caripe 2016; present study), and Cuba (present study).
Ecology. Obligate burrow cohabitant of a yet undetermined host. Anker & Vera Caripe (2016) hypothesized that the host of L. pereirai may be Glypturus acanthochirus Stimpson, 1866 on the basis that this species was present at all the sites where L. pereirai was collected, but this is yet to be confirmed.
Remarks. The specimen reported above from Cuba morphologically very closely matches the description of this species, leaving little doubt that it is the same species as reported from Panama and Venezuela.
Our phylogenetic analysis failed to elucidate well the evolutionary relationships of L. pereirai . Interspecific pairwise distances between L. pereirai and other species were generally high (COI distances 19.8–28.6%, 16S distances 12.9–30.2%). However, in both cases the species with the lowest interspecific distance from L. pereirai was L. denticulatus A. It is possible that L. pereirai is an Atlantic relative of the Indo-West Pacific L. pacificus species group, a conclusion somewhat supported by morphology, especially of the major cheliped. However, we are unable to confirm this hypothesis with presently available data.
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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Leptalpheus pereirai Anker & Vera Caripe, 2016
Scioli, Justin A., Robles, Rafael & Felder, Darryl L. 2024 |
Lepalpheus pereirai
Anker, A. & Vera Caripe, J. 2016: 186 |
Leptalpheus sp. 1
Anker, A. 2011: 24 |