Leptalpheus corderoae Salgado-Barrágan, Ayón-Parente & Hendrickx, 2014
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-FF9B-FF8F-8CC4-FE364A30EF78 |
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Plazi |
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Leptalpheus corderoae Salgado-Barrágan, Ayón-Parente & Hendrickx, 2014 |
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Leptalpheus corderoae Salgado-Barrágan, Ayón-Parente & Hendrickx, 2014 View in CoL
( Fig. 20c View FIGURE 20 )
Leptalpheus corderoae Salgado-Barrágan, Ayón-Parente & Hendrickx, 2014: 574 View in CoL View Cited Treatment , figs. 2–5.
Leptalpheus sp. 9 .— Anker et al., 2006b: table 1.
“ Leptalpheus ” nov. sp. C.— Felder et al., 2003: table 3.
“ Leptalpheus ” sp. 8.— Robles, 2005: chapter 3, table 1.
Material examined. Nicaragua: 3 females (cl 6.0– 8.9 mm), ULLZ 11829 View Materials [ USNM 1545918 About USNM ], Pacific coast, León, Las Peñitas, coll. R. Robles, 18.08.2001 ; 1 female (cl 8.3 mm), ULLZ 18237 View Materials [ USNM 1706503 About USNM ], same locality as previous, coll. D.L. Felder & R. Robles, 27.09.2000 ; 2 males (cl 4.3, 4.4 mm), 3 non-ovigerous females (cl 7.2–7.8 mm), 2 ovigerous females (cl 3.5, 4.7 mm), ULLZ 18271 View Materials [ USNM 1706509 About USNM ], same locality as previous, coll. D.L. Felder & R. Robles, 27.09.2000 ; 2 females (cl 6.2, 7.8 mm), ULLZ 18273 View Materials [ USNM 1706511 About USNM ], same locality as previous, with Lepidophthalmus natesi (host catalog no. ULLZ 18272 View Materials [ USNM 1706510 About USNM ]), coll. J.A. Cuesta, R. Robles & I.T. Rodriguez, 21.11.2001 ; 1 female (cl 6.7 mm), ULLZ 18285 View Materials [ USNM 1706520 About USNM ], same locality as previous, coll. D.L. Felder & R. Robles, 27.09.2000 ; 1 male (cl 8.4 mm), 2 females (cl 3.3, 8.2 mm), ULLZ 5760 View Materials [ USNM 1541124 About USNM ], same locality as previous, with Lepidophthalmus sp. (host catalog no. ULLZ 4633 View Materials [ USNM 1540462 About USNM ]), coll. D.L. Felder & R. Robles, 14.08.2001 ; 1 male (cl 6.2 mm), ULLZ 6034 View Materials [ USNM 1541279 About USNM ], same locality as previous, coll. D.L. Felder & R. Robles, 17.08.2001 ; 1 male (cl 2.9 mm), 1 ovigerous female (cl 4.3 mm), ULLZ 17877 View Materials [ USNM 1706384 About USNM ], Pacific coast, Chinandega, Paso Caballos , with Lepidophthalmus bocourti (host catalog no. ULLZ 17876 View Materials [ USNM 1706618 About USNM ]), coll. J.A. Cuesta, R. Robles & D.L. Felder, 21.11.2001 ; 1 female (cl 4.5 mm), ULLZ 18706 View Materials [ USNM 1706532 About USNM ], same locality as previous, coll. J.A. Cuesta, R. Robles & I.T. Rodriguez, 21.11.2001 ; 2 males (cl 4.2, 4.5 mm), ULLZ 18213 View Materials [ USNM 1706482 About USNM ], same locality as previous, with Lepidophthalmus sp. , coll. D.L. Felder, 12.04.2000 ; 2 females (cl 3.6, 6.0 mm), ULLZ 18267 View Materials [ USNM 1706506 About USNM ], same locality as previous, coll. D.L. Felder & R. Robles, 30.09.2000 .
Description. See Salgado-Barrágan et al. (2014).
Color in life. Body semitransparent, with red chromatophores throughout; chromatophores densest on antennal and antennular peduncles, dorsal surface of carapace, chelipeds, uropods, telson, and on anterior margins of abdominal somites where they form distinct reddish transverse bands; major chela distally hyaline-white ( Fig. 20C View FIGURE 20 ).
Type locality. Estero Pérula , Chamela, Jalisco, Pacific coast, Mexico .
Distribution. Tropical eastern Pacific region: Jalisco, Mexico ( Salgado-Barrágan et al. 2014) and Nicaragua ( Felder et al. 2003; present study).
Ecology. Obligate burrow cohabitant of callichirid ghost shrimps in the genus Lepidophthalmus : associated with L. bocourti (A. Milne-Edwards, 1870) in Mexico and Nicaragua ( Salgado-Barrágan et al. 2014; present study) and with L. natesi Felder & Robles 2015 in Nicaragua.
Remarks. Specimens of L. corderoae from Nicaragua morphologically matched the description of this species, which was based on material from Mexico. Additionally, the genetic sequences generated from Nicaraguan specimens closely matched the 16S sequence of a Mexican specimen published by Salgado-Barrágan et al. (2017), leaving no doubt that the Nicaraguan material represents the same species.
Leptalpheus corderoae is a member of the Leptalpheus axianassae group, being easily distinguished from L. axianassae and L. azuero by the presence of large, distinct tubercles on the ventral margin of the major chela, and from L. hendrickxi most easily by the presence of adhesive disks on the major chela.
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 corderoae Salgado-Barrágan, Ayón-Parente & Hendrickx, 2014
Scioli, Justin A., Robles, Rafael & Felder, Darryl L. 2024 |
Leptalpheus corderoae Salgado-Barrágan, Ayón-Parente & Hendrickx, 2014: 574
Salgado-Barragan, J. & Ayon-Parente, M. & Hendrickx, M. E. 2014: 574 |