Anoplodactylus trispinosus Stock, 1951

Müller, Hans-Georg & Krapp, Franz, 2009, The pycnogonid fauna (Pycnogonida, Arthropoda) of the Tayrona National Park and adjoining areas on the Caribbean coast of Colombia 2319, Zootaxa 2319 (1), pp. 1-138 : 114-115

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2319.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E687F8-2936-FFC0-7ADC-17C89814FEFE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Anoplodactylus trispinosus Stock, 1951
status

 

Anoplodactylus trispinosus Stock, 1951 View in CoL

Fig. 60 View FIGURE 60

Anoplodactylus trispinosus Stock, 1951: 14 View in CoL . Child 1979: 63, (literature). Stock 1986: 404.

Material: 6.— 3 fem. (2 gravid), 8 juv. ( SMF 1285 About SMF ), Thalassia , 2 m, 1.VIII.1985 . 1 ( SMF 1286 About SMF ), Thalassia , 3 m, 9.X.1985 . 1 male (ov.), 2 juv. ( SMF 1287 About SMF ), Thalassia , 3 m, 12.XII.1985 . 3 males (ov.), 2 fem. (1 gravid), 5 juv. ( SMF 1288 About SMF ), Thalassia , 1–2 m, 13.I.1986 .

8.— 1 male, 2 fem. (gravid) ( INVEMAR), from poriferans and hydroids on shaded jetty piles, 0–1 m, 14.V.1985 .

9.— 1 male ( MNHN), from detritus and hydroids on stones, 22–23 m, 19.VI.1985 .

30.—2 fem. (1 gravid) ( SMF 1289), Thalassia , 2 m, 6.VI.1985. 1 male, 1 fem. (gravid) ( ZMA 3365 View Materials ), Thalassia , 2 m, 4.VII.1985 . 7 males (3 ov.), 3 fem. (gravid) ( SMF 1290 About SMF ), Thalassia , 1–2 m, 6.VIII.1985 . 1 juv. ( SMF 1291 About SMF ), Thalassia , 0.5–2 m, 11.IX.1985 . 4 fem. (1 gravid), 3 juv. ( SMF 1292 About SMF ), Thalassia , 1–2 m, 17.I.1986 .

38.— 1 male (ov.), 1 fem. (gravid) ( ZFMK), Thalassia , 0.5 m, 17.III.1986 .

40.— 2 males (1 ov.), 3 fem. (gravid), 2 juv. ( ZSM), Thalassia , 1–3.5 m, 8.VIII.1985 . 1 fem. (gravid) ( SMF 1293 About SMF ), Thalassia , 2–4 m, 28.X.1985 .

43.— 2 fem. (gravid) ( SMF 1294 About SMF ), Thalassia , 1–1.5 m, 25.II.1986 .

45.— 1 male ( USNM), on algae, hydroids and bryozoans on rock, 6–10 m, 25.IX.1985 .

Description of male: Trunk—dorsal outline oval, moderately robust, all segments fused. Crurigers 1–3, occasionally also 4 th, dorso-distally with a small unarmed tubercle; crurigers separated by less than their own diameter. Ocular process twice higher than its basal diameter; distal half conical, eyes distinctly pigmented. Abdomen relativley slender, directed obliquely backwards, armed with 4 short setae. Proboscis cylindrical, rather robust, distally broadly rounded.

Cheliphores moderately slender, scape appreciably longer than proboscis; chela with short and strongly curved toothless fingers; movable finger with an external seta. Oviger slender; 3 rd article the longest, 2.2 times as long as first and second together; fourth article barely longer than sum of lengths of fifth and sixth; terminal article oval, half length of fifth, both bearing about 5 short and proximally directed setae.

Legs moderately robust, sparsely setose; coxa 1 just shorter than coxa 3, but half length of coxa 2; femur the longest and most robust article, like both tibiae bearing a long dorso-distal seta; cement gland duct central on femur, a short straight tube, displaced somewhat laterally; tibia 1 and 2 of nearly equal length; tarsus as long as broad; propodus feebly curved, heel very distinct, with 2 robust distal spines and 2 paired slender spines on anterior face; sole straight, 3 short curved spines in proximal half; distal half of sole occupied by long lamella, flanked on both sides by 3 short setae; main claw slender and feebly curved, its tip reaching the spines on anterior face of heel; auxiliary claw very small, nearly straight, 1/9 of length of main claw.

Measurements: Length of trunk 0.68; width 0.46 (across 1 st crurigers); length of abdomen 0.19; length of proboscis 0.31; length of cheliphore scape 0.19; length of chela 0.14; length of articles of leg 3: coxa 1—0.11; coxa 2—0.24; coxa 3—0.13; femur 0.41; tibia 1—0.34; tibia 2—0.36; tarsus 0.04; propodus 0.25; main claw 0.17; auxiliary claw 0.02.

Female: like male apart from the sex-specific characters.

Postlarva: Leg 4 a mere stump, which is longer by half than the abdomen, with indistinct articulation. Total length 0.5.

Remarks: The species is closely related to Anoplodactylus petiolatus (cf. Fig. 58 View FIGURE 58 ) and A. maritimus from the Atlantic Ocean (cf. Stock 1975a: 1073, Fig. 54 View FIGURE 54 ). Both species are in habitus very similar to A. trispinosus , but distinct in many details. A. trispinosus differs from petiolatus by its shorter and dorso-laterally displaced cement gland duct. A. maritimus shares this character of a short cement gland duct with trispinosus , but it is situated in an exactly dorso-median position. Further differences are the more robust cheliphore and the shorter propodal lamina in maritimus . In the western Atlantic A. trispinosus has been collected only sporadically, and the few data do not indicate a pattern of distinct substrate preference. In the Santa Marta region the species almost exclusively colonized stands of seagrass, it was found from the surf zone down to about 10 m depth. Ripe males were encountered in months I, VIII and XII, so no clear correlation with the seasons. Females with ova in their ovaries were observed in months I–II, V–VIII and XII,

Distribution: Amphi-atlantic; Senegal (Stock 1951: 14), Curaçao and Tobago (Stock 1954a: 127; Stock 1975a: 1076), Caribbean coasts of Panamá ( Child 1979: 63) and Colombia.

INVEMAR

Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas de Punta de Betin

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

ZFMK

Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig

ZSM

Bavarian State Collection of Zoology

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Pycnogonida

Order

Pantopoda

Family

Phoxichilidiidae

Genus

Anoplodactylus

Loc

Anoplodactylus trispinosus Stock, 1951

Müller, Hans-Georg & Krapp, Franz 2009
2009
Loc

Anoplodactylus trispinosus

Stock, J. H. 1986: 404
Child, C. A. 1979: 63
1979
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