Mariaplax, Rahayu & Ng, 2014

Rahayu, Dwi Listyo & Ng, Peter K. L., 2014, New genera and new species of Hexapodidae (Crustacea, Brachyura) from the Indo-West Pacific and east Atlantic, Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 62, pp. 396-483 : 423-424

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5353945

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4CF42744-861A-4635-9703-E6639CEBFAA9

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A0C6A33-1856-4C95-8893-BD3265DB4FA1

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:6A0C6A33-1856-4C95-8893-BD3265DB4FA1

treatment provided by

Tatiana

scientific name

Mariaplax
status

gen. nov.

Mariaplax View in CoL , new genus

Diagnosis. Carapace broader than long, surface granular, region indistinct, H-shaped medial depression shallow. Anterolateral margin arcuate; pterygostomial region with rows of long and short, broken or entire, oblique striae and scattered tubercles. Eyes small, slightly movable, corneas subglobular. Third maxilliped broad, completely covering buccal cavity; ischium longer than merus, mesial margin straight, oblique, or very slightly rounded; carpus, propodus and dactylus cylindrical, dactylus longer than propodus; exopod narrow compared to width of ischium, flagellum present. Chelipeds equal or subequal. P2–P4 relatively long; merus slender, usually with distinct median groove on lateral surface on some of legs; dactylus straight or upcurved, as long as propodus. Thoracic sternites 1 and 2 fused, sternite 3 partly or completely separated from sternite 4 by tuberculate ridge, sternite 8 exposed, triangular or subrectangular, as long as or half length of first abdominal somite. Male sternoabdominal cavity reaches distal margin of thoracic sternite 4; thoracic sternal groove oblique, short or long, straight or curved, wide or narrow, sometimes reaches base of cheliped. Male abdomen relatively narrow; somites 1, 2 and 6 free, somites 3–5 fused; telson shorter than somite 6, subtriangular to subpentagonal, distal margin rounded. G1 curved or twisted, more or less S-shaped, apice exposed on thoracic sternal groove, not concealed under abdomen. Female abdomen with 6 free somites and telson.

Etymology. We dedicate this new genus to Mary J. Rathbun who described Lambdophallus anfractus , the type species. The name “ Mariaplax ” is derived from “Maria”, the Latin of her first name Mary, and “-plax”, a typical suffix for many crab genera. Gender of genus feminine.

Species included. Lambdophallus anfractus Rathbun, 1909 (type species by present designation), M. chenae , new species,

M. cyrtophallus , new species, M. daviei , new species, M. galaxeae , new species, Hexapus granuliferus Campbell & Stephenson, 1970 , M. mica , new species, M. narusei , new species, M. ourabay , new species, M. propinqua , new species, M. secus , new species, M. sinensis , new species, Hexapus stephenseni Serène & Soh, 1976 , and M. streptophallus , new species.

Remarks. Rathbun (1909) assigned her new species to Lambdophallus without any comments. Manning & Holthuis (1981) transferred Lambdophallus anfractus to Hexapus on the basis of the G1 shape, and the shape and extension of the male thoracic sternal groove. However, as discussed for Mariaplax chenae , new species (see later), the form of the male thoracic sternal groove sometimes varies with the size of the specimen.

Lambdophallus anfractus shares a unique suite of third maxilliped, ambulatory leg, male abdominal and G1 characters with Hexapus granuliferus Campbell & Stephenson, 1970 , and H. stephenseni Serène & Soh, 1976 , as well as 11 new species from the Indo-West Pacific. These characters argue for establishing a new genus Mariaplax , for these species.

Mariaplax , new genus, differs markedly from Lambdophallus in that it has slightly movable eyes, with globular corneas (versus immovable eyes with small corneas in Lambdophallus ); the male telson is shorter than the sixth abdominal somite ( Fig. 23C View Fig ) (versus the telson is longer than the sixth abdominal somite in Lambdophallus, Alcock, 1902 : pl. 62, fig. 1); and the G1 is usually twisted and S-shaped in Mariaplax (see Fig. 23F, G View Fig ) (with the exception of M. cyrtophallus , new species and M. secus , new species) (versus sharply bent at a 90° angle and L-shaped in Lambdophallus, Alcock, 1902 : pl. 62, fig. 1).

Mariaplax differs from Hexapus s. str. as follows: the third maxilliped of Mariaplax is broad, completely covering the buccal cavity, and the ischium is as broad as the merus ( Fig. 23D View Fig ) (the third maxilliped is longitudinally narrow, showing most of the underlying mouthparts, with the ischium much narrower than the merus in Hexapus , Fig. 4E View Fig ); P2–P4 is relatively longer, with the merus usually possessing a shallow or deep longitudinal groove on the outer surface in Mariaplax (the groove on outer surface of P2–P4 is absent in Hexapus ).

Hexapinus s. str. differs from Mariaplax in possessing a subauriculiform ischium of the third maxillipeds ( Fig. 13C View Fig ) (subtruncate or subquadrate ischium in Mariaplax , Fig. 23D View Fig ), a male thoracic sternite 4 which is transversely narrower but longitudinally broader ( Fig. 10B View Fig ) (transversely broader but longitudinally narrower in Mariaplax , Fig. 23B, C View Fig ), and the short P2–P4 with almost evenly convex lateral surface ( Figs. 11A View Fig , 12A View Fig ) (long P2–P4 with longitudinal groove on the outer surface of the merus in Mariaplax , Fig. 22A, C View Fig ).

As discussed earlier, Hexapus granuliferus Campbell & Stephenson, 1970 , originally placed in Hexapinus by Manning & Holthuis (1981), and Hexapus stephenseni ( Serène &Soh,

1976), which was placed in Tritoplax by Huang et al. (2002) and Ng et al. (2008), should be transferred to Mariaplax .

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