Ranguna decourcyi ( Kemp, 1913 ) Ng & Yeo, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26107/RBZ-2023-0048 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:19D286F4-F712-4645-93FF-1AC19A55EDE9 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10271593 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/882487B0-FFF7-FFE2-F689-F962EF87FE25 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ranguna decourcyi ( Kemp, 1913 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Ranguna decourcyi ( Kemp, 1913) View in CoL , new combination
( Fig. 7 View Fig )
Potamon (Potamiscus) decourcyi Kemp, 1913: 292 View in CoL , pl. 17, figs. 1–3.
Potamiscus (Potamiscus) decourcyi View in CoL – Bott, 1966: 480, fig. 13.
Potamiscus decourcyi View in CoL – Bott, 1970: 159, pl. 38 fig. 29, pl. 51 fig. 27; Ghosh & Ghatak, 1999: 570; Brandis, 2000: 75, pl. 9a–c (partim); Yeo & Ng, 2007: 307; Ng et al., 2008: 165; Cumberlidge et al., 2009: supplementary table; Mitra, 2017: 24, 38, figs. 52–54, 72, 104–106 (partim).
Material examined. Holotype: male (63.0 × 48.0 mm) ( ZSIK 8006 /10), under stones in small hill stream, Sirpo Valley , near Renging, 1,000–1,500 ft asl, Arunachal Pradesh state, India, coll. W. R. de Courcy, March 1912.
Diagnosis. Carapace with regions behind epigastric and postorbital cristae tuberculate and granulate; frontal and postorbital regions relatively narrow ( Fig. 7A View Fig ); external orbital angle acutely triangular; epibranchial tooth sharp, distinct ( Fig. 7A View Fig ); anterolateral margins cristate, serrated, convex; branchial regions covered with granules, rugose ( Fig. 7A View Fig ). Male pleon narrowly triangular, appearing subrectangular in shape ( Fig. 7C View Fig ). G1 subterminal segment relatively stouter, terminal segment distinctly curved outwards, subconical, distally tapered, without dorsal flap, groove for G2 marginal ( Fig. 7D View Fig ). G2 much longer than G1; distal segment longer than half length of basal segment ( Fig. 7D View Fig ). Females not known.
Remarks. Kemp (1913) described the species from at least four specimens from and around the Sirpo Valley in Arunachal Pradesh state in India. The largest male 63.0 × 49.0 mm from Sirpo Valley was identified as the “type” of the species ( Kemp, 1913: 293, 294). This male, the holotype, was examined.
The characters of this species agree best with Ranguna as redefined here. While the combined frontal and postorbital region ( Fig. 7A View Fig ) is not as compressed as that of R. rangoonense , it is still clearly narrower than in Potamiscus . The features of the epistome and third maxilliped ischium ( Fig. 7B, C View Fig ) are also more like those of R. rangoonensis than P. annandalii . Most significantly, the shape of the male pleon ( Fig. 7C View Fig ) agrees very well with R. rangoonensis and argues for their congenericity. The G1 terminal and subterminal segments of R. decourcyi , new combination ( Fig. 7D View Fig ) are stouter than those of R. rangoonensis . Other morphological differences between these two species include: the male pleonal somite 6 is proportionately broader in R. decourcyi (less broad in R. rangoonensis ); the male telson has the lateral margins gently concave in R. decourcyi (strongly concave in R. rangoonensis ); the G1 terminal segment is more strongly curved with the structure gently curved downwards in R. decourcyi (less curved with a straight tip in R. rangoonensis ); and the flexible articulation between the G1 terminal and subterminal segments is larger in R. decourcyi (small in R. rangoonensis ) (S.K. Pati, pers. comm.). Importantly, these are all interspecific differences rather than intergeneric, and not distinct enough to exclude the species from Ranguna .
The specimens reported from Sibsagar, Assam by Brandis (2000) and from Mizoram by Mitra (2017) may not be R. decourcyi s. str. In these specimens, the epigastric and postorbital cristae appear more curved (in dorsal view) in Mitra’s specimens (2017: fig. 52), the branchial regions of both being more strongly granulated ( Brandis, 2000: fig. pl. 9a; Mitra, 2017: fig. 52), the median lobe of the posterior margin of the epistome of their material is more acutely triangular ( Mitra, 2017: fig. 53), the male pleon is somewhat more triangular ( Mitra, 2017: fig. 54), and the G1 terminal segment appears to be relatively more slender and straighter ( Brandis, 2000: pl. 9b, c; Mitra, 2017: figs. 104, 105). A re-examination of those material should be done to see if they are indeed conspecific.
Distribution. Northeastern India: Arunachal Pradesh,? Assam, and? Mizoram.
R |
Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Ranguna decourcyi ( Kemp, 1913 )
Ng, Peter K. L. & Yeo, Darren C. J. 2023 |
Potamiscus decourcyi
Mitra S 2017: 24 |
Ng PKL & Guinot D & Davie PJF 2008: 165 |
Yeo DCJ & Ng PKL 2007: 307 |
Brandis D 2000: 75 |
Ghosh HC & Ghatak SS 1999: 570 |
Bott R 1970: 159 |
Potamiscus (Potamiscus) decourcyi
Bott R 1966: 480 |
Potamon (Potamiscus) decourcyi
Kemp S 1913: 292 |