Stegias clibanarii Richardson, 1904
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.861.2073 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DFAE3C5E-F2EF-444B-8045-114E3DDC6AC2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7753773 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EB353E7A-FFA3-FFDD-AC2A-D6265A064A22 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Stegias clibanarii Richardson, 1904 |
status |
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Stegias clibanarii Richardson, 1904 View in CoL
Figs 1 View Fig , 2C View Fig , 5 View Fig , Table 1 View Table 1
Stegias clibanarii Richardson, 1904: 59–60 View in CoL , fig. 34.
Stegias clibanarii View in CoL – Richardson 1905: 536–537, fig. 580. — Verril 1908: 448, fig. 64. — Nierstrasz & Brender à Brandis 1923: 107; 1931: 200. — Menzies & Glynn 1968: 13, 18–19, 83 fig. 3. — Schultz 1969: 322, fig. 514. — Markham 1972: 64–65; 1975a: 225–230, figs 1–2; 1975b: 260, 263; 1978: 102 (in key), 103–104, 111–112, 116, fig. 10, table 1; 1979: 523 (in key), 526–527; 1988: 3, 46–48, fig. 18, table 1; 2003: 72. — McDermott 1974: 2; 2002: 34–40, figs 1–2, table 1. — Ross 1983: 167. — Schultz 1986: 371, 372, pl. 123. — Kensley 1994: 320 (in table 1). — Campos 2003: 79–80, 86. — Romero-Rodríguez & Román-Contreras 2008: 1207; 2013: 646 (in table 3). — McDermott et al. 2010: 12 (in table 1), 27. — Trilles & Hipeau-Jacquotte 2012: 288. — Cericola & Williams 2015: 238 (in table I). — Romero-Rodríguez & Álvarez 2020: 2226 (in table 2).
non Stegias clibanarii View in CoL – Pearse 1932: 4–5, figs 22–26. — Schultz 1969: 323, fig. 515.
Material examined
MEXICO • 1 ovigerous ♀ (3.80 mm TL), 1 ♂ (1.64 mm TL); Veracruz, Los Tuxtlas, Montepío ; 18º38′34″ N, 95º05′50″ W; Jul. 2002; A. Argüelles and M. Maldonado leg.; host ♀ of Clibanarius tricolor (Gibbes, 1850) (3.60 mm SL); A. Argüelles det. host; CNCR-36487 GoogleMaps .
Distribution
Stegias clibanarii has been recorded exclusively in the Caribbean region: Bermuda ( Richardson 1904), San Juan, Puerto Rico (Menzies & Gynn 1968) and Magdalena, Colombia ( Markham 1988); with the new records its geographic range extends to the southwestern Gulf of Mexico ( Fig. 1 View Fig ), likewise also represents the first evidence of its occurrence in Mexican coasts. The only known host for this bopyrid species so far is C. tricolor .
Remarks
The material examined ( Figs 2C View Fig , 5A, G View Fig ) agree in most details with the descriptions given by Richardson (1904) and Markham (1975a) for Stegias clibanarii , only differing in the following aspects: female with small eyes on the anterolateral margins of head ( Fig. 5A View Fig ), the barbula’s left projection more pointed than that on the opposite side ( Fig. 5B View Fig ), first pair of oostegites with a curved projection in the proximal end of the inner margin ( Fig. 5 View Fig C-D) and all five pairs of pleopods biramous ( Fig. 5E View Fig ). The maxilliped, not previously described, with anterior segment square in shape and much larger than posterior one, without palp but anterior and distal margin folded, converging in superior lateral margin giving it pointed appearance; posterior segment rectangular in shape ( Fig. 5F View Fig ). Male with the fusion of head and first pereomere not as conspicuous ( Fig. 5G View Fig ) as that illustrated by Markham (1975a).
Reproduction
The size of the female examined (3.80 mm TL) was similar to the average size for ovigerous females (3.55 ± 0.44 mm) previously reported ( McDermott 2002) but the number of embryos counted in our female ( Table 1 View Table 1 ) was almost three times as high as the maximum fecundity reported (667 embryos) for S. clibanarii by McDermott (2002). The average embryos’ length and width recorded ( Table 1 View Table 1 ) were similar to those reported by McDermott (2002) for embryos recently deposited in the marsupium
(0.157 ± 0.008 and 0.133 ± 0.016 mm, respectively) but their average volume was smaller than the 0.0015 mm 3 calculated by Romero-Rodríguez & Álvarez (2020).
The size of the male examined (1.64 mm TL) is in the range of 0.78 to 1.71 mm TL reported by McDermott (2002), although Markham (1975a) noted that males of this species can reach 2.6 mm TL.
The prevalence calculated for S. clibanarii was of 25%; however, the sample was only of four hermit crabs.
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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Stegias clibanarii Richardson, 1904
Romero-Rodriguez, Jesús & Álvarez, Fernando 2023 |
Stegias clibanarii
Schultz G. A. 1969: 323 |
Pearse A. S. 1932: 4 |
Stegias clibanarii
Romero-Rodriguez J. & Alvarez F. 2020: 2226 |
Cericola M. J. & Williams J. D. 2015: 238 |
Romero-Rodriguez J. & Roman-Contreras R. 2013: 646 |
Trilles J. P. & Hipeau-Jacquotte R. 2012: 288 |
McDermott J. J. & Williams J. D. & Boyko C. B. 2010: 12 |
Romero-Rodriguez J. & Roman-Contreras R. 2008: 1207 |
Campos C. N. H. 2003: 79 |
McDermott J. J. 2002: 34 |
Kensley B. 1994: 320 |
Schultz G. A. 1986: 371 |
Ross D. M. 1983: 167 |
Markham J. C. 1975: 225 |
McDermott J. J. 1974: 2 |
Markham J. C. 1972: 64 |
Schultz G. A. 1969: 322 |
Menzies R. J. & Glynn P. W. 1968: 13 |
Richardson H. 1905: 536 |
Stegias clibanarii
Richardson H. 1904: 60 |