Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus) milloti Crosnier, 1965

Teng, Shao-Jyun & Shih, Hsi-Te, 2015, A new species of Macrophthalmus Desmarest, 1823 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Macrophthalmidae) from Taiwan, with notes on four new records, Zootaxa 4058 (4), pp. 451-470 : 464-466

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4058.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8DF67C47-10A4-4E92-90C3-AB914F2A313F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510728

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FD7E87EC-C810-396E-59A6-7208FC233EB9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus) milloti Crosnier, 1965
status

 

Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus) milloti Crosnier, 1965 View in CoL

( Figs. 9 View FIGURE 9 , 10 View FIGURE 10 )

? Macrophthalmus View in CoL podophthalmus— Lanchester 1900: 760. (not M. podophthalmus Souleyet, 1841 )

Macrophthalmus View in CoL telescopicus— Kemp 1919: 387 (part), pl. 24(11) [not pl. 24(10) = M. serenei Takeda & Komai, 1991 View in CoL ]. (not M. telescopicus Owen, 1839 View in CoL )

Macrophthalmus View in CoL cf. telescopicus— Tweedie 1937: 164; 1950, 128 (part).

Macrophthalmus milloti Crosnier, 1965: 112 View in CoL , figs. 217–220, 222, 223, 228, pl. 11(4) [type locality: Madagascar]; 1975: 737; Barnes 1977: 276 (key); Takeda & Komai 1991: 166, fig. 1.

Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus) View in CoL milloti— Barnes 1967: 203 (list); Seréne 1973: 112, pl. 4(A–C); Barnes 1976: 135, fig. 3; Takeda & Nunomura 1976: 81; Morgan 1990: 60; Komai et al. 1995: 116, fig. 6; Davie 2002: 352, 353; Nagai et al. 2006: 13 (key), figs. 4g, h, 5e, f, i; Ng et al. 2008: 237 (list); Rahayu & Nugroho 2012: 24 View Cited Treatment , fig. 3C, D.

? Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus) View in CoL telescopicus— Barnes 1967: 205 (part), pl. 1(a); 1970: 219.

Macrophthalmus View in CoL verreauxi— Jeng 1997: 18, 22 (list). (not M. verreauxi H. Milne Edwards, 1848 View in CoL )

Macrophthalmus View in CoL serenei— Ng et al. 2001: 38 (list). (not M. serenei Takeda & Komai, 1991 View in CoL )

Material examined. Taiwan: 1 ♀ (12.2 mm) ( ASIZ C684 J0177), Nanwan, Pingtung, coll. M.-S. Jeng, 14 Mar. 1987; 1 ♀ (11.5 mm) ( ASIZ 70999), Nanwan, Pingtung, coll. M.-S. Jeng, 8 Mar. 1997.

Comparative material. M. milloti: Ryukyu Islands , Japan: 2 ovig. ♀♀ (14.2, 17.0 mm) (RUMF-ZC-276), Iriomote Island, coll. T. Naruse, 24 Mar. 2005; 1 ♂ (9.4 mm), 2 ♀♀ (12.6, 14.4 mm, incl. 1 ovig.) (RUMF-ZC- 277), Ishigaki Island, coll. T. Naruse, 13 Apr. 2005; 1 ♂ (8.4 mm) (RUMF-ZC-278), Ishigaki Island, coll. H. Oka & T. Masumoto, 21 Aug. 2005; 1 ♂ (15.7 mm) (RUMF-ZC-279), Nakagusuku Bay, Okinawa Island, coll. H. Oka et al., 25 Aug. 2005. M. serenei : Thailand: 1 ♂ (7 mm) (NCHUZOOL 14770), Amphoe Mueang, Phuket, coll. H.- T. Shih, 29 May 2012. Indonesia: 2 ♂♂ (12.3, 13.5 mm) (NCHUZOOL 14771), Nusa Dua, Bali, coll. H.-T. Shih, 16 July 2014.

Diagnosis. Carapace ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 J) smooth, 1.6–1.7 times wider than long; posterolateral region with clumps of granules; 3 well separated anterolateral teeth. Largest carapace width across first lateral teeth. Eyestalks slender, cornea exceeding first anterolateral tooth about one fourth of eyestalk length. Middle portion of epistome protuberant. Outer surface of palm ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 L) with ridge near lower margin, extending to immovable finger. Cutting edges of fingers armed with small tuberculate teeth proximally; dactylus length almost equal to palm. Female gonopore with suboval operculum ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 K), directed mesially; deep depression on sternite of sixth thoracic somite mesial to gonopore.

Distribution. Red Sea, East Africa ( Zanzibar, Comoros, Madagascar), India (Gulf of Mannar, Andaman Islands), Thailand (Phuket), Singapore ( Pulau Senang), Indonesia, Japan (Ryukyu Islands), Taiwan (Pingtung), New Guinea, New Caledonia, Fiji, Hawaiian Island, and Australia (Torres Strait, Queensland, Lord Howe Island, Descartes Island, Shirley Island).

Habitat. Coral reefs, sandy mud ( Komai et al. 1995).

Remarks. The two female specimens from Taiwan agree well with the description of M. milloti ( Takeda & Komai 1991; Komai et al. 1995). The Taiwanese specimens form a clade with those from the Ryukyu Islands, sister to M. serenei , based on molecular evidence ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11. A ).

The diagnosis of males, based on the specimens from the Ryukyu Islands, is as follows. Palm ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 B) of cheliped stout, outer surface smooth, with a raw of indistinct ridge close to lower margin; inner surface covered with long setae to base of fingers. Immovable finger straight, near middle of cutting edge with triangular tooth; proximal region of cutting edge of dactylus with square tooth. Terminal process of G1 ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 D–I) elongated, directed outward, with short thumb-like projection dorsally.

This species is similar to M. serenei , and both species belong to the group of M. telescopicus Owen, 1839 ( Barnes 2010) . Macrophthalmus milloti , however, has shorter eyestalks and a shorter terminal G1 process than in M. serenei .

DNA results and discussion. A 567 bp segment of the 16S and 658 bp segment of COI from 17 species of macrophthalmids and four species of outgroups were amplified and aligned ( Table 1). The phylogenetic tree of the combined markers was reconstructed from Bayesian inference analysis, with the support value from the maximum likelihood analysis ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11. A ). Although the genus Macrophthalmus is monophyletic with high supports, further subdivision within the genus is not clear, which is similar to the result of Kitaura et al. (2006) based on 16S. The relationship of some groups agree with those of Kitaura et al. (2006) and Barnes (2010), including the M. brevis group, the M. convexus group and the M. telescopicus group within the subgenus Macrophthalmus . The M. brevis group is close to M. erato and M. quadratus of the subgenus Paramareotis ; and the close relationship between M. tomentosus and M. pacificus , as well as between M. banzai and M. japonicus . Macrophthalmus purpureocheir sp. nov. is highly supported, sister to M. crinitus , although their relationship is only supported weakly. The same applies to the sister relationship between M. serenei and M. milloti .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

InfraOrder

Brachyura

Family

Macrophthalmidae

SubFamily

Macrophthalminae

Genus

Macrophthalmus

SubGenus

Mareotis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

InfraOrder

Brachyura

Family

Macrophthalmidae

SubFamily

Macrophthalminae

SubGenus

Mareotis

Loc

Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus) milloti Crosnier, 1965

Teng, Shao-Jyun & Shih, Hsi-Te 2015
2015
Loc

Macrophthalmus

Jeng 1997: 18
1997
Loc

Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus)

Rahayu 2012: 24
Nagai 2006: 13
Davie 2002: 352
Komai 1995: 116
Morgan 1990: 60
Barnes 1976: 135
Takeda 1976: 81
Barnes 1967: 203
1967
Loc

Macrophthalmus (Macrophthalmus)

Barnes 1967: 205
1967
Loc

Macrophthalmus milloti

Takeda 1991: 166
Barnes 1977: 276
Crosnier 1965: 112
1965
Loc

Macrophthalmus

Tweedie 1937: 164
1937
Loc

Macrophthalmus

Kemp 1919: 387
1919
Loc

Macrophthalmus

Lanchester 1900: 760
1900
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