alpheid shrimp
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Zootaxa ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 5091 (2) ◽  
pp. 393-400
Author(s):  
CÉDRIC D’UDEKEM D’ACOZ ◽  
FLORENCE GULLY ◽  
MARC COCHU ◽  
ARTHUR ANKER

The rare symbiotic alpheid shrimp Salmoneus erasimorum Dworschak, Abed-Navandi & Anker, 2000 was previously known from a single specimen collected with a suction pump on the Croatian coast in the Adriatic Sea, together with its host, the ghost shrimp, Gilvossius tyrrhenus (Petagna, 1792). A second record of S. erasimorum is presented here, with a diagnosis and the first colour photographs, based on a single specimen collected in northern Brittany, France, also with a suction pump, but without its host. This is also the first record of the species on the European coast of the Atlantic Ocean. An annotated list and a key to the species of Salmoneus currently known from the eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea are provided.  


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5061 (1) ◽  
pp. 177-184
Author(s):  
JONATHAN VERA CARIPE ◽  
LUISANA PEREDA ◽  
ARTHUR ANKER

Leptalpheus lirai sp. nov., a new species of symbiotically living, infaunal alpheid shrimp, is described based on a single specimen from the Gulf of Santa Fe, Sucre, Venezuela. The new species belongs to an informal group of nine species within the genus Leptalpheus Williams, 1965, which is characterised by the presence of well-developed adhesive disks on the major chela. In addition, Leptalpheus axianassae Dworschak & Coelho, 1999 and Fenneralpheus chacei Felder & Manning, 1986 are recorded for the first time from Venezuela (Anzoátegui and Sucre, respectively), the latter also representing the first record of the genus Fenneralpheus Felder & Manning, 1986 for the country. These records bring to 11 the number of alpheid genera, and to four the number of species of Leptalpheus, known in Venezuelan marine waters.  


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5026 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-135
Author(s):  
P. PURUSHOTHAMAN ◽  
C.P. ABHILASH ◽  
T.T. AJITH KUMAR ◽  
K. K. LAL

A new species of the genus Alpheus Fabricius, 1798, A. mannarensis sp. nov. is described and represented based on the materials collected from the shallow and rocky reefs, Gulf of Mannar (Thoothukudi waters), Southern India. This is the first report of Alpheus species from the Gulf of Mannar region. The new species is assigned to the Alpheus brevirostris group, and is distinguished from other species of this group by the combination of the following features: rostral ridge lower than orbital hood in lateral view and postrostral carina not extended to the middle of the carapace, palm of major chela with a transverse groove near the base of dactylus, the ultimate segment of the third maxilliped slender, fingers of minor chela of male slightly longer than palm, the first carpal segment of second pereiopods shorter than second segment, merus of third pereiopods slender and unarmed, dactylus of third pereiopods slender and subspatulate, and unique colour patterns of longitudinal light lines on the reddish body.  


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4966 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-60
Author(s):  
ARTHUR ANKER

The very uncommon alpheid shrimp Bermudacaris britayevi Anker, Poddoubtchenko & Marin, 2006, previously known only from the incomplete holotype from Nha Trang Bay, Vietnam, is recorded from Guam, Mariana Islands, extending its previously known distribution range into the oceanic islands of the western Pacific. The single specimen from Guam, an ovigerous female, was collected adjacent to a near-shore coral reef, on fine sand under a large piece of coral rubble, at a depth of about 10 m. This habitat is different from the collection data of the holotype, which was extracted from a burrow of unknown host on an intertidal sand-mud flat close to mangroves. Despite these ecological differences, the specimen from Guam corresponds to the holotype of B. britayevi in all diagnostic morphological characters and can be distinguished from the closely related B. australiensis Anker & Komai, 2004 and B. harti Anker & Iliffe, 2000. Since the holotype of B. britayevi was lacking one of the chelipeds, the complete specimen from Guam enables to complement the original description of the species. The stouter (= major) cheliped of the Guam specimen is illustrated to show a marked difference in the armature of the cheliped fingers, between the left and right cheliped. The colour pattern of B. britayevi, which was superficially described in the original description, is herein illustrated by photographs of the living individual. The relatively low number and large size of eggs in the Guam specimen of B. britayevi suggests an abbreviated larval development in this species. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4920 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-296
Author(s):  
TOMOYUKI KOMAI ◽  
TADAFUMI MAENOSONO ◽  
TOHRU NARUSE

A new alpheid shrimp species, provisionally assigned to the genus Salmoneus Holthuis, 1955, is described and illustrated on the basis of three specimens extracted from intertidal soft sediments on seagrass beds at Iriomote Island, southern Ryukyu Islands, Japan. Salmoneus singularis n. sp. is highly distinctive within the genus in having a pair of postorbital spines on the carapace, otherwise showing some affinities to the species of the S. gracilipes Miya, 1972 group. The possession of paired spines on the dorsolateral surface of the carapace is shared with several members of Triacanthoneus Anker, 2010, which is undoubtedly closely related to Salmoneus. However, the new species cannot be placed in Triacanthoneus because of the absence of a mid-dorsal spine on the carapace. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4894 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-142
Author(s):  
ARTHUR ANKER ◽  
PAULO P.G. PACHELLE

Bannereus chani sp. nov. (Caridea: Alpheidae) is described based on a single female specimen collected off south-eastern Taiwan, at a depth of 301–356 m, being the second only species in the genus Bannereus Bruce, 1988. The ovigerous female holotype of the new species differs from the female holotype of B. anomalus Bruce 1988, the type species of the genus, by a series of important morphological characters, for instance, on the major cheliped and third pereiopod, strongly indicating that they represent two distinct species. The non-type male specimen tentatively identified as B. anomalus by Bruce (1988) may well belong to the new species, since it differs from the holotype of B. anomalus essentially by the same criteria as the female holotype of B. chani sp. nov. In addition, B. anomalus is newly recorded from the New Caledonian side of the Coral Sea. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4845 (2) ◽  
pp. 264-274
Author(s):  
JIANMEI AN ◽  
RURU CHEN ◽  
GUSTAV PAULAY

Three new species of the parasitic isopod subfamily Hemiarthrinae Markham, 1972 are described. Allodiplophryxus unilateralis n. sp. is described from Western Australia, infesting the palaemonid shrimp Jocaste lucina (Nobili, 1901), and females differ from the only other species in the genus in possessing six pleomeres, an asymmetrical first oostegite and pleopods restricted to the short side of the body. Loki athanus n. sp. is described from Madagascar, infesting the alpheid shrimp Athanas parvus de Man, 1910, and females differ from the only other species in the genus in possessing well-developed lateral plates on pleomere 4 and four pairs of uniramous pleopods. Hemiarthrus alphei n. sp. is described from French Polynesia, infesting the alpheid shrimp Alpheus crinitus Dana, 1852, and females differ from the four other known Hemiarthrus species in having pleomeres with well-developed, symmetrical lateral plates, a barbula with three pairs of projections and a pointed pleotelson. Keys to species of Hemiarthrus and all genera of the Hemiarthrinae are presented. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4820 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-322
Author(s):  
TOMOYUKI KOMAI ◽  
TOMOYASU TAMEGO ◽  
KOUICHI HANANO

A new species of the alpheid shrimp genus Automate de Man, 1888, A. awaji, is described on the basis of an ovigerous female holotype and three paratype specimens (sex not determined) from Awaji Island, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan. The specimens were collected from soft sediments on a shallow subtidal flat (depth 4–8 m) using an airlift suction sampler. The new species is referred to the A. evermanni Rathbun, 1901 species group, in which seven species are currently included, from various parts of the world. Automate awaji n. sp. is characterized by the combination of the following characters: eye with cornea relatively small, in lateral and subdistal position on eyestalk; antennal scaphocerite with distolateral spine not exceeding rounded distal blade; ultimate article of maxilliped 3 with longitudinal row of setae on dorsolateral surface; cheliped ischia without spiniform setae on dorsal and ventral margins; major chela of type I smooth, not rugose or tuberculate on dorsal and ventral margins, fingers not gaping; carpus of pereopod 2 with proximal-most article less than half-length of second article; propodus of pereopod 5 with grooming apparatus consisting of closely spaced transverse rows of stiff setae. It is the fourth representative of the genus Automate reported from Japan. A brief overview on Japanese species of Automate is also given.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4786 (3) ◽  
pp. 345-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
ARTHUR ANKER

The present study deals with two species new to science, as well as several new records in the closely related alpheid shrimp genera Salmoneus Holthuis, 1955 and Deioneus Dworschak, Anker & Abed-Navandi, 2000, based on material collected at various localities in the tropical western and eastern Atlantic Ocean. In the western Atlantic, Salmoneus inconspicuus sp. nov. is described based on material from the Caribbean coast of Panama, Cuba, French Antilles and (with some doubts) Bermuda. The new species has been previously reported from the eastern Caribbean Sea as S. teres Manning & Chace, 1990, a closely related species so far known only from Ascension Island in the central Atlantic. Salmoneus camaroncito Anker, 2010 is reported from the Caribbean coast of Mexico, for the first time since its original description. Salmoneus carvachoi Anker, 2007 is reported from Colombia and southeastern USA, representing a new record of the species for each of these countries. Salmoneus depressus Anker, 2011 and Salmoneus setosus Manning & Chace, 1990 are reported for the first time from Cuba and Panama, respectively. In addition, these two species, as well as Salmoneus wehrtmanni Anker, 2010, are reported from new localities in Mexico. In the eastern Atlantic, Salmoneus saotomensis sp. nov. is described based on a single specimen from São Tomé Island in the Gulf of Guinea. The new species is characterised by the somewhat enlarged minor cheliped and is compared to all other Atlantic species presenting this feature. Deioneus sandizelli Dworschak, Anker & Abed-Navandi, 2000 is reported from São Tomé Island, for the first second time since its original description based on the Cape Verde type material. The characters separating Deioneus and Salmoneus are reassessed. The new evidence shows that these two genera are distinguished by only one morphological feature known to be variable in at least one non-related alpheid genus. However, in view of the increasing morphological heterogeneity in Salmoneus, it seems more appropriate to retain Deioneus as a valid genus for it may represent a distinct clade that also includes several other species currently placed in Salmoneus. 


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