Lophoplax symmetrinuda ( Edmondson, 1951 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5244.5.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B55396DA-15DB-4CDF-81FD-78686A0EC3A2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7665799 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039087CD-7E15-733A-47C6-F89FF40AFBA7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Lophoplax symmetrinuda ( Edmondson, 1951 ) |
status |
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Lophoplax symmetrinuda ( Edmondson, 1951) View in CoL
( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 )
Pseudocryptocoeloma symmetrinudus Edmondson, 1951: 233 View in CoL , fig. 34; Serène 1968: 86; Ng 1987: 79, 97; Ng et al. 2008: 144; Marumura & Takeda 2012: 192, figs. 2A, 3, 4; Maenosono 2019: 32, figs. 8B, 10, 13B, 14K, L.
Lophoplax symmetrinudus — Takeda & Kurata 1984: 201; Takeda & Marumura 1995: 90.
Type material. Holotype: male (6.5 × 5.0 mm) ( BPBM 5109 About BPBM ), low tide, table reef, Siufaga, Tau, Samoa, coll. W. Harris, 1937.
Diagnosis. Carapace transversely subovate ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 3A; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A); epigastric, protogastric, hepatic, cardiac and intestinal areolets all glabrous, prominent, smooth; epigastric areolets relatively wide, ovate, short ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 3A; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A); protogastric areolet prominent, transversely ovate positioned obliquely ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 3A; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A); cardiac areolet medially separated, each element positioned obliquely ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 3A; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A); hepatic areolet swollen, long, reaching only to base of second anterolateral tooth ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A); external orbital tooth wide, low ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A, B); tips of external orbital and anterolateral teeth low, rounded ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A, B); junction between antero- and posterolateral margins demarcated by second anterolateral tooth without additional lobes or tubercles ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A, B); epistome relatively narrow longitudinally ( Maenosono 2019: fig. 10C); median lobe of posterior margin of the epistome broadly triangular, with lateral margins gently concave ( Maenosono 2019: fig. 10C). Third maxilliped with merus quadrate, ischium short ( Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 ). Dorsal and lateral surfaces of carpus of cheliped rugose; cheliped fingers not distinctly bent, pollex subparallel with the ventral margin of palm ( Maenosono 2019: fig. 10D). P2–P5 very short, not elongate ( Fig. 12C View FIGURE 12 ); outer surface of the P3–P5 merus, carpus and propodus smooth ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ). Male pleonal somites 4–6 transversely wide, telson wider than long, semicircular ( Fig. 12D View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 13B). G1 slender, sinuous, distal part gently curved upwards ( Fig. 12E, F View FIGURE 12 ; Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 4A, B; Maenosono 2019: fig. 14K, L).
Colour in life. Background colour white; setae brown; epigastric, protogastric and hepatic areolets bright red; cardiac areolets pale red to red ( Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 2A; Maenosono 2019: fig. 8B).
Remarks. Lophoplax symmetrinuda is arguably the most distinctive member of the genus Lophoplax as currently diagnosed: it differs markedly from all congeners in its transversely subovate carapace ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 3A; Maenosono 2019: fig. 10A); the wide and low external orbital and anterolateral teeth ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 8A, B); the absence of tubercles or lobes at the junction between the antero- and posterolateral margins ( Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 8A, B); the proportionately shorter merus and ischium of the third maxilliped ( Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 ); the comparatively shorter ambulatory legs, especially the merus ( Fig. 12C View FIGURE 12 ; Maenosono 2019: fig. 8B); and the distinctly wider male pleon ( Fig. 12D View FIGURE 12 ; Marumura & Takeda 2012: fig. 4C; Maenosono 2019: fig. 8B). Despite these characters, the presence and arrangement of the gastric, cardiac and hepatic lobes agrees well with other Lophoplax species, and as such we retain it in this genus for the time being, as first suggested by Takeda & Kurata (1984) and Takeda & Marumura (1995).
The original figures of the species by Edmondson (1951: fig. 34a–d) are inaccurate, the carapace in particular appearing quadrate rather than ovate and the dentition being incorrectly depicted ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ).
Edmondson (1951: 235) comments on why it should be in Pseudocryptocoeloma are brief and non-informative: “The genus Pseudocryptocoeloma was established by Ward in 1936 to provide for the species P. parvus , described from Lindeman Island, Queensland. The new species differs from the Australian form in the arrangement of the nude areas of the carapace. In P. parvus the entire median and posterior portions of the carapace are bare.” Maenosono (2019) described and figured the species at length and in the present examination of the holotype male agrees well with his account, notably in the form of the male pleon and G1.
Habitat. The type male was collected on a table reef in the intertidal zone of a reef. Maenoson (2019) collected the species from intertidal reef habitats as well in Japan .
Distribution. Known from Samoa and the Ryukyus, Japan.
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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Lophoplax symmetrinuda ( Edmondson, 1951 )
Ng, Peter K. L. & Rahayu, Dwi Listyo 2023 |
Lophoplax symmetrinudus
Takeda, M. & Marumura, M. 1995: 90 |
Takeda, M. & Kurata, Y. 1984: 201 |
Pseudocryptocoeloma symmetrinudus
Maenosono, T. 2019: 32 |
Marumura, M. & Takeda, M. 2012: 192 |
Ng, P. K. L. & D. Guinot & P. J. F. Davie 2008: 144 |
Ng, P. K. L. 1987: 79 |
Serene, R. 1968: 86 |
Edmondson, C. H. 1951: 233 |