Goneplacoidea, MacLeay, 1838
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3665.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8358B363-BEE3-416D-96CA-8614E38B61D5 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BB9C75-FF87-FFE7-FF78-FF4AFCB5F879 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Goneplacoidea |
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Superfamily Goneplacoidea View in CoL
Family Acidopsidae . The male gonopore is coxal. Acidops cessacii shows a typical coxal condition. A large, thick, muscular penis emerges from the large gonopore located above the P5 coxo-sternal condyle and lies in a shallow depression on sternite 8 at the suture 7/8 level (A. Milne-Edwards & Bouvier 1900: 78); the abdominal somite 3, transversally elongated, covers the penis.
Acidops Stimpson, 1871 View in CoL , monotypic, was assigned to Pilumnidae ( Balss 1921) View in CoL , Xanthidae (Rathbun 1930) View in CoL , Rhizopinae Stimpson, 1858 ( Balss 1957; Melo 1996), Goneplacidae View in CoL ( Tesch 1917, as Epimelus View in CoL A. Milne-Edwards, 1878; Monod 1956; Guinot & Ribeiro 1962; Ng 1987a; Manning & Chace 1990; see also Barreto et al. 1993; Tavares & Mendonça 2004), Chasmocarcininae Serène, 1964 ( Ng 2002), to its own family and superfamily ( Števčić 2005: 36, as Acidopidae [sic], Acidopoidea [sic]), and to Acidopsidae View in CoL in the Goneplacoidea View in CoL ( Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008; De Grave et al. 2009: 32; Castro et al. 2010: table 1).
As the diagnosis in Števčić (2005) is incomplete, some comments on the morphology of the Acidopsidae View in CoL are in order. Instead of being a derived heterotreme as implied by its previous assignment to Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL , the Acidopsidae View in CoL shows the following plesiomorphic characters: male gonopore coxal, with a trend towards coxosternal condition; thoracic sternum narrow and elongated; sternite 3 only slightly enlarged transversally; sternal sutures 4/5–7/8 complete, equidistant, nearly horizontal, suture 2/3 also complete, 3/4 extremely short, only lateral; sternite 8 reduced, with only a small portion dorsally visible; presence of a long median line, reaching sternite 4; six abdominal somites, 3–5 fused but only ankylosed and with sutures still distinct, even medially (A. Milne- Edwards & Bouvier 1900: pl. 15, fig. 8; Ng 2002: 212; Castro et al. 2010: table 1), and somites 1 and 2 in a dorsal position; G1 with long protopodite; G2 long, as long as the G1, with long flagellum ( Guinot & Ribeiro 1962: figs. 27, 28); homochely and homodonty. Consequently, Acidops View in CoL is a basal heterotreme, but with the anterior sternites 1–3 not extended in the form of a developed triangle.
Parapilumnus Kossmann, 1877 View in CoL , with its type species P. cristimanus View in CoL (see Ng & Chen 2004) and the related species P. oryctos Ng, 2002 View in CoL , also shows a trend towards coxo-sternal conditon, with the thick penis in a slight depression ( Ng 2002: 212, 219, fig. 8d). Parapilumnus View in CoL shares with Acidops View in CoL most of its plesiomorphic characters, including a straight, stout G1 and an elongated G2 ( Ng 2002: fig. 8E–H, for Parapilumnus View in CoL ). Both genera share a vulva mostly covered by an operculum. Some characters are, however distinctive, including the male abdomen with fused abdominal somites 3–5 and relatively narrow abdominal somite 3 in Parapilumnus View in CoL (somites 3–5 ankylosed and abdominal somite 3 transversally elongated in Acidops View in CoL ), as well as the location of the press-button for abdominal locking (slightly far from suture 5/ 6 in Acidops View in CoL , practically above suture 5/ 6 in P. oryctos View in CoL , see Ng 2002: fig. 8B).
The taxonomic history of Parapilumnus View in CoL is complicated (see review by Ng 2002). Rathbun (1930a) regarded it as a synonym of Pilumnus Leach, 1816 View in CoL . Its type species P. cristimanus View in CoL (see Ng & Richer de Forges 2007) was transferred to Globopilumnus Balss, 1933 ( Balss 1933) View in CoL , but subsequently excluded from it ( Guinot-Dumortier 1961). Parapilumnus View in CoL was eventually referred to the Chasmocarcininae ( Ng 2002) , then placed in its own family and superfamily, Parapilumnidae and Parapilumnoidea Števčić, 2005 ( Števčić 2005), and more recently included in Acidopsidae View in CoL ( Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008; Castro et al. 2010). Parapilumnidae Števčić, 2005 , is a junior synonym of Acidopsidae Števčić, 2005 View in CoL .
Family Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal, located just above the P5 coxo-sternal condyle. The sternite 8 is invaginated into a channel, a penial groove (“genital groove” or “penial channel” of some authors) in which the long penis (proximal portion excepted) is concealed being enclosed within the invagination formed by sternite 8 posterior to suture 7/8, instead of along the sternal suture 7/8 ( Fig. 24 View FIGURE 24 ); sternite 7 is prolonged posteriorly forming a long episternite 7 bordering the anterior half of sternite 8 ( Fig. 8I–K View FIGURE 8 ; see Modalities of penis protection: Protection by invagination of the penis into sternite 8). The terminal papilla emerges from sternite 8, thus representing a coxo-sternal condition. As the line of invagination is clearly visible, close and parallel to thoracic sternal suture 7/8, the wide sternite 8 seems to be subdivided transversally into two parts, giving the false impression of a double or supplementary plate inserted between sternites 7 and 8. This double plate has been called “intercalated plate”, “interplate”, “supplemental sternal plate”, “supplementary plate”, “supplementary accessory plate”, “genital covering plate”, “coxo-sternal plate”, “penian channel”, or “invaginated channel” ( Rathbun 1914; Felder & Rabalais 1986: figs. 2d, 5d; Guinot 1986: pl. 2, figs. C, D; Davie 1988: fig. 1F; Tavares 1992a: figs. 1A, 2C–D; Blow & Bailey 1992: 175, pl. 1, figs. 1b, 5, 7, pl. 2, fig. 7; Davie & Guinot 1996: figs. 3G, 7; Coelho Filho & Coelho 1998: 804, 809, 812, figs. 4a, 7a, b; Schweitzer & Feldmann 2001a: 338, 339; Karasawa & Kato 2003a, b; Števčić 2005: 107, 108; Castro et al. 2010: table 1). The “supplementary plate” is nothing but the invaginated sternite 8 for penis protection. The sternite 8 of chasmocarcinid females is evidently not invaginated and shows as a normal, single plate.
In Chasmocarcinus typicus View in CoL , the penis is typically completely enclosed by sternite 8. In a few individuals, however, the margins of the penial groove do not join completely, so the penis is partially visible ( Blow & Bailey 1992: pl. 1, fig. 1b). In C. cylindricus View in CoL , the penial groove is only partially closed, so that the distal half of the penis is exposed. An “open suture in sternite 8, such that the penis is visible” was mentioned in Hephthopelta sp. ( Davie & Guinot 1996: 285), whereas the penial groove is completely closed in our material of Hephthopelta bruuni View in CoL . According to Komai et al. (2012: 141, 148, fig. 7D) the supplementary sternal plate of some species of Hephthopelta Alcock, 1899 View in CoL , such as H. cf. lugubris Alcock, 1899 View in CoL , is “actually not a well-defined plate and is partially mobile” and the penis is strongly calcified. The supplementary plate of Camatopsis rubida View in CoL illustrated by Hsueh & Huang (2002: fig. 1D) and Komai et al. (2012: 148, fig. 6C) occupies “all the way across the thoracic sternum”.
In Raoulia Ng, 1987 ( Ng 1987a: 93) View in CoL , the penis, which lies in a long groove between sternites 7 and 8 and has its exposed dorsal surface sclerotised, is slightly mobile (P.K.L. Ng, pers. comm. 2012; see also Komai et al. 2012: 141). The placement of Raoulia View in CoL in the Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL was considered doubtful by Ng, Guinot & Davie (2008: 76, note 1) because there is no “supplementary plate”, as shown by Barnard (1955: fig. 16, as Typhlocarcinodes piroculatus View in CoL ). Thus, Raoulia View in CoL is tentatively excluded here from Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL . Števčić (2005: 71) assigned Raoulia View in CoL to its own superfamily without mentioning the male genital region as did previous authors such as Tesch (1918b: 231, incorrectly as T. piroculatus Rathbun, 1911 View in CoL ), Serène (1964a: 237, incorrectly as T. piroculatus View in CoL ), and Ng (1987a) for R. limosa Ng, 1987 . Typhlocarcinodes Alcock, 1900 View in CoL , assigned with reservation to Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL by Ng, Guinot & Davie (2008: 76), should clearly show a “supplementary plate” to remain included in the family. Microtopsis takedai Komai, Ng & Yamada, 2012 View in CoL , recently assigned to Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL , shows a penis “lying in a channel between sternites 7 and 8, completely covered by supplementary sternal plate between sternites 7 and 8, plate reaching halfway across exposed part of thoracic sternum” (Komai et al. 2012: 141, 151, fig. 2E, F).
The Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL is treated here as a family whose members share two putative synapomorphies: (1) male sternite 8 deeply invaginated, forming a channel for the protection of the penis, thus giving the impression that the sternite is divided in two; (2) the carapace-thoracic sternum interlocking mechanism formed by thoracic sternite 8 and thoracic pleurite 8. The carapace is interlocked in a large, deep, transversal gutter between sternite 8 and pleurite 8, which is posteriorly raised ( Fig. 24C View FIGURE 24 ). Large vulvae are characteristic of the family, as well in the cavernicolous Trogloplax View in CoL and the freshwater Australocarcinus Davie, 1988 View in CoL (with direct development) as well as in the marine species of Chasmocarcinus View in CoL and the monotypic Camatopsis View in CoL (see Female sternal gonopores, or vulvae above). The sperm of the freshwater Australocarcinus riparius ( Jamieson & Guinot 1996: 289) View in CoL showed no clear affinity with those of any other Heterotremata, although confirming its heterotreme affiliation.
The Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL , included in Goneplacoidea View in CoL ( Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008: 75, 76; De Grave et al. 2009: 32; Schweitzer et al. 2010: 133; Castro et al. 2010: table 1), currently comprises three subfamilies: Chasmocarcininae ( Camatopsis View in CoL , Chasmocarcinops Alcock, 1900 View in CoL , Chasmocarcinus View in CoL , Hephthopelta Alcock, 1899 View in CoL , and some fossil genera such as † Falconoplax Van Straelen, 1933 View in CoL , and † Collinsius Karasawa, 1993 View in CoL ); Megaesthesiinae Števčić, 2005 ( Megaesthesius Rathbun, 1909 View in CoL ) as previously suggested by Serène (1964b: 186; see also Crosnier 1975); and Trogloplacinae Guinot, 1986 ( Trogloplax View in CoL , Australocarcinus Davie, 1988 View in CoL ). The suprafamilial rank Chasmocarcinoidea Serène, 1964, proposed by Števčić (2005: 106), is not retained here, as in Castro et al. (2010), despite the two apomorphies mentioned above.
Acidops View in CoL , Parapilumnus View in CoL , Scalopidia Stimpson, 1858 View in CoL , and Speocarcinus View in CoL , previously included in or regarded as close to Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL ( Serène 1964b; Davie & Guinot 1996; Karasawa & Kato 2003a, 2003b; Ng 2002), do not show the putative synapomorphies recognised herein for Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL (see Superfamily Goneplacoidea View in CoL : Family Acidopsidae View in CoL , Family Scalopidiidae View in CoL ; Superfamily Xanthoidea View in CoL : Family Pseudorhombilidae View in CoL , Subfamily Speocarcininae ).
A penial groove resembling the chasmocarcinid channel has been observed in some fossil species of Chasmocarcinu s, in † Collinsius Karasawa, 1993 View in CoL , and † Falconoplax Van Straelen, 1933 View in CoL ( Tavares 1992a; Blow & Bailey 1992; Schweitzer & Feldmann 2001a). The inclusion of extinct genera in Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL was based on a set of characters of the carapace, abdomen, cephalic and thoracic appendages ( Feldmann & Zinsmeister 1984; Schweitzer & Feldmann 2001a; Karasawa 1997; Karasawa & Fudouji 2000; Collins in Collins et al. 2003; Karasawa & Kato 2003a, b; Schweitzer & Karasawa 2004).
† Falconoplax View in CoL was previously considered a goneplacid ( Van Straelen 1933: 11; Feldmann & Schweitzer 2004: 16), a tymoline ( Glaessner 1969: R492), or a dorippid derived from † Sodakus ( Vega et al. 1995: 246) . Bailey & Blow (1987: 74) and Blow & Bailey (1992: 175) even synonymised † Falconoplax View in CoL with Chasmocarcinus View in CoL within the Goneplacidae View in CoL , a synonymy not accepted by Schweitzer & Feldmann (2001a: 339), who reinstated † Falconoplax View in CoL . The peculiar configuration of the penial region at the sternite 8 level, commented by Glaessner & Secretan (1987), led Tavares (1992a) to transfer † Falconoplax View in CoL from Cyclodorippidae View in CoL to Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL . Inclusion of † Falconoplax View in CoL in Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL was followed by all subsequent authors ( Schweitzer & Feldmann 2001a: 338; Karasawa & Kato 2003a: 151; 2003b: 143, table 8; Schweitzer et al. 2004: 103; Feldmann & Schweitzer 2004: 16, fig. 3A; De Grave et al. 2009: 32; Schweitzer et al. 2010: 133). Indeed, the type species † Falconoplax kugleri Van Straelen, 1933 View in CoL ( Van Straelen 1933: 11, fig. 6), represented by a great number of type series specimens from the Upper Eocene of Venezuela including some males with a complete ventral surface, shows a “supplementary plate”. In contrast to the closed groove of the other chasmocarcinids, the penial groove is wide, opened in † F. kugleri View in CoL ( Glaessner & Secretan 1987: 11, pl. 2, figs. 13c; Tavares 1992a: figs. 1A, 2C, D), supposedly leaving the penis largely exposed. Our examination of a male paratype of † F. kugleri View in CoL (MNHN.F.R53027), with an exceptionally well-preserved sternite 8 confirms this special condition, perhaps explained by the fact that the specimen is an internal mould. A similar pattern has been figured by Blow & Bailey (1992: pl. 1, fig. 7, as † Chasmocarcinus kugleri ) in the internal mould of another male paratype deposited in the Naturhistorisches Museum, Basel. Schweitzer & Feldmann (2001a: 339) hypothesised, however, that † Falconoplax View in CoL could be an ancestral state of the chasmocarcinid organisation, with an incompletely invaginated sternite 8 for penis protection. The presence of supplemental plate could not be observed in four specimens from the Lower Miocene of Venezuela only represented by dorsal carapaces that were assigned to † F. kugleri by Feldmann & Schweitzer (2004: 16). The fossil record of † F. kugleri in Venezuela is quoted by Aguilera et al. (2010: 112). The thoracic sternum of † F. bicarinella Collins & Morris, 1976 View in CoL ( Collins & Morris 1976: pl. 18, fig. 7), from the Eocene of Barbados, only represented by carapaces, is unknown.
† Bicarinocarcinus collinsi Glaessner & Secretan, 1987 View in CoL (p. 6, pl. 1, figs. 2–4), from the Eocene of Pakistan (Sulaiman Range), is known by an entire carapace, a fragment of carapace, and the cephalothorax of a male with a well-preserved thoracic sternum, all deposited in the MNHN. Unfortunately, the sternum is sharply broken just at the limit between the sternites 7 and 8, so the presence of a penial groove is questionable.
† Collinsius simplex Karasawa, 1993 View in CoL ( Karasawa 1993: 73, pl. 21, fig. 8; 1997: 61, pl. 23, figs. 8, 10; Karasawa & Kato 2003a: 151; 2003b: 143), from the Oligocene, shows a “supplementary plate” with a closed channel as in Chasmocarcinus View in CoL , which justifies its placement in Chasmocarcinidae View in CoL . It is noteworthy that these fossils already display a coxo-sternal condition. A similar condition, with a “supplementary plate”, should be present in other fossil chasmocarcinids.
† Chasmocarcinu s robertsi Blow & Bailey, 1992 View in CoL , shows sternite 8 of in males with “a broad, shallow transverse depression”, interpreted as “genital groove and covering plate”, thus closed ( Blow & Bailey 1992: 178, pl. 1, fig. 5, pl. 2, fig. 7), which resembles a double plate. The vulva of the female is circular and large ( Blow & Bailey 1992: 172, pl. 2, fig. 5), extending across most of sternite 6 as in living members of Chasmocarcinus View in CoL (see Female sternal gonopores, or vulvae; Castro et al. 2010: table 1).
Family Conleyidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal in the monotypic Conleyidae View in CoL . The penis, moderately long and partially protected by laterally expanded episternite 7, shows a trend to a coxo-sternal condition ( Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: 44, fig. 13F; see also P.K.L. Ng & N.K. Ng 2003; De Grave et al. 2009: 33; Castro et al. 2010: table 1).
Family Euryplacidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal. The penis shows a clear coxo-sternal disposition. The often long and proximally thick penis exits through a large gonopore that opens immediately above the P5 coxosternal condyle. The exposed portion of the penis is protected in various degrees by a concavity along the outer posterior margin of sternite 7. Episternite 7 variably extends sometimes to just above the gonopore, leaving the penis exposed and free when the coxa rotates during P5 movement. The penis is variously exposed in all genera: Eucrate View in CoL (Guinot 1969b: fig. 35; Hsueh & Huang 2002: figs. 16E, 17D; Castro & Ng 2010a: fig. 11E), Frevillea View in CoL A. Milne-Edwards, 1880 ( Castro & Ng 2010a: 51), Henicoplax Castro & Ng, 2010 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: fig. 25E), Heteroplax Stimpson, 1858 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: 71), Machaerus Leach, 1818 View in CoL (Guinot 1969b: figs. 36, 38 as “ Pilumnoplax View in CoL ”; Castro & Ng 2010a: figs. 30F, 32C), Nancyplax Lemaitre, García-Gómez, von Sternberg & Campos, 2001 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: fig. 31F), Platyozius Borradaile, 1902 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: fig. 35F), Psopheticoides Sakai, 1969 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: 89), Systroplax Castro & Ng, 2010 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: 91), Trissoplax Castro & Ng, 2010 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: fig. 41F), Trizocarcinus Rathbun, 1914 View in CoL (Guinot 1969b: fig. 37; Ng & Castro 2007: fig. 3B; Castro & Ng 2010a: fig. 44F), Villoplax Castro & Ng, 2010 View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2010a: 112), and X enocrate Ng & Castro, 2007 ( Ng & Castro 2007: fig. 3B). The penis is protected and mostly concealed by the overlapping of episternite 7 with sternite 8 in Euryplax View in CoL (Guinot 1969b: fig. 39; Castro et al. 2010: fig. 9C, D, table 1; Castro & Ng 2010a: figs. 16E, 17G). The region immediately around the penis in euryplacids is covered by a conspicuously elongated abdominal somite 3 that fits around episternite 7. Thoracic sternite 8 is thus completely covered ( Castro & Ng 2010a: fig. 6F) but a small portion remains visible in some species belonging to six genera (Castro et al. 2010: fig. 9B; Castro & Ng 2010a: figs. 16F, 30G, 44G, table 1).
The final emergence of the penis in Euryplacidae View in CoL , as in Euryplax nitida View in CoL and E. polita View in CoL , is somewhat displaced onto the sternum, and its description can be difficult as when the coxo-sternal condition needs to be explained. Davie (2002: 198), for example, described the euryplacid condition as “clearly sternal with penis free but lying in more or less well-developed groove; becoming sternal with penis sheathed and/or protected proximally by a covered groove; or sternal, with penis lying in closed canal”. Stimpson (1859: 60), in his description of Euryplax nitida View in CoL , correctly described the “verges of the male arising from the coxae of the posterior feet […] to the abdominal appendages through canals in the sternum”. The location of the male gonopore was not mentioned in Karasawa & Kato’s (2003b: 137) diagnosis of Euryplacinae Stimpson, 1871 , but it is given as coxal for Goneplacidae View in CoL , which included Euryplacinae . Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006: 28) did not specify the condition, but Eucrate View in CoL and Heteroplax View in CoL are listed as lacking a penial groove. Števčić (2005: 71) stated that in euryplacids the “sexual openings [are] usually coxal to sometimes coxo-sternal”. The coxo-sternal condition of Euryplax View in CoL as well as of the remaining Euryplacidae View in CoL was clearly demonstrated by Castro et al. (2010: fig. 9C, D) and Castro & Ng (2010a: figs. 16E, 17G).
The Euryplacidae View in CoL , traditionally placed as a subfamily of Goneplacidae View in CoL sensu lato, is now considered to be an independent family within Goneplacoidea View in CoL ( Karasawa & Schweitzer 2006: 57; Castro 2007: 613, 617; Ng & Castro 2007: 43; Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008: 78; De Grave et al. 2009: 33; Schweitzer et al. 2010: 133; Castro et al. 2010: table 1; Castro & Ng 2010a: 5), instead of constituting a separate superfamily ( Števčić 2005: 71).
Family Goneplacidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal, with a varying trend towards a coxo-sternal disposition. The Goneplacidae View in CoL was revised by Castro (2007), who emended the diagnosis and restricted the family to 17 genera (see also De Grave et al. 2009: 33; Schweitzer et al. 2010: 134; Castro et al. 2010; Castro & Ng 2010b: 51).
The penis of Goneplacidae View in CoL has been referred to as coxal to coxo-sternal ( Guinot 1969a, b, c; Števčić 2005: 63; Castro et al. 2010: table 1), coxo-sternal ( Castro 2007: 616; Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: 45), coxal ( Karasawa & Kato 2003b: 137), and sternal or “sterno-coxal” ( Davie 2002: 190). Such different nomenclature shows the difficulty in interpreting and naming the transformation series observed among the Goneplacidae View in CoL . Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006: 30) did not mention the position of the male gonopore in Goneplacidae View in CoL , but referred to the absence of a penial groove in Carcinoplax View in CoL .
The male gonopore opens immediately above the coxo-sternal condyle of the P5 coxa in Carcinoplax (see Guinot 1969a: figs. 61, 62, 65; 1989: figs. 2, 3; Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: fig. 13D; Castro 2009: 952), Goneplacoides Castro, 2007 ( Komatsu & Takeda 2003: fig. 3a, as “ Goneplax ” marivenae ; Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: fig. 7F, as Goneplax new species; fig. 13C, as “ Goneplax ” marivenae ), Goneplax Leach, 1814 ( Bouvier 1940: fig. 176; Guinot 1969a: figs. 63, 64, 67; Guinot & Castro 2007: fig. 3B), Ommatocarcinus White, 1852 ( Fig. 8G View FIGURE 8 ), Paragoneplax Castro, 2007 , Psopheticus Wood-Mason, 1892 ( Guinot 1990: fig. 25), Pycnoplax (see Guinot 1969a: fig. 60, as Carcinoplax ; Castro 2012: 95, 99, 102), and Pedroplax Ng & Komai, 2011 ( Ng & Komai 2011: fig. 2E; see also Davie 2012a). The penis is soft, straight, and of moderate length. The gonopore and the proximal portion of the penis are protected by a variously expanded episternite 7 ( Guinot 1989: figs. 2, 3, Carcinoplax longimanus and C. monodi ; Hsueh & Huang 2002: fig. 10B, Carcinoplax purpurea Rathbun, 1914 ). The posterior margin of episternite 7 may completely cover the gonopore or it may cover at least only its anterior margin. The posterior portion or the entirety of the gonopore can be exposed when the coxa rotates with the movements of the P5. The relatively short, exposed distal portion of the penis is protected by the closed abdomen, its wide somite 3 typically reaching the episternite 7 and leaving varying portions of thoracic sternite 8 exposed, visible dorsally (e.g., Guinot 1989: figs. 2, 3; Guinot & Castro 2007: fig. 3B; Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: fig. 10C), sometimes fitting under episternite 7 (e.g., Castro 2007: figs. 4B, 6B). Another variation is that in at least the adult of some species (e.g., Goneplax clevai , Ommatocarcinus macgillivrayi ), the proximal portion of the penis is left exposed because it is not covered by the closed abdomen.
The coxo-sternal disposition is more evident with the development of a groove that provides additional protection to a longer penis. In Hadroplax sinuatifrons the proximal portion of the penis, after exiting from the gonopore, is enclosed in a partially opened groove formed by a keel-like thickening on the anterior margin of thoracic sternite 8, and overhung by a relatively short episternite 7. The penis is also sheltered in a groove in Notonyx kumi Naruse & Maenosono, 2009 ( Naruse & Maenosono 2009: 184), as well as in N. nitidus . In Singhaplax wolffi , the penis is fully protected by running below suture 7/8, which essentially functions as a long, closed groove. In Microgoneplax Castro, 2007 , and Singhaplax dichotoma , S. platypoda , S. rhamphe , and S. styrax , the gonopore region on the P5 coxa and the penis are protected by a wider episternite 7, which overhangs over sternite 8. In all species of Microgoneplax and Singhaplax , the abdomen does not extend close to the P5 coxae and therefore does not cover the gonopore region. The only exception is S. platypoda , where the particularly wide abdomen reaches the gonopore region ( Castro 2007: fig. 36A). The abdomen is very broad in S. danielae Takeda & Komatsu, 2010 , and M. guinotae Takeda & Komatsu, 2010 ( Takeda & Komatsu 2010: figs. 2B, 5B, respectively); the disposition of the penis is not known. A short junction of sternites 7 and 8 occurs in Pedroplax ( Ng & Komai 2011: figs. 2E, 3G; Davie 2012a: 110).
Neommatocarcinus huttoni View in CoL markedly departs from the typical pattern of Goneplacidae View in CoL in having a penis with a sclerotised proximal portion and located in a groove ( Takeda & Miyake 1969: fig. 6a, b), which is unique for the Goneplacidae View in CoL . This is one of the characters diagnostic of the Neommatocarcinidae Števčić, 2011 ( Števčić 2011) .
The assignment of Bathyplax typhla View in CoL to Goneplacoidea View in CoL is questionable (see Castro 2007: 619): Xanthidae View in CoL ( Manning & Holthuis 1989; Tavares 1996b); monotypic Bathyplacinae Števčić, 2005, in Geryonidae View in CoL within Goneplacoidea ( Števčić 2005: 66) View in CoL ; and Bathyplacinae in Goneplacidae ( Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008: 80) View in CoL . The wide and rather long penis, which emerges from the large coxal gonopore, is situated immediately above the P5 coxosternal condyle. A small proximal portion of the soft penis lies in a short groove and remains exposed, but its remaining portion is protected by the closed abdomen, wide somite 3 of which reaching the episternite 7. Sternite 7 extends onto the P5 coxa but it is not in contact with sternite 8, a large portion of which is exposed dorsally as an oblique plate (Guinot 1969c: fig. 96; Tavares 1996b: fig. 1E, F).
Family Litocheiridae View in CoL . Litocheira bispinosa View in CoL , the type species and perhaps the only species of the genus ( Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008: 83; see also Tesch 1918b; Gordon 1931; Guinot 1969a, b, 1971a), shows a coxal gonopore, just above the coxo-sternal condyle, partially surrounded by expanded episternite 7 and an outer prolongation of sternite 8. The penis is basally thick and continues as a long, soft tube, which lies in a concavity posterior to suture 7/8, and is covered by large abdominal somite 3 ( Fig. 25G View FIGURE 25 ).
The location of the male gonopore was a source of confusion, being considered either sternal ( Balss 1933: 44) or coxal ( Türkay 1975b: fig. 27). Litocheira View in CoL was misinterpreted as a primitive catometope (sternal gonopore) by Türkay (1983a: 101, 102), perhaps because of the existence of the penial groove. The genus was traditionally assigned to Goneplacidae View in CoL ( Tesch 1918b: 163; Balss 1933: 43; 1956: 1656), and restricted to its type species without familial assignment, the remaining species being transferred to the Pilumnidae View in CoL (Guinot 1969c: 697; 1971a: 1078). Litocheira View in CoL , with one related genus, Georgeoplax Türkay, 1983 View in CoL , was once again included in Goneplacidae ( Türkay 1975b: 124) View in CoL as a basal representative but later assigned to Chasmocarcininae ( Davie 2002: 196) . It is the onomatophore (type genus) of a separate family, Litocheiridae Kinahan, 1856 View in CoL , raised to Litocheiroidea by Števčić (2005: 61) (see Low et al. 2012c for correct authority). Ng, Guinot & Davie (2008: 83, fig. 71) provisionally placed the taxon as a family within Goneplacoidea View in CoL , and Castro et al. (2010: fig. 9E, table 1) recognised its goneplacoid status (see also De Grave et al. 2009: 33; Schweitzer et al. 2010: 136).
Litocheira clearly does not share any of the synapomorphies of Chasmocarcinidae and therefore should not be included in this family. Despite their grapsoid facies, Litocheira and Georgeoplax are neither grapsids nor plagusiids, and do not belong to a thoracotreme family (sternal male gonopores). The coxal gonopores of Litocheira are evidence of a heterotreme condition. In contrast to Goneplacidae , the Litocheiridae has male abdominal somites 1, 2 dorsally placed, somites 1–3 of the same width, a heart-shaped telson ( Fig. 25E View FIGURE 25 ), a stout, twisted, setiferous G1 (observed as “grapsoid” by Türkay 1975b), both G1 and G2 with long protopodites, a simple, long, and straight G2 ( Fig. 25A–D View FIGURE 25 ), a narrow and longitudinally expanded thoracic sternite 7 ( Fig. 25G View FIGURE 25 ), and an arched and wide front.
Additonal features of Litocheiridae include a broad male abdomen ( Fig. 25E View FIGURE 25 ), with all somites free (instead of somites 3–5 fused according to Davie 2002: 196); flexion of the male abdomen in the middle of somite 3; abdominal somite 6 with deep sockets for the abdominal-locking mechanism; thoracic sternite 8 with a very small portion visible dorsally, instead of completely concealed according to Števčić (2005: 61); thoracic sternal suture 3/4 conspicuous, deep; sutures 4/5 and 5/6 interrupted; suture 6/7 complete; suture 7/8 interrupted (Castro et al. 2010: fig. 9E), instead of complete according to Števčić (2005: 61); median line along sternites 7 and 8; large vulva with two sclerotised prominences and closed by a membrane ( Fig. 25F View FIGURE 25 ; Castro et al. 2010: fig. 9E); G2 long, and straight, consisting of a simple flagellum ( Fig. 25D View FIGURE 25 ), in contrast to the short and sigmoid pilumnoid G2 characteristic of a number of species previously attributed to Litocheira as in Tesch (1918b; see Guinot 1969c).
Family Mathildellidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal. The wide penis, which exits from a large gonopore situated on the coxa (and not on the condyle, see Condylar protection), ends in a narrow papilla, lies in a very shallow, hardly visible depression on sternite 8, and is only protected by the transversely broad abdominal somite 3; episternite 7 is not expanded ( Guinot & Richer de Forges 1981a: figs. 4, 5C, E; Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: fig. 13E; Castro et al. 2010: table 1).
The Mathildellidae View in CoL , considered to be a portunoid family by Karasawa & Schweitzer (2006: 41, 61) and Karasawa, Schweitzer & Feldmann (2008: 94, 96), was recognised as a goneplacoid family by Takeda & Watabe (2004), Ng & Manuel-Santos (2007), Castro (2007), Ng, Guinot & Davie (2008), De Grave et al. (2009: 33), Schweitzer et al. (2010: 136), and Castro et al. (2010).
Family Progeryonidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal, being large and opening just anterior to coxo-sternal condyle of P5 coxa. The penis, which is moderately long, originates “directly from base of coxa of P5” ( Castro & Ng 2008: 54) as in Progeryon vaubani View in CoL and P. mararae View in CoL ( Guinot & Richer de Forges 1981a: fig. 3A, D), P. mus View in CoL ( Castro & Ng 2008: fig. 7G), and Rhadinoplax microphthlamus ( Castro & Ng 2008: figs. 3, 4G). Episternite 7 is moderately expanded but does not cover the penis (see Castro et al. 2010: table 1). In the monotypic Paragalene Kossmann 1878 View in CoL , the penis protrudes from the coxal gonopore and shows as a broad, soft proximal expansion with a short distal extension ( Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008: 84; Castro & Ng 2008: 63, 67, fig. 7H).
The Progeryonidae View in CoL was included in Goneplacoidea View in CoL by Ng & Manuel-Santos (2007: table 1), Ng, Guinot & Davie (2008: 84), Castro & Ng (2008: 54), and De Grave et al. (2009: 33).
Family Scalopidiidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal, the condition coxo-sternal in Scalopidia spinosipes View in CoL , the only species in the family. The long penis, which runs along suture 7/8, is protected in a narrow channel formed by the incomplete juxtaposition of sternites 7 (expansion of episternite 7) and 8, and its unprotected dorsal portion is slightly sclerotised (Castro et al. 2010: fig. 9F). This is clearly a derived coxo-sternal condition. The channel between the incompletely juxtaposed sternites 7 and 8 in Scalopidia View in CoL is not homologous to the chasmocarcinid “supplementary plate” resulting from a deep invagination of sternite 8.
Scalopidia View in CoL was included in Goneplacidae View in CoL by Huang (1994: 592) and in the goneplacid subfamily Chasmocarcininae by Ng et al. (2001: 34) and Hsueh & Huang (2002: 113). It is clear that Scalopidia View in CoL , which is not a chasmocarcinid, deserves its own family. We disagree with Števčić (2005: 107) in excluding the Scalopidiidae View in CoL from the Chasmocarcinoidea, and we refer it with more confidence to the Goneplacoidea View in CoL (see Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008: 85; De Grave et al. 2009: 33; Castro et al. 2010: fig. 9F, table 1; Komai et al. 2012: 141).
Family Sotoplacidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal with an exit displaced in a sternal position in Sotoplax robertsi View in CoL , the only species in the family. The long penis is protected by a closed canal formed by the joining of thoracic episternite 7 and sternite 8 ( Guinot 1984a: 92, figs. 2A, 3B; Almeida et al. 2008: fig. 2C; Castro et al. 2010: figs. 4, 5A, table 1; “p” in fig. 4, erroneously indicated as the penis, is actually the coxo-sternal condyle that covers it, the penis not being externally visible). Abdominal somite 3 is not conspicuously wider than other abdominal somites, therefore a very large portion of thoracic sternite 8 is visible dorsally. A derived coxo-sternal condition is evident. Sotoplax Guinot, 1984 View in CoL , which is known from the male holotype of S. robertsi View in CoL and new material from Brazil ( Almeida et al. 2008) and the Gulf of Mexico (Thoma et al. 2009), and tentatively included in Euryplacidae View in CoL ( Ng, Guinot & Davie 2008: 78, 79), was recently elevated to the family rank (Castro et al. 2010).
Family Vultocinidae View in CoL . The male gonopore is coxal. The short penis is only partially protected by a conspicuously elongated episternite 7 and the transversely wide abdominal somite 3 ( Ng & Manuel-Santos 2007: fig. 13A, B; Ng & Richer de Forges 2009: fig. 2A; Castro et al. 2010: table 1). A trend towards a coxo-sternal condition is observed in this monotypic family. The Vultocinidae View in CoL , despite a somewhat pilumnoid appearance, is clearly a goneplacoid family ( De Grave et al. 2009: 33).
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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Goneplacoidea
GUINOT, DANIÈLE, TAVARES, MARCOS & CASTRO, PETER 2013 |
Progeryonidae
De Grave, S. & Pontcheff, N. D. & Ahyong, S. T. & Chan, T. - Y. & Crandall, K. A. & Dworschak, P. C. & Felder, D. L. & Feldmann, R. M. & Fransen, C. H. J. M. & Goulding, L. Y. D. & Lemaitre, R. & Low, M. E. Y. & Martin, J. W. & Ng, P. K. L. & Schweitzer, C. E. & Tan, S. H. & Tshudy, D. & Wetzer, R. 2009: 33 |
Ng, P. K. L. & Guinot, D. & Davie, P. J. F. 2008: 84 |
Castro, P. & Ng, P. K. L. 2008: 54 |
Euryplacidae
Castro, P. & Ng, P. K. L. 2010: 5 |
De Grave, S. & Pontcheff, N. D. & Ahyong, S. T. & Chan, T. - Y. & Crandall, K. A. & Dworschak, P. C. & Felder, D. L. & Feldmann, R. M. & Fransen, C. H. J. M. & Goulding, L. Y. D. & Lemaitre, R. & Low, M. E. Y. & Martin, J. W. & Ng, P. K. L. & Schweitzer, C. E. & Tan, S. H. & Tshudy, D. & Wetzer, R. 2009: 33 |
Ng, P. K. L. & Guinot, D. & Davie, P. J. F. 2008: 78 |
Castro, P. 2007: 613 |
Ng, P. K. L. & Castro, P. 2007: 43 |
Karasawa, H. & Schweitzer, C. E. 2006: 57 |
Stevcic, Z. 2005: 71 |