Migmathelphusa olivacea, Ng, 2006

Ng, Oliver K. S. Chia Peter K. L., 2006, The Freshwater Crabs Of Sulawesi, With Descriptions Of Two New Genera And Four New Species (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Parathelphusidae), Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 54 (2), pp. 381-428 : 416-418

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13245646

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DF1C3D-FF84-FF8E-7FFF-F981FAB9FD91

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Migmathelphusa olivacea
status

sp. nov.

Migmathelphusa olivacea View in CoL , new species

( Figs. 35 View Fig , 36 View Fig , 37D View Fig , 38D View Fig )

Material examined. – Holotype: male (33.2 x 29.1 mm) ( MZB 1486 View Materials ), Lake Poso , Tentena, on sand of lake and outlet, Central Sulawesi, coll. C. D. Schubart et al., 20-21 Jan.2000 . Paratypes - 7 males, 1 juvenile ( ZRC 2000.1702 View Materials ), same data as holotype ; 1 male, 1 female ( ZRC 2000.1683 View Materials ), Lake Poso, Pendola south coast on sand, Central Sulawesi, coll. C. D. Schubart et al., 22 Jan.2000 ; 3 males, 3 females, 1 juvenile ( ZRC 2000.1704 View Materials ) , 1 male, 1 female ( MZB 1487 View Materials ), Lake Poso, Tindolo east coast on sand, Central Sulawesi, coll. C. D. Schubart et al., 22 Jan.2000 .

Diagnosis. – Carapace narrowly transverse to squarish, flat, branchial and gastric regions slightly inflated, dorsal surfaces smooth, deep olive-green when live; cervical groove distinct, narrow; H-shaped central depression distinct. Epigastric cristae strong, sharp, subparallel to frontal margin; postorbital cristae weak to absent. Front entire with slight depression; Remarks. – Migmathelphusa olivacea shares characters of Nautilothelphusa zimmeri and Parathelphusa sarasinorum . It is similar to N. zimmeri in that M. olivacea has a rather squarish rather than transverse carapace, a broad last ambulatory propodus, a weak to absent postorbital cristae, slender fingers in which the pollex is subequal to the palm and its third pair of ambulatory merus is longer than the rest. However, M. olivacea differs from N. zimmeri in that it has a long slender G1 with the tip directed inwards (versus short) ( Fig. 36 View Fig A-D vs. Fig. 34 View Fig A-G), a G2 with a relatively longer distal segment (0.4 times basal segment vs. 0.3 times) ( Fig. 36E View Fig vs. Fig. 34H View Fig ), the absence of a sharp distinct subterminal spine on the ambulatory merus ( Fig. 35 View Fig vs. Fig. 32 View Fig , 33 View Fig ), the external orbital angle does not extend beyond the frontal margin ( Fig. 35A View Fig vs. Fig. 32A View Fig , 33A, B View Fig ) and the frontal margin is only slightly depressed and not deeply depressed medially as in N. zimmeri ( Fig. 35B View Fig vs. Fig. 32B View Fig ).

Superficially, M. olivacea resembles P. sarasinorum which is also found in Lake Poso in that the carapace of M. olivacea has a deep olive-green coloration with a yellow tinge on the margin. M. olivacea also has an external orbital angle that does not extend beyond the frontal margin and epibranchial teeth that are blunt, low, acutely triangular, directed forwards with the outer margins slightly truncate. However, M. olivacea is different in that it has inflated branchial and gastric regions ( Fig. 35A View Fig vs. Fig. 2A View Fig ). Migmathelphusa olivacea is here recognised as a new genus as it has a distinctive long slender G1 with its tip directed inwards, a G2 with a short distal segment as well as the unique and distinct combination of characters as noted above

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