Lobothelphusa thewanica, Shi & Chen & Sun, 2022

Shi, Boyang, Chen, Xiaoyong & Sun, Hongying, 2022, On two new species of the genus Lobothelphusa Bouvier, 1917 (Decapoda: Brachyura: Potamidae: Potaminae) from the Pegu Range, central Myanmar, Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 70, pp. 65-79 : 71-74

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26107/RBZ-2022-0005

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F47F0693-6332-43A8-AFF0-3F6D93F4285B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7171432

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AFDE3083-229A-4565-8E64-4CFA304B4F0E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:AFDE3083-229A-4565-8E64-4CFA304B4F0E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lobothelphusa thewanica
status

sp. nov.

Lobothelphusa thewanica View in CoL , new species

( Figs. 4 View Fig , 5 View Fig , 6D–F View Fig , 7E–G View Fig )

Material examined. Holotype: adult male (cw 31.44 mm, cl 26.14 mm, ch 15.38 mm, fw 10.96 mm), NNU16-BG1, Thewa Township , Pegu Range, Bago Division, 18.492°N, 96.387°E, 53 m asl, Myanmar ( Fig. 1 View Fig light blue), coll. B. Shi, 11 May 2019. GoogleMaps

Paratypes: adult male (cw 32.84 mm, cl 26.88 mm, ch 15.68 mm, fw 11.12 mm), NNU16-BG2; adult female (cw 29.26 mm, cl 25.69 mm, ch 14.73 mm, fw 11.24 mm), SEABRIBG3; adult male (cw 30.26 mm, cl 24.13 mm, ch 14.44 mm, fw 9.13 mm), SEABRI-BG4; juvenile (cw 28.61 mm, cl 23.57 mm, ch 13.67 mm, fw 8.78 mm), SEABRI-BG5; juvenile (cw 28.31 mm, cl 23.22 mm, ch 13.32 mm, fw 8.52 mm), SEABRI-BG6; Same location as holotype.

Description. Carapace subquadrate, slightly broader than long (cw/cl = 1.20; ch/cl = 0.58); dorsal surface smooth, gently swollen longitudinally and transversely; regions indistinct, cervical grooves developed, shallow, H-shaped groove well-developed ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). Epigastric cristae low, distinct, slightly rugose, separated by groove which opens up into inverted Y-shaped gap posteriorly, distinctly positioned anterior to postorbital cristae, separated from postorbital cristae by distinct narrow groove; postorbital cristae distinct, sinuous, slightly oblique, sharp, confluent with the first epibranchial teeth; regions behind epigastric and postorbital cristae smooth ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). Frontal margin slightly concave (fw/cw = 0.38), with very low, rounded granules; frontal region broad longitudinally ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). Antennular fossae rectangular when viewed from front; supraorbital margin sinuous, cristate; infraorbital margin sinuous, sloping downward, cristate; orbital region relatively broad; suborbital and pterygostomial regions granulose; eyes filling up most of orbital space; eyestalk short, stout; cornea moderately large, pigmented ( Fig. 4C View Fig ). External orbital angle well-developed, triangular, tip acute, outer margin convex, margins cristate, with deep cleft separating it from anterolateral margins; anterolateral margins gently convex, each with four prominent epibranchial teeth; epibranchial teeth 1–4 progressively smaller, tips directed anterolaterally, base of each tooth slightly broad; first and second epibranchial teeth distinctly broader; third and fourth epibranchial teeth slender; posterolateral margin sinuous; posterior carapace margin gently convex or straight; branchial region without oblique striae ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). Posterior margin of epistome with well-developed, triangular median tooth, lateral margins straight ( Fig. 4C View Fig ). Third maxilliped glabrous; ischium of third maxilliped rectangular, elongate longitudinally, ca. 0.65 times length of width, without median sulcus; merus squarish, ca. 1.52 times length of width; exopod reaching half-length of merus, with well-developed flagellum ( Figs. 4B, C View Fig , 5A View Fig ).

Chelipeds asymmetrical, glabrous, major chela distinctly larger; dorsal surface smooth; merus with well-developed subdistal spine on dorsal margin; carpus with strong, welldeveloped spine on inner distal angle; inner distal angle sinuous ( Fig. 4A–C View Fig ). Fingers of major chela with numerous teeth of different size, large gape when finger closed; fingers of minor chela similar to major chela; fingers slightly curved, equal in length to palm; palm longer than high; inner and outer surfaces inflated ( Fig. 4A–D View Fig ).

Ambulatory legs relatively long, slender, p3 longest, p5 shortest; p5 propodus relatively stouter than p2–p4 propodi; dactylus slightly curved, equal in length to propodus, with short, sharp chitinous spines on margins; outer edges with thick spongy tomentum ( Fig. 4A, B, E View Fig ).

Male thoracic sternum smooth; thoracic sternites s1/s2 completely fused; suture between thoracic sternites s2/ s3 distinct; thoracic sternites s3/s4 fused, groove between sternites not discernible; sutures between thoracic sternites s4/s5, s5/s6, s6/s7, s7/s8 shallow, narrow ( Fig. 4B, F, H View Fig ). Pleonal locking mechanism with distinct, anteriorly directed tubercle on submedian part of sternite s5 ( Fig. 4H View Fig ). Narrow transverse ridge at the suture between thoracic sternites s7/ s8 that interrupts the median line ( Fig. 4H, I View Fig ).

Male pleon narrowly triangular; telson with blunt apex and concave lateral margins, ca. 0.79 times length of width; somite 6 trapezoidal, ca. 2.12 times length of width, lateral margins straight; somites 4–6 trapezoidal, progressively less broad; lateral margins of somites 4–6 straight; lateral margins of somite 3 distinctly convex; suture between somites 5/4, 4/3 distinctly sinuous; somite 3 broader than somites 1 and 2 longitudinally; somite 2 longitudinally broader than somite 1; somite 1 longitudinally narrow ( Fig. 4B, F View Fig ); Female pleon ovate, covering the thoracic sternites when closed; telson broadly subtriangular, much broader than long, with slightly convex lateral margins; somites 5 longest, broader than long, with convex lateral margins; somites 4 and 6 almost equal; somites 1–3 progressively longer ( Fig. 4G View Fig ).

G1 slightly sinuous, slender, tip of terminal segment situated adjacent to pleonal locking structure in situ ( Figs. 4H View Fig , 5B, C View Fig , 6D, E View Fig ); groove for G2 on ventral surface; terminal segment relatively short, conical in shape, tip acute, distal part slightly curved outward, ca. 0.29 times length of subterminal segment; dorsal fold relatively high, extending along one-quarter to three-quarters of terminal segment, with rounded apex in medial position; subterminal segment gently convex on upper part of inner margin ( Figs. 5B, C View Fig , 6D, E View Fig ). G2 length equal to length of G1; distal segment long, ca. 0.48 times length of basal segment ( Figs. 5D View Fig , 6F View Fig ). Vulvae on sternite 6, semicircular, occupying ca. 0.50 times the length of the thoracic sternite 6, almost reaching suture between thoracic sternites s4/s5 ( Fig. 4I View Fig ).

Etymology. The species is named after the type locality, the township of Thewa, in the Pegu Range, Bago Division, Myanmar.

Colour in life. The adult animals are olive green dorsally with the ventral surfaces yellow. The chelipeds and ambulatory legs are pale yellow. The black colouration seen in the photographs is due to the black sediment that has strongly adhered to the exoskeleton. The thick spongy tomentum of the ambulatory legs is usually brown ( Figs. 4 View Fig , 7F, G View Fig ).

Ecological note. Individuals were collected under stones and the layers of fallen leaves in the river or on its banks; the substrate consists mainly of stones and rocky rubble ( Fig. 7E View Fig ). Remarks. The new species fits well within the morphological definition of the genus Lobothelphusa , particularly the flat carapace with indistinct dorsal regions, the third maxilliped ischium without a median sulcus, and the anterior margins of the ambulatory carpi, propodi, and dactyli with a thick spongy tomentum. Lobothelphusa thewanica , new species, is similar to L. bagoensis , new species, and L. crenulifera in the morphology of the postorbital cristae and the G1, but markedly distinct in some characters: (1) the carapace is subquadrate, the outer margin of the external orbital angle is convex, the epigastric cristae are positioned distinctly anterior to the postorbital cristae, and the third and fourth epibranchial teeth are slender ( Fig. 4A View Fig ) (versus the carapace is subtrapezoidal, the epigastric cristae are gently anterior or parallel to the postorbital cristae, and the third and fourth epibranchial teeth are stout in L. bagoensis and L. crenulifera , Fig. 2A View Fig , cf. Rathbun, 1905: pl. 12, fig. 11; Bott, 1970: pl. 38, fig. 23, pl. 45, fig. 21; the outer margin of the external orbital angle is more pronouncedly convex in L. bagoensis , Fig. 2A View Fig ); (2) the G1 is slightly sinuous, with the terminal segment proportionately longer, ca. 0.29 times length of the subterminal segment, and the distal part is slightly curved outward ( Figs. 5B, C View Fig , 6D, E View Fig ) (versus the G1 is gently sinuous or straight, the terminal segment is relatively short, ca. 0.23 times length of the subterminal segment, and the distal part is gently curved outward in L. bagoensis , Figs. 3D, E View Fig , 6A, B View Fig ; whereas the G1 is sinuous, the terminal segment is relatively short, ca. 0.21 times length of the subterminal segment, and the distal part is curved outward in L. crenulifera , cf. Bott, 1970: pl. 38, fig. 23); (3) the dorsal fold of the G1 terminal segment is relatively high, and extends along a quarter to three-quarters of the length of the terminal segment (versus the dorsal fold is low in L. bagoensis and L. crenulifera , Figs. 3D, E View Fig , 6A, B View Fig , cf. Bott, 1970: pl. 38, fig. 23; the dorsal fold extends to three-quarters of the length of the terminal segment in L. bagoensis , Figs. 3D, E View Fig , 6A, B View Fig ); and (4) the G1 subterminal segment is slender, the upper part of the inner margin is gently convex (versus the upper part of the inner margin is convex in L. bagoensis , Figs. 3D, E View Fig , 6A, B View Fig ; the upper part of the inner margin is slightly concave in L. crenulifera , cf. Bott, 1970: pl. 38, fig. 23).

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