Eryma lerasi ( Étallon, 1861 )

Devillez, Julien & Charbonnier, Sylvain, 2021, Review of the Late Jurassic erymoid lobsters (Crustacea: Decapoda), Geodiversitas 43 (2), pp. 25-73 : 37-39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/geodiversitas2021v43a2

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6EF0DFAC-609D-407D-B4CC-CB985C3295FC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4498598

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/29758789-0776-FFF3-10ED-011CFB6CADB5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eryma lerasi ( Étallon, 1861 )
status

 

Eryma lerasi ( Étallon, 1861)

( Fig. 6 View fig )

Macrourites lerasi Étallon, 1861: 170 , pl. 1, fig. 6.

Eryma dutertrei Sauvage, 1891: 91 , pl. 4, figs 7-12. — Van Straelen 1925: 270, fig. 126. — Moret 1946: 51, fig. 2. — Secrétan 1964: 69. — Förster 1966: 117, fig. 20, pl. 16, figs 6-7. — Carriol 1991: 223. — Feldmann & Titus 2006: 63. — Schweitzer et al. 2010: 23. n. syn.

Eryma gracilimana Lahusen, 1894: 320 , pl. 1, fig. 9. — Van Straelen 1925: 272. — Glaessner 1929: 155. — Gerasimov 1955: 25, pl. 8, fig. 8. — Birshtein 1956: 75. — Förster 1966: 122. — Gerasimov et al. 1995: 10, 30. — Ilyin 2000: 152, 154, table 1. — Feldmann & Titus 2006: 63. n. syn.

Eryma portlandica Woods, 1930: 79 , pl. 22, figs 2-4. — Secrétan 1964: 69. n. syn.

Eryma lerasi – Van Straelen 1925: 276. — Glaessner 1929: 155. — Schweitzer et al. 2010: 24.

Clytia dutertrei – Glaessner 1929:115.

Eryma bedelta (pars.) – Förster 1966: 99.

Eryma gracilimanum – Schweitzer et al. 2010: 24.

TYPE MATERIAL. — Holotype lost ( Förster 1966).

TYPE LOCALITY. — Haut-Rhin departement, Alsace-Lorraine, France.

TYPE AGE. — Not precised in original publication. However, considering the specimens that could be assigned to E. lerasi (see discussion below), all from Late Jurassic deposits, and the absence of sediments corresponding to the end of the Kimmeridgian-Tithonian in Haut-Rhin department ( Skrzypek et al. 2008), it is reasonable to consider that the lost holotype was probably found in Late Jurassic deposits (Oxfordian-Kimmeridgian).

DESCRIPTION

Carapace

Sub-cylindrical carapace; very narrow post-orbital area; deep and wide cervical groove, curved dorsally, subvertical ventrally, joined to dorsal margin and to antennal groove; deep antennal groove; short, deep gastro-orbital groove, originating as a median inflexion of cervical groove; deep postcervical groove, slightly curved, joined to dorsal margin and to branchiocardiac groove; deep and narrow branchiocardiac groove, subparallel to postcervial groove, inflected towards its junction to hepatic groove, strongly inclined, joined to dorsal margin and to hepatic groove; deep and narrow hepatic groove, concavo-convex, joined to cervical groove; flat ω and χ areas; deep and wide inferior groove.

Thoracic appendages

Chelate P1; P1 propodus subrectangular, wide, strongly compressed dorso-ventrally; narrow dactylar bulge, slightly inflated, posteriorly delimited by a groove; thin, elongated fingers, equal in length, almost straight or slightly curved inward; occlusal margins with short and widely spaced conical teeth; P1 carpus short, subtriangular; elongated P1 merus.

Ornamentation

Carapace with a heterogeneous ornamentation; carapace covered by small rounded tubercles preceded by crescentshaped depressions, depressions wider and deeper in branchial region; P1 propodus, fingers and carpus densely covered by small tubercles preceded by shallow depressions.

DISCUSSION

Macrourites lerasi Étallon, 1861 was described on a P1 chela currently lost. It was assigned to Eryma by Van Straelen (1925). This assignation is supported by the subrectangular propodus, compressed dorso-ventrally, with elongated thin fingers curved inward, and a narrow dactylar bulge. Later, Förster (1966) integrated Eryma lerasi into the synonymy of Eryma bedeltum (Quenstedt, 1857) . This synonymy is not maintained here because the P1 fingers of E. lerasi are thinner and its P1 propodus is clearly subrectangular and not trapezoidal.

The shape of the propodus, its fine and dense ornamentation, its thin fingers, their slight curvature and the narrow dactylar bulge are morphological features that E. lerasi shares with Eryma portlandica Woods, 1930 (Tithonian, United Kingdom; Fig. 6 View fig G-J). So, E. portlandica is here considered as a junior synonym of E. lerasi . The illustration of Eryma gracilimanum Lahusen, 1894 (Tithonian, Russia; Fig. 6B View fig ), an isolated P1 chela, exhibits the same morphological features. So, this species is also considered here as a junior synonym of E. lerasi . Contary to E. lerasi and E. gracilimanum , the type material of E. portlandica includes carapaces. Eryma dutertrei Sauvage, 1891 (Kimmeridgian, France; Fig. 6 View fig C-E) and the carapace identified as Eryma cf. boloniensis Sauvage, 1891 (Kimmeridgian, United Kingdom; Fig. 6K, L View fig ) by Förster (1966) share similar characteristics: the cervical groove is strongly inflected at carapace mid-height and curved dorsally, the junction between the postcervical and branchiocardiac grooves is low on the carapace, the ornamentation is dense, made of tubercles separated by well-marked depressions. So, we also add E. dutertrei and the specimen of E. cf. boloniensis of Förster (1966) within the synonymy of E. lerasi .

The carapace groove pattern of E. lerasi exhibits some characteristics distincts from other species of the genus. Indeed, the junction between the postcervical and branchiocardiac grooves is clearly lower than in E. georgeii , E. jungostrix , E. mandelslohi , E. modestiforme , E. ventrosum , and E. westphali . There is no ventral extension of the postcervical groove in E. lerasi contrary to E. georgeii , E. jungostrix , E. mandelslohi , E. modestiforme , E. ventrosum , and E. westphali . The morphology of the P1 chelae of E. lerasi are thinner than that of E. georgeii , E. major , E. veltheimii , and E. westphali . Finally, the ornamentation of E. lerasi , made of tubercles and depressions, differs from that of E. jungostrix , E. major , E. mandelslohi , and E. veltheimii , covered only by tubercles or depressions.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

SuperFamily

Erymoidea

Family

Erymidae

Genus

Eryma

Loc

Eryma lerasi ( Étallon, 1861 )

Devillez, Julien & Charbonnier, Sylvain 2021
2021
Loc

Eryma gracilimanum

SCHWEITZER C. E. & FELDMANN R. M. & GARASSINO A. & KARASAWA H. & SCHWEIGERT G. 2010: 24
2010
Loc

Eryma bedelta

FORSTER R. 1966: 99
1966
Loc

Eryma portlandica

SECRETAN S. 1964: 69
1964
Loc

Eryma lerasi

SCHWEITZER C. E. & FELDMANN R. M. & GARASSINO A. & KARASAWA H. & SCHWEIGERT G. 2010: 24
GLAESSNER M. F. 1929: 155
VAN STRAELEN V. 1925: 276
1925
Loc

Eryma gracilimana

FELDMANN R. M. & TITUS A. L. 2006: 63
ILYIN I. V. 2000: 152
GERASIMOV P. A. & MITTA V. V. & KOCHANOVA M. D. 1995: 10
FORSTER R. 1966: 122
BIRSHTEIN J. A. 1956: 75
GERASIMOV P. A. 1955: 25
GLAESSNER M. F. 1929: 155
VAN STRAELEN V. 1925: 272
LAHUSEN J. 1894: 320
1894
Loc

Eryma dutertrei

SCHWEITZER C. E. & FELDMANN R. M. & GARASSINO A. & KARASAWA H. & SCHWEIGERT G. 2010: 23
FELDMANN R. M. & TITUS A. L. 2006: 63
CARRIOL R. - P. 1991: 223
FORSTER R. 1966: 117
SECRETAN S. 1964: 69
MORET L. 1946: 51
VAN STRAELEN V. 1925: 270
SAUVAGE H. E. 1891: 91
1891
Loc

Macrourites lerasi Étallon, 1861: 170

ETALLON A. 1861: 170
1861
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF