Camatopsis leptomerus Ng and Castro, 2016

Arzivian, Arteen, Alrubaie, Ahmad, Yang, Jessica, Lin, Huiyu, Zhang, Eva & Leong, Rupert, 2022, Crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Seas of East and Southeast Asia Collected by the RV Hakuhō Maru (KH- 72 - 1 Cruise) 4. South China Sea, Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science. Series A, Zoology 48 (4), pp. 147-191 : 176

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.50826/bnmnszool.48.4_147

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12760195

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F30F95F-FFE3-902F-FF36-FD50FDA65FCE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Camatopsis leptomerus Ng and Castro, 2016
status

 

Camatopsis leptomerus Ng and Castro, 2016 View in CoL

( Fig. 14G–H View Fig )

Material examined. RV Hakuhō Maru KH-72-1 Cruise, sta. 42, 1 8 (CB 5.5×CL 4.8 mm), NSMT-Cr 30941.

Remarks. The genus Camatopsis was revised by Ng and Castro (2016) who referred the forma A and B of the Siboga specimens defined by Tesch (1918) to one known species C. rubida , and three new species C. minor , C. leptomeru s and Microtopsis teschi , and furthermore, amended the records of C. rubida from Japan and Taiwan ( Yokoya, 1933; Sakai, 1939, 1965, 1976; Takeda, 1973b; Fang, 1991; Hsueh and Huang, 2002; Komai et al., 2012) to those of a new species C. thula . Camatopsis thula is most characteristic in having the shortest and stoutest ambulatory meri among its congeners. The specimen at hand ( Fig. 14G–H View Fig ) is female, so that the Gl is not available for definite identification, but the ambulatory legs are slenderer than those of congeners, with the overall appearance agreeing well with the photographs of C. leptomerus given by Ng and Castro (2016) who examined numerous specimens from many localities.

Distribution. The type locality is the Bohol Sea in the Philippines, 627–645 m in depth, and the other localities recorded by Ng and Castro (2016) are in Taiwan (310–346 m), the Philippines (10–1,260 m), Malaysia, Indonesia (216 m), Papua New Guinea (80–447 m), Vanuatu (83– 394 m), and New Caledonia (200–700 m).

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