Rathbunaja ursus, Ng & Forges, 2015

Ng, Peter K. L. & Forges, Bertrand Richer De, 2015, Revision of the spider crab genus Maja Lamarck, 1801 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Majoidea: Majidae), with descriptions of seven new genera and 17 new species from the Atlantic and Indo-West Pacific, Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 63, pp. 110-225 : 216

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5384590

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:40BCDD62-D35E-46D1-95A3-2CC0DF219DEE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5466833

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EA0364F5-146A-4288-929C-60D73C5D0A3B

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:EA0364F5-146A-4288-929C-60D73C5D0A3B

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Rathbunaja ursus
status

sp. nov.

Rathbunaja ursus View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs. 60 View Fig , 61G, H View Fig , 63E–H View Fig , 64E, F View Fig , 65H–K View Fig , 67A–D View Fig )

Material examined. Holotype: male (50.1 × 41.5 mm) ( NMCR, ex ZRC 2013.1275 View Materials ), Balicasag Island, Panglao, Bohol, Philippines , 200–300 m, coll. fishermen with tangle nets, 2 March 2004 . Paratypes: Philippines – 2 ovigerous females (46.8 × 36.6 mm, 45.0 × 36.0 mm) ( ZRC 2001.0594 View Materials ), Balicasag Island, Panglao , Bohol, 200–300 m, coll. fishermen with tangle nets, 28 November 2001 . — 1 male (41.6 × 32.8 mm), 1 ovigerous female (45.6 × 35.7 mm), 1 female (47.2 × 37.6 mm) ( ZRC 2013.1276 View Materials ), Balicasag Island, Panglao , Bohol, 200–300 m, coll. fishermen with tangle nets, June 2002 . — 1 female (49.4 × 38.4 mm) (NSMT-Cr 15386), Balicasag Island, Panglao , Bohol, coll. fishermen with tangle nets, via H. Komatsu & M. Takeda, February 2003 . — 1 male (47.5 × 39.5 mm) ( ZRC 2013.1277 View Materials ), Maribohoc Bay, Panglao , Bohol, coll. J. Arbasto, tangle nets, 30 May 2004 .

Diagnosis. Carapace relatively broad ( Fig. 60 View Fig ). Pseudorostral spines long, diverging ( Fig. 60 View Fig ). Median row with 2 median gastric spines; 2 cardiac spines; 2 intestinal spines ( Fig. 60 View Fig ). Basal antennal article with 2 relatively long distal spines, strongly diverging ( Fig. 61G View Fig ). Ischium of third maxilliped long ( Fig. 63E–H View Fig ). Ambulatory legs (notably merus and propodus) relatively long ( Figs. 60 View Fig , 65I–K View Fig ). Male telson appears semicircular ( Fig. 64E View Fig ). G1 very long, strongly curved, slender, tip bent inwards ( Fig. 67A–D View Fig ).

Etymology. The name “ursus” alludes to the thick tomentum covering the animal like the fur of a bear, «ursus». The name is used as a noun in apposition.

Remarks. The discovery of Rathbunaja ursus n. sp. from Balicasag, Philippines, is rather surprising especially since there was also a specimen of R. bisarmata ( Rathbun, 1916) collected from the same area. Most specimens of Rathbunaja from the Philippines actually belong to this new species. The two species are similar and are not easy to separate; In R. ursus , however, the carapace is relatively broader ( Fig. 60 View Fig versus Fig. 59A, B View Fig ), the two distal spines on the basal antennal article are more strongly diverging ( Fig. 61G View Fig versus Fig. 61A, C View Fig ), the ischium of the third maxilliped is proportionately longer ( Fig. 63E–H View Fig versus Fig. 63A, B View Fig ), the anterior thoracic sternum (sternites 1–4) is relatively longer ( Fig. 64E, F View Fig versus Fig. 64A, B View Fig ), the male telson is proportionately broader ( Fig. 64E, F View Fig versus Fig. 64A, B View Fig ), and the lateral margins of male abdominal somites 5 and 6 are more concave ( Fig. 64E, F View Fig versus Fig. 64A, B View Fig ). Most significantly, their G1 structures are completely different, with that of R. ursus much longer, with the distal part more strongly curved and slender ( Fig. 67A–D View Fig versus Fig. 66A–G View Fig ). These differences cannot be explained by size or maturity.

NMCR

New Mexico State University

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Majidae

Genus

Rathbunaja

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF