Leptalpheus cf. forceps Williams, 1965

Anker, Arthur, 2011, Six new species and three new records of infaunal alpheid shrimps from the genera Leptalpheus Williams, 1965 and Fenneralpheus Felder & Manning, 1986 (Crustacea, Decapoda), Zootaxa 3041, pp. 1-38 : 6-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.278802

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4893555

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BB87D5-FF91-FF8E-FF7F-2442FD5D9AFC

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leptalpheus cf. forceps Williams, 1965
status

 

Leptalpheus cf. forceps Williams, 1965 View in CoL

Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3. A , B

Leptalpheus forceps Williams 1965: 194 View in CoL , figs. 1, 2; Dawson 1967: 224; Saloman 1971: 67; Chace 1972: 77; (?) Christoffersen 1980: 135; Williams 1984: 101, fig. 69; Abele & Kim 1986: 194, 228-229, figs. a, b; Felder & Rodrigues 1993: 366; (?) Christoffersen 1998: 361.

Leptalpheus cf. forceps View in CoL — Anker 2008: 788 View Cited Treatment , figs. 4, 5, 6A, B.

Material examined. 3 ov. females (cl 3.4–3.8 mm), RMNH D54558, Panama, Caribbean coast, Bocas del Toro, Isla Bastimentos, near main village, sand flat near mangroves, yabby pump, 0–0.2 m, in burrows of Lepidophthalmus sp., leg. A. Anker, 0 3.05.2007 [fcn 07-164B]; 1 male (cl 4.8 mm), MNHN-IU-2011-5238, same collection data [fcn 07-165B]; 1 ov. female (cl 3.9 mm), OUMNH.ZC. 2011-06-022, Panama, Caribbean coast, Bocas del Toro, Isla Bastimentos, near main village, sand flat near mangroves, yabby pump, 0–0.2 m, in burrows of Lepidophthalmus sp., leg. A. Anker, J.A. Vera Caripe, J.A. Baeza, 18.11.2006 [fcn 06-597]; 1 ov. female (cl not measured), UP, same collection data [fcn 06-598].

Description. See Williams (1965) and Anker (2008).

Size. The Panamanian specimens range from 3.4 mm to 4.8 mm cl, thus being smaller than the type specimens from North Carolina (cl 5.2 mm and 7.8 mm) and the specimens from Costa Rica (cl 6.1–8.2 mm) reported by Anker (2008); the largest ovigerous female from Bocas del Toro has a cl of 3.9 mm.

Colour in life. Semitransparent with reddish or purplish chromatophores arranged in diffuse transverse bands on the abdomen; posterior abdominal somites with a greenish tinge; antennular and antennal peduncles and tail fan with some reddish or greenish chromatophores; chelipeds with some chromatophores on merus and carpus, chelae mostly colourless, hyaline-white; walking legs semitransparent; eggs bright green ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3. A , B; see also colour photographs in Anker 2008).

Type locality. USA, North Carolina, Newport River.

Distribution. Western Atlantic: from North Carolina to the northern Gulf of Mexico ( Williams 1965; Dawson 1967; Saloman 1971), Costa Rica, as L. cf. forceps ( Anker 2008) , Panama, as L. cf. forceps (present study).

Ecology. In Bocas del Toro, all specimens were collected from burrows of Lepidophthalmus cf. sinuensis Lemaitre & Rodrigues, 1991 ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3. A C), on a very shallow sand flat, adjacent to a small mangrove creek and seagrass beds.

Remarks. The Panamanian specimens, although significantly smaller than the North Carolina and Costa Rican specimens, are clearly adults, as evidenced by the presence of numerous ovigerous females ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3. A B). Otherwise, they are similar to the Costa Rican specimens reported as L. cf. forceps by Anker (2008). The proportions of the antennular peduncles seem to be slightly different between L. forceps from North Carolina and L. cf. forceps from Costa Rica and Panama (cf. Williams 1965, fig. 1B; Anker 2008, fig. 4A). In addition, some Costa Rican male specimens had a long caudal appendix on the uropodal endopod ( Anker 2008, fig. 4J); such an appendix was not observed in the Panamanian specimens and was also lacking in specimens of L. forceps collected in the Indian River lagoon in Florida (A. Anker, pers. obs.). A more comprehensive morphological and molecular assessment of L. forceps populations throughout the known range is needed to determine if L. forceps is a single species, variable both morphologically ( Anker 2008) and ecologically (being associated with Upogebia and several species of Lepidophthalmus ), or a complex of several cryptic species.

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Alpheidae

Genus

Leptalpheus

Loc

Leptalpheus cf. forceps Williams, 1965

Anker, Arthur 2011
2011
Loc

Leptalpheus cf. forceps

Anker 2008: 788
2008
Loc

Leptalpheus forceps

Christoffersen 1998: 361
Felder 1993: 366
Abele 1986: 194
Williams 1984: 101
Christoffersen 1980: 135
Chace 1972: 77
Saloman 1971: 67
Dawson 1967: 224
Williams 1965: 194
1965
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