Inachoididae, , Hymenosomatoidea, and Dorippoidea, 1851

GUINOT, DANIÈLE, TAVARES, MARCOS & CASTRO, PETER, 2013, Significance of the sexual openings and supplementary structures on the phylogeny of brachyuran crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura), with new nomina for higher-ranked podotreme taxa, Zootaxa 3665 (1), pp. 1-414 : 127

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3665.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8358B363-BEE3-416D-96CA-8614E38B61D5

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BB9C75-FF97-FFEC-FF78-FED6FCC9FD2D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Inachoididae
status

 

Family Inachoididae View in CoL

The male gonopore is coxal and occupies a posteriormost location in relation to sternite 8 ( Fig. 50C, E View FIGURE 50 ). Its large opening is situated at the extremity of the coxo-sternal condyle in Stenorhynchus ( Fig. 31D View FIGURE 31 ). But, as an example of the difficulty in determining the borderline between the strictly condylar and coxal perforations, the gonopore is apparently partially condylar, partially coxal in other inachoidids such as Leurocyclus Rathbun, 1897 ( Fig. 31C View FIGURE 31 ), Paulita , Paradasygyius , Collodes Stimpson, 1860 , and Anasimus (see Modalities of penis protection: Condylar protection). The inachoidid penis is cylindrical, rather short, and ends in a small, narrow papilla. The penis is, however, rather long and lodged in a shallow groove in large adults of Leurocyclus tuberculosus (see Guinot 1984b). The trend to a coxo-sternal condition occurs in Inachoididae with multistate characters as a result of sternal modifications that protect the penis (see Coxo-sternal condition).

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