Nasutoplax rostrata (Haswell, 1881) Haswell, 1881

Poore, Gary C. B., Guinot, Danièle, Komai, Tomoyuki & Naruse, Tohru, 2016, Reappraisal of species attributed to Halicarcinus White, 1846 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Hymenosomatidae) with diagnosis of four new genera and one new species from New Ireland, Papua New Guinea, Zootaxa 4093 (4), pp. 480-514 : 507

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4093.4.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5E0BF4DB-04EA-4A9A-BF47-901DF84FFD39

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/753D87B8-051D-FD5F-FF22-FBE8FDE9F8A2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nasutoplax rostrata (Haswell, 1881)
status

comb. nov.

Nasutoplax rostrata (Haswell, 1881) View in CoL n. comb.

( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 )

Hymenosoma rostratum Haswell, 1881: 550 View in CoL . — Haswell 1882: 116. — Baker 1906: 114, pl. 3 fig. 2. — Kemp 1917: 247. Halicarcinus View in CoL rostratus— Hale 1927: 117–118, fig. 114. — Griffin & Yaldwyn 1971: 46. — Griffin 1972: 65. — Lucas 1972: 475–

482, figs 3H, 5A–D (larva). — Lucas 1980: 180–181, figs 3F, 6L, 7F, 10H. — Poore 2004: 394, fig. 120d. Rhynchoplax rostrata— Tesch 1918: 17, 18.

Neorhynchoplax rostrata— Takeda & Miyake 1971a: 160.

Material examined. Australia. Victoria, Geelong, Wheat and Rippleside piers, 38°07'S, 144°22'E, NMV J65981 View Materials (1 male, cl 5.0 mm), NMV J64928 View Materials (2 ovigerous females, 4.2 mm)—selected from many hundreds of specimens in NMV collections.

Diagnosis. As for genus.

Distribution. Southern Australia, soft sediments, 2–130 m (Poore 2004).

Remarks. Baker’s (1906) and Hale’s (1927) descriptions and figures characterise the species well, showing the rostrum in dorsal view, and carinate propodus and carpus of the male cheliped. Neither author noted the unique lateral profile of the rostrum (fig. 11b, k). The median rostral lobe is laterally flattened, distally upturned and with a secondary lower apex, more prominent in males than in females. The rostrum is shorter in females than in males. Lucas (1980) did not remark on the unusual spinulose lobe near the apex of gonopod 1 that sets the species apart from all other hymenosomatids. The cornea is curved upwards from the eyestalk and more erect than in other taxa. Nasutoplax rostrata is very common in southern Australian muddy environments. Ovigerous females carry about 50 embryos, each 0.3 mm diameter.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Hymenosomatidae

Genus

Nasutoplax

Loc

Nasutoplax rostrata (Haswell, 1881)

Poore, Gary C. B., Guinot, Danièle, Komai, Tomoyuki & Naruse, Tohru 2016
2016
Loc

Hymenosoma rostratum

Haswell 1881: 550
1881
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