Minuca burgersi (Holthuis, 1967)

Masunari, Setuko, Martins, Salise Brandt & Anacleto, Andre Fernando Miyadi, 2020, An illustrated key to the fiddler crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda, Ocypodidae) from the Atlantic coast of Brazil, ZooKeys 943, pp. 1-20 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.943.52773

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2E2EAD47-EC1A-49FC-AA9B-857C29E283D6

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BE75529E-69B2-5CED-A6F4-0CAE0D8874F4

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Minuca burgersi (Holthuis, 1967)
status

 

Minuca burgersi (Holthuis, 1967) Figures 1B View Figure 1 , 4B View Figure 4 , 7B View Figure 7 , 8C, D View Figure 8

Recognition characters.

Carapace pentagonal moderately arched in the anteroposterior direction and dorsal surface without pile (Fig. 8C View Figure 8 ). Dorso-lateral margins well-marked and converging posteriorly; major and minor pairs of postero-lateral striae clearly visible (Fig. 8C View Figure 8 ). Front triangular and very wide making up from 36% to 41% of the front-orbital breadth (Fig. 1B View Figure 1 ). Male major claw manus covered by small tubercles and provided with a strong groove (sometimes filled with dirt) on dorsal surface following the dorsal margin; fingers thick and slightly flattened; dactyl little longer than manus; pollex and dactyl curved forming a large gap (Fig. 8D View Figure 8 ). First three ambulatory legs with pile (= woolly pubescence) limited to dorsal surface of carpus and manus (Fig. 4B View Figure 4 , setae), absent in ventral margin; all ambulatory legs with narrow merus and dorsal margin almost strait; last pair of ambulatory legs without piles and merus less than two 1.5 times wider than respective carpus in its maximum breadth (Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ). Male abdominal segments never fused. Medium-sized species and one of the smallest in the genus; males’ carapace width (CW) up to 19.0 mm in a population from Fortaleza, CE, Brazil ( Crane 1975).

Biological notes.

The species reproduces year-round in the population of Ubatuba, southeastern Brazil ( Benetti et al. 2007). It occurs in oligohaline and mesohaline areas and on sandy substrate although in low densities ( Masunari 2006; Thurman et al. 2013).

Remarks.

The species is morphologically close to its congeners M. rapax and M. mordax ; the distinguishing characters among these species are treated in the subsequent items.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Ocypodidae

Genus

Minuca