Two new species of branchial parasitic isopods (Crustacea: Isopoda: Bopyridae: Pseudioninae) from hermit crabs collected in Singapore

Author(s):  
Jason D. Williams ◽  
Lauren M. Schuerlein
2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. A070121
Author(s):  
Fernando A. Ferratges ◽  
Pedro Artal ◽  
Samuel Zamora

A new genus and two new species of fossil hermit crabs (Anomura, Paguroidea) are described from the southern Pyrenean basins (Huesca, NE Spain). Parapetrochirus nov. with P. robustus n. gen., n. sp., as type species, comes from the lower Eocene (Ypresian) Roda Formation. It preserves both chelipeds exhibiting a notable heterochely, a larger left cheliped and a concavity without granulation in the inner upper portions. Eocalcinus gerardbretoni n. sp. comes from the highest levels of the Arguis Formation (Priabonian) in Yeste locality. This species is characterized by a hemispherical outline and a sinuous lower margin of the chela, which differs from the type species of the genus. The cheliped morphology of such species allows inclusion in the families Diogenidae and Calcinidae, respectively. Fossil paguroids are relatively rare in the Eocene of Spain, therefore, the description of these two new taxa increases the known diversity of this group. Parapetrochirus robustus n. gen., n. sp. inhabited siliciclastic substrates within a prodelta environment and E. gerardbretoni n. sp. was collected from the last levels of coral rudstones just below the continental influence of Yeste-Arrés Formation.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4722 (4) ◽  
pp. 301-325
Author(s):  
RAFAEL LEMAITRE

Six species of hermit crabs of the family Paguridae from the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico region, including two new species, Anisopagurus asteriscus sp. nov. and Pagurus alarius sp. nov., are documented. The two new species are described, and recognition characters summarized for the four previously known species. Reports of the latter, Nematopaguroides fagei Forest & de Saint Laurent, 1968, N. karukera Lemaitre, Felder & Poupin, 2017, Paguriscus robustus Lemaitre, Felder & Poupin, 2017, and Pylopaguridium markhami McLaughlin & Lemaitre, 2001, represent range extensions for all four species. Color photographs are included for four of the species, as well as remarks on their taxonomy and distributions. All six species included can be categorized as micro-pagurids (with shield length rarely exceeding 2.0 mm), and were collected from cryptic reef habitats in Bocas del Toro, Panama; the French Antillean island of Guadeloupe; and the Gulf of Mexico coasts of Louisiana, Yucatán, and Florida Keys. The discovery of these new or rare species supports the conclusion of recent studies that the diversity of pagurids from the Caribbean region has yet to be fully realized. 


Crustaceana ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 199-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janet Haig ◽  
Anthony J. Provenzano

Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3277 (1) ◽  
pp. 56
Author(s):  
TOMOYUKI KOMAI ◽  
JOSEPH POUPIN

Two new species of pagurid hermit crabs are described from shallow coral reefs of Mayotte, Comoro Islands, southwest-ern Indian Ocean. Cestopagurus caeruleus sp. nov., representing the fourth of the genus, is morphological similar to C.coutieri Bouvier, 1897 and C. timidus (Roux, 1830), but the new species is immediately distinguished from the latter twospecies by the proportionally longer antennular peduncles and the different armature of the dactylus of the right cheliped.Trichopagurus asper sp. nov., representing the third species of the genus, appears closer to T. macrochela Komai & Osa-wa, 2005, but the tuberculate dorsal surface of the right palm and the possession of spines on the carpus of the left cheliped readily differentiate the new species from the latter species.


Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3407 (1) ◽  
pp. 22
Author(s):  
MANUEL AYÓN-PARENTE ◽  
MICHEL E. HENDRICKX

The genus Areopaguristes Rahayu & McLaughlin, 2010 is represented in the eastern Pacific by a single species, A.mclaughlinae (Ayón-Parente & Hendrickx, 2006). Based on material recently collected in the Gulf of California, Mexico,and held in museum collections, two new species of this genus are described. Areopaguristes lemaitrei sp. nov. and A.waldoschmitti sp. nov. Both have the typical 12 gills of the genus. In addition to its color pattern, A. lemaitrei sp. nov. isdistinguished by the presence of corneous-tipped spines on palm and fingers, a broadly rounded rostrum shorter than lat-eral projections, and by the shape of the external lobe of the first pleopod. Areopaguristes waldoschmitti sp. nov. also fea-tures a distinctive color pattern, a less spinous armature of chelipeds, antennular peduncles proporcionally longer andantennal acicle shorter, a deep median cleft on the posterior margin of telson, and the distal margin of the inferior lamella of the first male pleopod is unarmed; this last character separates A. waldoschmtti sp. nov. from all its congeners.


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