Tunicotheres

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Tunicotheres
FMIB 43432 Pinnotheres moseri.jpeg
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Suborder: Pleocyemata
Infraorder: Brachyura
Family: Pinnotheridae
Subfamily: Pinnotherinae
Genus: Tunicotheres
E. Campos, 1996 [1]
Species:
T. moseri
Binomial name
Tunicotheres moseri
(Rathbun, 1918) [2]
Synonyms [2]
  • Pinnotheres moseri Rathbun, 1918

Tunicotheres is a monotypic genus of crabs in the family Pinnotheridae, and Tunicotheres moseri is the only species in the genus. This crab lives commensally in the atrial chamber of a small ascidian (sea squirt). [3] It is found in the tropical western Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. [2]

Contents

Taxonomy

In Mary J. Rathbun's original description of this species, she placed it in the then broadly defined Pinnotheres . [4] It remained there for most of the 20th century until Ernesto Campos, while revising the Pinnotheridae, noted that most species with a 2-segmented palp on the third maxilliped were anomalous in Pinnotheres. This led to the segregation of multiple genera, of which Tunicotheres, defined in 1996, was one. [5]

Description

Members of this family are tiny, soft-bodied crabs commonly known as pea crabs. Males of this species have carapace widths of up to 6 mm (0.24 in) and females of up to 13 mm (0.5 in). [6]

Ecology

This crab has been found as an endosymbiont of several species of host tunicate including Styela plicata , Phallusia nigra , Molgula occidentalis and Polycarpa spongiabilis . [7] Usually, a single crab occupies the atrial chamber of a single tunicate. Questing males will seek to enter tunicates that are occupied by unberried females (those not brooding eggs), but will avoid those containing males, or females carrying eggs and developing larvae. [8] Tunicotheres moseri has a reduced developmental cycle, with the eggs and all larval stages being retained in the brood pouch of the female. The developing young finally leave the abdominal pouch and the host tunicate as first instar juveniles. [3]

The crabs are found in solitary residence in their tunicate host far more often than would be expected statistically. This seems to be due to territoriality, but does not occur because of aggression between a resident and an invading crab; the resident crab stations itself close to the atrial siphon and in most cases the intruder is deterred from attempting to enter. Additionally, the crabs seem to use an agonistic avoidance strategy and likely detect, by chemical or tactile cues, which tunicates are already occupied, moving on promptly from occupied hosts to find unoccupied ones. [7]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Crab</span> Crustacean

Crabs are decapod crustaceans of the infraorder Brachyura, which typically have a very short projecting tail-like abdomen, usually hidden entirely under the thorax. They live in all the world's oceans, in freshwater, and on land, are generally covered with a thick exoskeleton, and have a single pair of pincers on each arm. They first appeared during the Jurassic period, around 200 million years ago.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Zealand pea crab</span> Species of crab

The New Zealand pea crab, is a species of small, parasitic crab that lives most commonly inside New Zealand green-lipped mussels. Adult females are about the size and shape of a pea, while adult males are smaller and flatter. Adult New Zealand pea crabs are completely reliant on their host mussel for shelter and food, which it steals from the mussel's gills. The New Zealand pea crab is found throughout New Zealand and can infect up to 70% of natural populations. These crabs are of concern to green-lipped mussel aquaculture because they reduce the size and growth of mussels, although infected mussels can be harvested and consumed.

<i>Libinia emarginata</i> Species of crustacean

Libinia emarginata, the portly spider crab, common spider crab or nine-spined spider crab, is a species of stenohaline crab that lives on the Atlantic coast of North America.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Decapod anatomy</span> Entire structure of a decapod crustacean

The decapod is made up of 20 body segments grouped into two main body parts: the cephalothorax and the pleon (abdomen). Each segment may possess one pair of appendages, although in various groups these may be reduced or missing. They are, from head to tail:

<i>Pinnotheres</i> Genus of crabs

Pinnotheres is a genus of crabs, including the pea crab. Many species formerly in Pinnotheres have been placed in new genera, such as Zaops ostreus, the oyster crab and Nepinnotheres novaezelandiae, the New Zealand pea crab. The species currently recognised in the genus Pinnotheres are:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pinnotheridae</span> Family of crabs

Pinnotheridae is a family of tiny soft-bodied crabs that live commensally in the mantles of certain bivalve molluscs and the occasional large gastropod mollusc species in genera such as Strombus and Haliotis. Tunicotheres moseri is commensal with a tunicate. The earliest fossils attributable to the Pinnotheridae date from the Danian.

<i>Petrolisthes elongatus</i> Species of crustacean

Petrolisthes elongatus, known as the New Zealand half crab, elongated porcelain crab, blue half crab, blue false crab or simply as the half crab or false crab, is a species of porcelain crab native to New Zealand.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oyster crab</span> Species of crab

The oyster crab is a small, whitish or translucent crab in the family Pinnotheridae.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Latreilliidae</span> Family of crabs

Latreilliidae is a small family of crabs. They are relatively small, long-legged crabs found on soft bottoms at depths of up 700 metres (2,300 ft) in mostly tropical and subtemperate waters around the world. Their carapace is very small and doesn’t cover the bases of their legs, which protrude from the cephalothorax in a spider-like manner. The family and its type genus are named after Pierre André Latreille. The oldest known fossils from the Latreillidae have been dated to the middle of the Cretaceous period. It comprises seven extant species.

<i>Pinnixa faba</i> Species of crab

Pinnixa faba, known as the pea crab, mantle pea crab or large pea crab, is a pea crab which lives harmlessly within a large edible clam. This species is a symbiont of Tresus capax and Tresus nuttallii in its mature stage.

<i>Gemmotheres</i> Genus of crabs

Gemmotheres also known as the jewel-box pea crab, is a monotypic genus of pea crab, which was erected in 1996 to hold the species Gemmotheres chamae. The species lives as a commensal of the corrugate jewelbox, Chama congregata.

<i>Minuca pugnax</i> Species of crab

Minuca pugnax, commonly known as the Atlantic marsh fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab that lives on north-western shores of the Atlantic Ocean.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hexapodidae</span> Family of crabs

Hexapodidae is a family of crabs, the only family in the superfamily Hexapodoidea. It has traditionally been treated as a subfamily of the family Goneplacidae, and was originally described as a subfamily of Pinnotheridae. Its members can be distinguished from all other true crabs by the reduction of the thorax, such that only seven sternites are exposed, and only four pairs of pereiopods are present. Not counting the enlarged pair of claws, this leaves only six walking legs, from which the type genus Hexapus, and therefore the whole family, takes its name. Some anomuran "crabs", such as porcelain crabs and king crabs also have only four visible pairs of legs. With the exception of Stevea williamsi, from Mexico, all the extant members are found either in the Indo-Pacific oceans, or around the coast of Africa.

<i>Austruca perplexa</i> Species of crab

Austruca perplexa is a species of fiddler crab. It is found from the Ryukyu Islands, Japan to India, throughout the Malay Archipelago, along eastern Australian coasts from Queensland to New South Wales, and in various Pacific islands, including Fiji, Tonga and Vanuatu.

Tumidotheres maculatus is a species of crab that lives commensally or parasitically in the mantle cavity of molluscs. It is found along much of the western Atlantic Ocean and was first described by Thomas Say in 1818.

<i>Phallusia nigra</i> Species of sea squirt

Phallusia nigra is a solitary marine tunicate of the ascidian class found in tropical seas around the world. It usually lives in shallow waters, attached to any hard substrate.

Calyptraeotheres garthi is a species of pea crab in the family Pinnotheridae. It is found in the southwestern Atlantic Ocean and is a parasitic castrator of the slipper limpet Crepidula cachimilla.

<i>Leptuca panacea</i> Species of crab

Leptuca panacea, commonly known as the Gulf sand fiddler crab or the Panacea sand fiddler, is a species of fiddler crab native to coastal habitats along the Gulf of Mexico from northwestern Florida to Mexico.

Leptuca leptodactyla, commonly known as the thin-fingered fiddler crab or the western Atlantic fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to the western Atlantic coast of the Americas.

References

  1. Davie, Peter (2011). "Tunicotheres E. Campos, 1996". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species . Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 Davie, Peter (2010). "Tunicotheres moseri (Rathbun, 1918)". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species . Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  3. 1 2 Baeza, JA; Ocampo, EH & Luppi, TA (2018). "The life cycle of symbiotic crustaceans: a primer". In Wellborn, Gary A. & Thiel, Martin (eds.). Life Histories. The Natural History of the Crustacea. Vol. 5. Oxford University Press. p. 381. ISBN   978-0-19-062027-1.
  4. Rathbun, Mary J. (1918). The grapsoid crabs of America. Bulletin of the United States National Museum. Vol. 97. Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office. p. 94. doi: 10.5479/si.03629236.97.i . BHL page 7637301.
  5. Campos, Ernesto (1996). "Partial revision of pinnotherid crab genera with a two-segmented palp on the third maxilliped (Decapoda: Brachyura)". Journal of Crustacean Biology. 16 (3): 556–563. doi: 10.1163/193724096X00595 .
  6. Lopez Greco, L.S.; Bolanos, J.; Rodriguez, Marcelo & Hernandez, G. (2001). "Survival and molting of the pea crab larvae Tunicotheres moseri Rathbun 1918 (Brachyura, Pinnotheridae) exposed to copper". Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology. 40 (4): 505–510. doi:10.1007/s002440010203. PMID   11525493. S2CID   23983305.
  7. 1 2 Ambrosio, Louis J.; Baeza, J. Antonio & Chen, Chaolun Allen (2016). "Territoriality and conflict avoidance explain asociality (solitariness) of the endosymbiotic pea crab Tunicotheres moseri". PLOS ONE. 11 (2): e0148285. Bibcode:2016PLoSO..1148285A. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0148285 . PMC   4766240 . PMID   26910474.
  8. Fransen, Charles (2018). Studies on Decapoda and Copepoda in Memory of Michael Türkay. Brill. p. 68. ISBN   978-90-04-36643-5.