Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-wpx69 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-22T04:47:01.996Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Homolidae de Haan, 1839 and Homolodromiidae Alcock, 1900 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura) from the Pacific Northwest of North America and a reassessment of their fossil records

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Carrie E. Schweitzer
Affiliation:
1Department of Geology, Kent State University Stark Campus, 6000 Frank Ave. NW, Canton, Ohio 44720,
Torrey G. Nyborg
Affiliation:
2Department of Natural Sciences, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California 92350,
R. M. Feldmann
Affiliation:
3Department of Geology, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio 44242,
Richard L. M. Ross
Affiliation:
41835 Brant Place, Courtenay, British Columbia V9N 8Y8 Canada,

Abstract

New material collected from Cretaceous and Tertiary rocks of the Pacific Northwest of North America has prompted a reevaluation of the fossil record of the Homolidae de Haan, 1839 and the Homolodromiidae Alcock, 1900. The fossil records of the homolid genera Homola Leach, 1815; Homolopsis Bell, 1863; and Hoplitocarcinus Beurlen, 1928 are restricted, and Latheticocarcinus Bishop, 1988, which is synonymous with Eohomola Collins and Rasmussen, 1992 and Metahomola Collins and Rasmussen, 1992, is reinstated as a distinctive genus. Thirteen new combinations resulted from reinstatement of Latheticocarcinus: L. adelphinus (Collins and Rasmussen, 1992), L. affinis (Jakobsen and Collins, 1997), L. atlanticus (Roberts, 1962), L. brevis (Collins, Kanie, and Karasawa, 1992), L brightoni (Wright and Collins, 1972), L. centurialis (Bishop, 1992), L. declinata (Collins, Fraaye, and Jagt, 1995), L. dispar (Roberts, 1962), L. pikeae (Bishop and Brannen, 1992), L. punctatus (Rathbun, 1917), L. schlueteri (Beurlen, 1928), L. shapiroi Bishop, 1988, L. spiniga (Jakobsen and Collins, 1997), and L. transiens (Segerberg, 1900). A new species, Latheticocarcinus ludvigseni, is described from Cretaceous rocks of British Columbia. The first fossil occurrence of the extant homolid genus Paromolopsis, P. piersoni new species, is recorded from Miocene rocks of Oregon. Paromola pritchardi Jenkins, 1977 is formally transferred to Dagnaudus Guinot and Richer de Forges (1995) as suggested by Guinot and Richer de Forges (1995). The extinct family Prosopidae von Meyer, 1860 is referred to the Homolodromioidea Alcock, 1900, following previous work. Palehomola gorrelli Rathbun, 1926 is transferred from the Homolidae to the Homolodromiidae, and the new genus Rhinodromia is erected to contain Homolopsis richardsoni Woodward, 1896, from Cretaceous rocks of British Columbia. A new terminology is suggested for describing the rostral area in homolodromiids, in an attempt to alleviate considerable confusion over that issue. The morphologic similarity of fossil and extant members in both the Homolidae and the Homolodromiidae suggest that these two brachyuran families are evolutionarily conservative, much as the lobsters are. In addition, the similar paleobiogeographic and evolutionary patterns seen in the two families suggests that either they are closely related or that brachyuran families exhibited similar evolutionary and dispersal trends early in their history.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alcock, A. 1899. An account of the Deep-sea Brachyura collected by the Royal Indian Marine Survey Ship “Investigator.” Calcutta, 85 p.Google Scholar
Alcock, A. 1900. Materials for a carcinological fauna of India, 5: The Brachyura Primigenia or Dromiacea. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 68(II:3):123169.Google Scholar
Alcock, A. 1901. Catalogue of the Indian Decapod Crustacea in the collection of the Indian Museum. Part I. Brachyura. Fasc. I. Introduction and Dromides or Dromiacea (Brachyura Primigenia). Calcutta, I–IX:80 p.Google Scholar
Báez, R.P. and Martin, J. W. 1989. Crabs of the family Homolodromiidae, I. Description of the male of Homolodromia robertsi Garth, 1973, based on specimens from deep waters off the coast of Chile. Journal of Crustacean Biology, 9:492500.Google Scholar
Bell, T. 1863. A monograph of the fossil malacostracous Crustacea of Great Britain, Pt. II, Crustacea of the Gault and Greensand. Palaeontographical Society Monograph, London, 40 p.Google Scholar
Beurlen, K. 1928. Die fossilen Dromiaceen und ihre Stammesgeschichte. Paläontologische Zeitschrift (Berlin), 10:144183.Google Scholar
Bishop, G. A. 1982. Homolopsis mendryki: a new fossil crab (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Late Cretaceous Dakoticancer assemblage, Pierre Shale (Maastrichtian) of South Dakota. Journal of Paleontology, 56:221225.Google Scholar
Bishop, G. A. 1983. Two new species of crabs, Notopocorystes (Eucorystes) eichhorni and Zygastrocarcinus griesi (Decapoda: Brachyura) from the Bearpaw Shale (Campanian) of north-central Montana. Journal of Paleontology, 57:900910.Google Scholar
Bishop, G. A. 1988. New fossil crabs, Plagiophthalmus izetti, Latheticocarcinus shapiroi, and Sagittiformosus carabus (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Western Interior Cretaceous, U. S. A. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 101:375381.Google Scholar
Bishop, G. A. 1992. Two new crabs, Homolopsis williamsi and Homolopsis centurialis (Crustacea: Decapoda), from the Western Interior Cretaceous of the United States. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 105:5566.Google Scholar
Bishop, G. A., and Brannen, N. A. 1992. Homolopsis pikeae new species (Decapoda), a crab from the Cretaceous of Texas. Journal of Crustacean Biology, 12:317323.Google Scholar
Blow, W. C., and Manning, R. B. 1996. Preliminary descriptions of 25 new decapod crustaceans from the Middle Eocene of the Carolinas, U. S. A. Tulane Studies in Geology and Paleontology, 29:125.Google Scholar
Bouvier, E. L. 1896. Sur l'origine homarienne des Crabes: étude comparative des Dromiacés. Bulletin de la Société Philomatique de Paris, series 8(2) (1895–1896):34110.Google Scholar
Collins, J. S. H. 1997. Fossil Homolidae (Crustacea; Decapoda). Bulletin of the Mizunami Fossil Museum, 24:5171.Google Scholar
Collins, J. S. H., and Rasmussen, H. W. 1992. Upper Cretaceous-Lower Tertiary decapod crustaceans from West Greenland. Bulletin Gr⊘nlands Geologiske Unders⊘gelse, 162, 46 p.Google Scholar
Collins, J. S. H., Fraaye, R. H. B., and Jagt, J. W. M. 1995. Late Cretaceous anomurans and brachyurans from the Maastrichtian type area. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 40:165210.Google Scholar
Collins, J. S. H., Fraaye, R. H. B., and Jagt, J. W. M. 2000. First record of the homolid crab Hoplitocarcinus gibbosus (Schlüter, 1879) from the Lower Campanian of Belgium. Bulletin de l'Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Sciences de la Terre, 70:121127.Google Scholar
Collins, J. S. H., Kanie, Y., and Karasawa, H. 1993. Late Cretaceous crabs from Japan. Transactions and Proceedings of the Palaeontological Society of Japan, n. s., 172:292310.Google Scholar
Crame, J. A. 1993. Bipolar molluscs and their evolutionary significance. Journal of Biogeography, 6:3760.Google Scholar
Crame, J. A. 1996. Evolution of high-latitude molluscan faunas, p. 119131. In Taylor, J. (ed.), Origin and Evolutionary Radiation of the Mollusca. The Malacological Society of London. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Dana, J. D. 1852. Crustacea, p. 390400. In U.S. Exploring Expedition During the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842, Under the Command of Charles Wilkes, U.S.N., Volume 13. C. Sherman, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Fabricius, J. C. 1793. Entomologia Systematica emendata et aucta secundum classes, pridines genera, species adjectis synonimis, locis, observationibus, descriptionibus, 2, viii+519 p. Hafniae.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feldmann, R. M. 1991. The genus Lyreidus de Haan, 1839 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura, Raninidae): systematics and biogeography. Journal of Paleontology, 66:934957.Google Scholar
Feldmann, R. M., and Wilson, M. 1988. Eocene decapod crustaceans from Antarctica, p. 465488. In Feldmann, R. M. and Woodburne, M. O. (eds.), Geology and Paleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Geological Society of America Memoir 169, 566 p. + maps.Google Scholar
Feldmann, R. M., and Zinsmeister, W. J. 1984. New fossil crabs (Decapoda: Brachyura) from the La Meseta Formation (Eocene) of Antarctica: paleogeographic and biogeographic implications. Journal of Paleontology, 58:10461061.Google Scholar
Feldmann, R. M., Tshudy, D. M., and Thomsen, M. R. A. 1993. Late Cretaceous and Paleocene decapod crustaceans from James Ross Basin, Antarctic Peninsula. The Paleontological Society Memoir Series (Supplement to Journal of Paleontology, 67) Memoir 28, 41 p.Google Scholar
Feldmann, R. M., Tucker, A. B., and Berglund, R. E. 1991. Paleobathymetry of decapod crustaceans, Washington. National Geographic Research and Exploration, 7:352363.Google Scholar
Förster, R. 1986. Der erste Nachweis eines brachyuren Krebses aus dem Lias (oberes Pliensbach) Mitteleuropas. Mitteilungen Bayerische Staatssammlung für Paläontologie und historische Geologie, 26:2531.Google Scholar
Förster, R., and Stinnesbeck, W. 1987. Zwei neue Krebse, Callianassa saetosa n. sp. und Homolopsis chilensis n. sp. (Crustacea, Decapoda) aus der Oberkreide Zentral-Chiles. Mitteilungen der Bayerische Staatssammlung für Paläontologie und historische Geologie, 27:5165.Google Scholar
Förster, R., Gaździcki, A., and Wrona, R. 1985. First record of a homolodromiid crab from a Lower Miocene glacio-marine sequence of West Antarctica. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Palaontologie Monatshefte., 6:340348.Google Scholar
Garth, J. S. 1973. New taxa of brachyuran crabs from deep waters off western Peru and Costa Rica. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences, 72:112.Google Scholar
Glaessner, M. F. 1933. Die Krabben der Juraformation. Zentralblatt für Mineralogie, Geologie, und Paläontologie, abteilung B, 3:178191.Google Scholar
Glaessner, M. F. 1969. Decapoda, p. R400R533, R626–628. In Moore, R. C. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Pt. R, Arthropoda 4(2). Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Glaessner, M. F. 1980. New Cretaceous and Tertiary crabs (Crustacea: Brachyura) from Australia and New Zealand. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 104:171192.Google Scholar
Guinot, D. 1977. Propositions pour une nouvelle classification des Crustacés Décapodes Brachyoures. Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l'Académie des Sciences, series 3, 285:10491052.Google Scholar
Guinot, D. 1978. Principles d'une classification évolutive des Crustacés Décapodes Brachyoures. Bulletin Biologique de la France et de la Belgique, 112(3):211292.Google Scholar
Guinot, D. 1979. Données nouvelles sur la morphologie, la phylogenèse et la taxonomie des Crustacés Décapodes Brachyoures. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, A(112):354 p.Google Scholar
Guinot, D. 1990 (1991). Éstablissement de la famille des Poupiniidae pour Poupinia hirsuta gen. nov., sp. nov. de Polynésie (Crustacea Decapoda Brachyura Homoloidea). Bulletin du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, Série 4, 12:577605.Google Scholar
Guinot, D. 1995. Crustacea Decapoda Brachyura: Révision des Homolodromiidae Alcock, 1900. In Crosnier, A. (ed.), Résultats des campagnes MUSORSTOM, Volume 13. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, 163:155282.Google Scholar
Guinot, D., and de Forges, B. Richer 1981. Homolidae, rares ou nouveaux, de l'Indo-Pacfique (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura). Bulletin du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, (4), 3, sect. A(2):523–581, figs. 1–7, pls. 1–8, tabls. 1–2, cartes 1–2.Google Scholar
Guinot, D., and de Forges, B. Richer 1995. Crustacea Decapoda Brachyura: Révision de la famille des Homolidae de Haan, 1839. In Crosnier, A. (ed.), Résultats des campagnes MUSORSTOM, Volume 13. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, 163:283517.Google Scholar
Haan, W. de. 1833–1849. Crustacea, p. 109164. In de Siebold, P. F. (ed.), Fauna Japonica 4, XVII, XXXI. J. Muller, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Ihle, J. E. W. 1913. Die Decapoda Brachyura der Siboga-Expedite. I. Dromiacea. Siboga Expedition Monograph 39b, 2(12):206241.Google Scholar
Jakobsen, S. L., and Collins, J. S. H. 1997. New middle Danian species of anomuran and brachyuran crabs from Fakse, Denmark. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark, 44:89100.Google Scholar
Jenkins, R. J. F. 1977. A new fossil homolid crab (Decapoda, Brachyura), Middle Tertiary, southeastern Australia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 101:110.Google Scholar
Karasawa, H. 1992. Fossil decapod crustaceans from the Manda Group (middle Eocene), Kyushu, Japan. Transactions and Proceedings of the Palaeontological Society of Japan, n. s., 167:12471258.Google Scholar
Latreille, P. A. 1802–1803. Histoire naturelle, générale et particulière, des crustacés et des insectes, Volume 3. F. DuFart, Paris, 467 p.Google Scholar
Latreille, P. A. 1831. Cours d'Entomologie, ou de l'histoire naturelle des Crustacés, des Archnides, des Myriapodes, et des Insectes, etc. Annales I. Atlas. Roret, Paris, 26 p.Google Scholar
Leach, W. E. 1815. A tabular view of the external characters of four classes of Animals, wich Linné arranged under Insecta: with the distribution of genera composing three of these classes into orders, and descriptions of several new genera and species. Transactions of the Linnaean Society of London, 11:306400.Google Scholar
Ludvigsen, R., and Beard, G. 1994. West Coast Fossils. Whitecap Books, Toronto, 194 p.Google Scholar
Manning, R. B., and Felder, D. L. 1991. Revision of the American Callianassidae (Crustacea: Decapoda: Thalassinoidea). Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 104:764792.Google Scholar
Mertin, H. 1941. Decapode Krebse aus dem subhercynen und Braunschweiger Emscher und Untersenon. Nova Acta Leopoldina, 10(68):11264, pls. 1–8.Google Scholar
Meyer, H. von. 1860. Die Prosoponiden oder die Familie der Maskenkrebse. Palaeontographica, 7:183222, pl. 23.Google Scholar
Meyer, H. von. 1864. Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie, Geologie, und Paläontology (Stuttgart), p. 20.Google Scholar
Edwards, A. Milne 1880. Etudes préliminaires sur les Crustacés, 1ère Partie. Reports on the Results of Dredging under the Supervision of Alexander Agassiz, in the Gulf of Mexico, and in the Caribbean Sea, 1877, '78, '79, by the U.S. Coast Guard Survey Steamer “Blake,” Lieutenant-Commander C. D. Sigsbee, U.S.N., and Commander J. R. Bartlett, U.S.N., Commanding. VIII. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard, 8(1):168, pls. 1–2.Google Scholar
Müller, P., Krobicki, M., and Wehner, G. 2000. Jurassic and Cretaceous primitive crabs of the family Prosopidae (Decapoda: Brachyura)—their taxonomy, ecology, and biogeography. Annales Societatis Geologorum Poloniae, 70:4979.Google Scholar
Newman, W. A. 1992. Biotic cognates of eastern boundary conditions in the Pacific and Atlantic: relicts of Tethys and climate change. Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History, 16:17.Google Scholar
Nyborg, T. G. 2002. Fossil decapod crustaceans from the early to middle Miocene Astoria Formation, Washington and Oregon, U. S. A. Unpublished M. S. thesis, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, 224 p.Google Scholar
Ortmann, A. E. 1901. Crustacea, 2. Malacostraca. Die Klassen und Ordnungen der Arthropoden. Leipzig, 5(2): 1319 p.Google Scholar
Prothero, D. R., Bitboul, C. Z., Moore, G. W., and Moore, E. J. 2001. Magnetic stratigraphy of the early and middle Miocene Astoria Formation, Newport Embayment, Oregon, p. 272283. In Prothero, D. R. (ed.), Magnetic Stratigraphy of the Pacific Coast Cenozoic. Pacific Section, Society of Sedimentary Geology, Book 91.Google Scholar
Rathbun, M. J. 1917. New species of South Dakota Cretaceous crabs. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 52:385391.Google Scholar
Rathbun, M. J. 1926. The fossil stalk-eyed Crustacea of the Pacific Slope of North America. United States National Museum Bulletin, 138:155 p.Google Scholar
Reuss, A. E. 1859. Zur Kenntnis fossiler Krabben. Akad. Wiss Wien Denschrift 17:190, pls. 1–24.Google Scholar
Roberts, H. B. 1962. The Upper Cretaceous decapod crustaceans of New Jersey and Delaware. In Richards, H. G. (ed.), The Cretaceous Fossils of New Jersey. New Jersey Bureau of Topography and Geology, 61:163191.Google Scholar
Samouelle, G. 1819. The Entomologist's Useful Compendium, or An Introduction to the Knowledge of the British Insects. London, 496 p.Google Scholar
Schlüter, C. A. von. 1879. Neue und weniger gekannte Kreide- und Tertiärkrebse des nördlichen Deutschlands. Zeitschrift der Deutschen Geologischen Gesellschaft, 31:586615, 5 pls.Google Scholar
Schweitzer, C. E. 2001a. Additions to the Tertiary decapod fauna of the Pacific Northwest of North America. Journal of Crustacean Biology, 21:521537.Google Scholar
Schweitzer, C. E. 2001b. Paleobiogeography of Cretaceous and Tertiary decapod crustaceans of the North Pacific Ocean. Journal of Paleontology, 75:808826.Google Scholar
Schweitzer, C. E., and Feldmann, R. M. 2000. First notice of the Chirostylidae (Decapoda) in the fossil record and new Tertiary Galatheidae (Decapoda) from the Americas. Bulletin of the Mizunami Fossil Museum, 27:147165.Google Scholar
Schweitzer, C. E., and Feldmann, R. M. 2001. New Cretaceous and Tertiary decapod crustaceans from western North America. Bulletin of the Mizunami Fossil Museum, 28:173210.Google Scholar
Schweitzer, C. E., Feldmann, R. M., Gonzáles-Barba, G., and Vega, F. J. 2002. New crabs from the Eocene and Oligocene of Baja California, Mexico and an assessment of the evolutionary and paleobiogeographic implications of Mexican fossil decapods. The Paleontological Society Memoir Series (Supplement to Journal of Paleontology, 76) Memoir 59, 43 p.Google Scholar
Segerberg, K. O. 1900. De anomura och brachyura decapoderna inom Skandinaviens Yngre krita. Geologiska Föreningens, Stockholm Förhandlingar, no. 201, Bd. 22, Häft, 5:347390.Google Scholar
Serène, R., and Lohavanijaya, P. 1973. The Brachyura (Crustacea: Decapoda) collected by the Naga Expedition, including a review of the Homolidae, p. 1187. In Scientific Results of the Marine Investigations of the South China Sea and the Gulf of Thailand 1959–1961. Naga Report, 4(4).Google Scholar
Takeda, M., and Fujiyama, I. 1983. Three decapod crustaceans from the Lower Cretaceous Miyako Group, Northern Japan. Bulletin of the National Science Museum, Tokyo, series C, 9(4):129136.Google Scholar
Takeda, M., Mizuno, Y., and Yamaoka, M. 1986. Some fossil crustaceans from the Miocene Morozaki Group in the Chita Peninsula, Central Japan. Kaseki no Tomo, Publications of the Tokai Fossil Society, 28(2):1222, figs. 1–2, pls. 1–4.Google Scholar
Van Straelen, V. 1936. Crustacés Décapodes nouveaux ou peu connus de l'époque Crétacique. Musée Royal d'Histoire Naturelle de Belgique, 12(45):150, 4 pls.Google Scholar
Via, L., and Sequeiros, L. 1993. Cancrejos mascara (Prosopidae) del Oxfordiense de Moneva (Zaragoza). Batelleria, 3:516.Google Scholar
Whiteaves, J. F. 1900. On some additional or imperfectly understood fossils from the Cretaceous rocks of the Queen Charlotte Islands with a revised list of species from these rocks. Geological Survey of Canada, Mesozoic Fossils, v. 1, part 4, p. 293307, pls. 34–39.Google Scholar
Winkler, T. C. 1883. Carcinological investigation on the genera Pemphix, Glyphea, and Araeosternus. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, (5)10:133149, 306–317.Google Scholar
Wood-Mason, J., and Alcock, A. 1891. A note on the result of the last season's deep-sea dredging: natural history notes from H. M. Indian Marine Survey Steamer “Investigator” Commander R. F. Hoskyn, R. N. Commanding, no. 21. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, ser. 6, 7:258272.Google Scholar
Woodward, H. 1892. Note on a new decapodous crustacean (Prosopon Etheridgei H. Woodw.) from the Cretaceous of Queensland, Australia. Proceedings of the Linnaean Society of New South Wales, ser. 2, 7:301306.Google Scholar
Woodward, H. 1896. On some podophthalmous Crustacea from the Cretaceous Formation of Vancouver and Queen Charlotte Islands. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, 52:221228.Google Scholar
Wright, C. W., and Collins, J. S. H. 1972. British Cretaceous Crabs. Palaeontographical Society Monographs, 126(533):1113.Google Scholar