Polycheles typhlops explained

Polycheles typhlops is a species of blind, deep water decapod crustacean with a cosmopolitan distribution. It is "one of the dominant and most characteristic crustaceans in deep-sea communities of the Mediterranean Sea".

Description

Adult P. typhlops reach a total length of 50-,[1] from the tip of the rostrum to the end of the telson. This excludes the greatly elongated first pair of pereiopods which are normally held with the first three segments close to the side of the thorax, and the remainder held horizontal above the level of the animal's body, with the tips of the claws not exceeding the tip of the rostrum.[2] This is thought to be an adaptation to predation while partly buried in the sediment.[2] The usual colour of the exoskeleton is whitish, orange or yellow, with the fertilised eggs matching the colour of the pleon where they are brooded.[1]

As in other polychelids, and as implied by the generic names Polycheles and Pentacheles, all five pairs of pereiopods bear claws.

Polycheles typhlops may be distinguished from closely related species by a number of characteristics, including the presence of an indentation around the orbit of the eye, 12–15 spines on each side of the carapace, a forward-pointing spine on the back of each of the second to fifth segments of the pleon, and two longitudinal ridges on each uropod.[3] Only one other polychelid species is known to occur in the Mediterranean Sea, although four different species of larva have been found there.

Distribution

Polycheles typhlops lives in deep water throughout the Indo-Pacific, and on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean,[1] including the Mediterranean Sea, the type specimen having been caught off Sicily.

The species' depth distribution is less clear, with different authors citing depths of 350-,[4] 300-,[5] 450-,[1] 77-, and 600-. It is reported to be most abundant at depths of, 500-,[5] or 900-.[6] There are known to be both seasonal and geographical variations in depth, which may help to explain the variation.[1]

Ecology

P. typhlops probably acts as an ambush predator, hiding buried in the sediment with its claws raised above the surface.[2] Its main prey are bony fish and other crustaceans, such as shrimp, mysids and amphipods.[7]

Notes and References

  1. . 28 . 3 . 494–501 . 2008 . Gonad development of the deep-sea lobster Polycheles typhlops (Decapoda: Polychelidae) from the central western Mediterranean . Serenella Cabiddu . Maria C. Follesa . Alice Gastoni . Cristina Porcu . Angelo Cau . amp . 10.1651/07-2908R.1. free .
  2. Adolf Kotthaus . 1966 . Erstnachweis von Polycheles typhlops (Decapoda reptantia) für isländische Gewässer . First record of Polycheles typhlops (Decapooda reptantia) from Icelandic waters . German . Helgoländer Wissenschaftliche Meeresuntersuchungen . 13 . 4 . 348–353 . 10.1007/BF01611954. free .
  3. Book: A Picture Guide to Shelf Invertebrates from the Northern Gulf of Mexico . Harriet Perry . Kirsten Larsen . amp . April 24, 2004 . Polycheles typhlops . . . January 15, 2010.
  4. Crostacei decapodi batiali della Sardegna meridionale . Rendiconti Seminario Facoltà Scienze Università Cagliari . 57 . 189–199 . 1987 . Marco Mura . . Italian.
  5. Population characteristics of the deep-sea lobsters Polycheles typhlops and Stereomastis sculpta (Decapoda: Polychelidae) in a bathyal mud community of the Mediterranean Sea . P. Abelló . J. E. Cartes . amp . . 114 . 109–117 . 1992 . 10.1007/BF00350860 .
  6. Relationship between size and depth in decapod crustacean populations on the deep slope in the Western Mediterranean . F. Sardà . J. E. Cartes . amp . Deep-Sea Research Part I . 40 . 11/12 . 2389–2400 . 1993 . 10.1016/0967-0637(93)90112-G.
  7. . 2009 . 19 . 329–347 . 10.1007/s11160-009-9105-6 . Biological patterns and ecological indicators for Mediterranean fish and crustaceans below 1,000 m: a review . F. Sardà . J. B. Company . G. Rotllant . M. Coll .