Publications by authors named "Bertrand Richer De Forges"

Additional spider crab (superfamily Majoidea) material from four major French-led expeditions to the Papua New Guinea region were examined in this study. One new genus and four new species from the families Inachidae and Oregoniidae are described. Dorhynchus profundus n.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The taxonomy of majid spider crabs collected from recent southwest Indian Ocean cruises belonging to Eurynome Leach, 1814, and allied genera is treated. Eurynome longimana Stimpson, 1857, long synonymised with the European E. aspera (Pennant, 1777), is here recognised as a distinct species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The poorly known majid genus Ortmann, 1893, is revised. The genus was previously known only from one species, Ortmann, 1893, described from Japan and reported from east Africa. is redescribed and figured in detail from the type and material from the type locality, Sagami Bay in Japan.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Based partly on a collection of homolid crabs captured from baited traps in deep waters off French Frigate Shoals, Northwest Hawaiian Islands, in October 2006, the Hawaiian species of the family Homolidae are reviewed. Known genera and species in the Hawaiian Islands now include two species of Homola (H. orientalis and H.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The deep-water epialtid spider crab (superfamily Majoidea) material collected from recent French expeditions to Papua New Guinea (BIOPAPUA 2010, PAPUA NIUGINI 2012, MADEEP 2014, and KAVIENG 2014) was studied. In addition to several new records for the country, five new species of Oxypleurodon Miers, 1885, Rochinia A. Milne-Edwards, 1875, and Tunepugettia Ng, Komai Sato, 2017, are described.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Coral Sea, located at the southwestern rim of the Pacific Ocean, is the only tropical marginal sea where human impacts remain relatively minor. Patterns and processes identified within the region have global relevance as a baseline for understanding impacts in more disturbed tropical locations. Despite 70 years of documented research, the Coral Sea has been relatively neglected, with a slower rate of increase in publications over the past 20 years than total marine research globally.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The nomenclature and taxonomy of the Cape Town Spider Crab, Macropodia falcifera Stimpson, 1858, is treated. The species is rediagnosed and figured, and its ecology discussed. A key is also provided of the Indo-West Pacific species of Macropodia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The inachid spider crab genus, Parapleisticantha Yokoya, 1933 [type species: Parapleisticantha japonica Yokoya, 1933] is removed from the synonymy of Pleistacantha Miers, 1879 [type species: Pleistacantha sanctijohannis Miers, 1879], and recognised as a valid genus. Parapleisticantha differs from Pleistacantha sensu stricto primarily by having a less spiny carapace, stouter and more inflated male chelipeds, and by lacking a slender subdistal process on the male first gonopod. We redescribe Parapleisticantha japonica based on the Japanese type material and describe as new a second species, Parapleisticantha ludivinae n.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Glypheidea, a group of lobster-like decapods thought to be extinct since the Triassic period, was rediscovered in 1975 with the Neoglyphea inopinata species caught in the Philippines and another species, Laurentaeglyphea neocaledonica, found in 2005 near New Caledonia.
  • - A molecular data set of decapod species was constructed, sequencing eight nuclear and mitochondrial genes from the two existing glypheid species, showing that they cluster together and confirming Glypheidea as a distinct infraorder.
  • - Despite being dubbed 'Jurassic shrimps' and labeled 'living fossils,' glypheids are actually a more advanced lineage of decapods
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A new genus of a deep-sea ascomycete with one new species, Alisea longicolla, is described based on analyses of 18S and 28S rDNA sequences and morphological characters. A. longicolla was found together with Oceanitis scuticella, on small twigs and sugar cane debris trawled from the bottom of the Pacific Ocean off Vanuatu Islands.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF