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Sabtu, 14 September 2013

Eight New Shrimps Described from Sulawesi



Scientists from Germany and Singapore have described eight new species of Caridina shrimp from the lakes of Sulawesi.

Many of which have already been imported for the aquarium (see Sulawesi shrimps).

Kristina von Rintelen and Yixiong Cai published a revision of the lacustrine Caridina of Sulawesi in the most recent issue of the Raffles Bulletin of Zoology in which they describe these eight species.

The eight new species named are Caridina dennerli, C. glaubrechti, C. holthuisi, C. parvula, C. profundicola and C. striata from the Malili lake system, and C. caerulea and C. schenkeli from Lake Poso.

The authors also raise the concern the effect of collecting large numbers of lacustrine Sulawesi shrimps for the aquarium trade may have on the survival of these species.

The December issue of Practical Fishkeeping magazine includes pictures of the species and interview with Dr Kristina von Rintelen.
Caridina dennerli

Caridina dennerli

This species has been sold as Caridina sp. cardinal in the aquarium trade, and is named after German company Dennerle, who supported the authors project.

The body and most appendages of C. dennerli are dark red to purple, with a pattern of conspicuous small white spots on the body.

Most of the first two pairs of legs, the antennae and part of the snout are white. It is found on or under small rocks, and between boulders in Lake Matano.

caridina glaubrechti

Caridina glaubrechti

This species has been sold as Caridina sp. red orchid or Caridina sp. brown camo in the aquarium trade, and is named after Matthias Glaubrecht, who initiated the project and collected some material.

Caridina glaubrechti is brown with several white bands or patches on the body, with a conspicuous white band on the abdomen and transparent or partly brownish appendages. It lives amongst rocks and boulders in Lake Towuti.


caridina holthuisi
Caridina holthuisi

This species has been sold as Caridina sp. Matano black tiger in the aquarium trade, and is named after famous carcinologist (a scientist who studies crabs) Lipke Holthuis.

Caridina holthuisi is dark brown, often with transverse beige bands or a beige dorsal longitudinal band on the body. It lives amongst leaf litter in the three major lakes of the Malili system and in the Petea River.
caridina parvula
Caridina parvula

This species is named after its small size (Latin parvus=small). Caridina parvula has a light red body (which can turn completely blue when stressed) with a few faint white transverse bands, and transparent appendages.

It lives amongst rocks in lakes Matano and Towuti, and in the Petea and Tominanga rivers.

caridina profundicola
Caridina profundicola

This species is named after its relatively deep habitat (Latin profundus=deep and collere=to inhabit).

Caridina profundicola has a transparent yellowish body and usually has two conspicuous yellow bands on the abdomen. It lives amongst large rocks in the deeper waters of Lake Towuti.

caridina striata
Caridina striata

This species has been sold as Caridina sp. red stripe in the aquarium trade, and is named after its characteristic colour pattern of red and white stripes (Latin striatus=stripe).

Caridina striata is red with a characteristic pattern of white stripes and spots and reddish transparent appendages except for the first two pairs of legs, which are usually white. It lives amongst rocks in lakes Towuti and Mahalona.
caridina caerulea
Caridina caerulea

This species has been sold as Caridina ensifera blue in the aquarium trade and is named after its partly blue colour (Latin caeruleus=blue).

Caridina caerulea has a transparent reddish or yellowish body, bluish legs and snout, and a pair of prominent blue patches on the tail fan. It lives amongst wood and rocks in Lake Poso.

caridina schenkeli
Caridina schenkeli

This species has a transparent yellowish or brownish body and is found on various kinds of substrate (rocks, riverine vegetation, roots, dead wood) in the rivers east and south of Lake Poso.

For more information, see the paper: von Rintelen, K and Y-X Cai (2009) Radiation of endemic species flocks in ancient lakes: Systematic revision of the freshwater shrimp Caridina H. Milne Edwards, 1837 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Atyidae) from the ancient lakes of Sulawesi, Indonesia, with the description of eight new species. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 57, pp. 343"452.

Freshwater Shrimps from Sulawesi


In the central highlands of the Indonesian island Sulawesi, formerly Celebes, the ancient systems of Lake Poso and the Malili lakes harbour two independent and endemic species flocks of the freshwater shrimp Caridina.

These are part of a well known genus in aquatics, but less well known, until now, were the flamboyant colour patterns in some species that resemble marine rather than typical freshwater shrimps.

However, these colourful shrimps are exclusive freshwater dwellers and occur only in those lake systems. They all have rather large eggs and their larvae only develop in freshwater " in contrast to other Caridina species with some salinity tolerance at the larval stage.

The fauna of Lake Poso and the so called Malili lakes, or Malili lake system, was first studied by Swiss naturalists and cousins Fritz and Paul Sarasin in 1895 (Lake Poso) and 1896 (Malili lakes). Apart from shrimps, the lakes are also home to several other endemic and partly colourful species; for example fish, snails, crabs or snakes.

An international team of researchers is describing the species diversity and trying to understand how it could evolve.



Lake Poso shrimps
Lake Poso is a solitary lake with adjacent rivers and a maximum depth of 450m/1,476 . It has very low nutrient and organic content, or, in other words, it is oligotrophic.

Four shrimp species are currently described from the lake and its river system and are Caridina acutirostris, C. ensifera (the original 'red' form is pictured above), C. longidigita and C. sarasinorum " mainly by E Schenkel in 1902 based on the Sarasins collection and revised by Cai and Wowor in 2006.

Two more are currently described by Kristina von Rintelen, Germany, and collaborators. One of the new species is still known as Caridina ensifera, but recent anatomical and genetic analyses revealed the existence of two species with two distinct colour patterns of red and blue (compare von Rintelen, K von Rintelen, T and M Glaubrecht, (2007).

Red is the original C. ensifera described by Schenkel, 1902, and blue will be described as a new species. Both are difficult to distinguish if present as the alcohol-bleached material commonly found in scientific collections, although living specimens (adults and juveniles) can always be told apart.

Besides conspicuous blueish body appendages with an otherwise transparent body in blue versus not blueish in red, the main difference is prominent in the tail fan.

Blue has an elongated blue patch on the distal part of each endopod as an upside down V-shape, whereas red has a smaller red spot on the distal part of each exopod.

Both species are abundant in the lake itself but absent from the rivers, whereas, for example, C. acutirostris, not featured here, is a typical riverine species absent from the lake.

They not only differ in colour, but also in ecological preferences and behaviour.

Blue is rather stationary and mainly found on hard substrate (wood and rocks), whereas red is often found in pelagic swarms or sporadic on various kinds of soft and hard substrate: for example, sand, macrophytes and rocks.

The latter also has the highest density of all shrimps in the lake and is often caught by local fishermen.

Shrimps from Malili
The Malili system comprises five lakes sharing a common drainage. The three major ones are Towuti, Matano and Mahalona with two small satellite lakes, Masapi and Lontoa or Wawontoa.

At approximately. 590m/1,935 Lake Matano is the eighth deepest lake worldwide. Canadian scientists measured its temperature at 27-29C/81-84F at the surface and around 27C/81F at 560m/1837 , a pH of 7.4 and a conductivity of 224 S that also did not change with depth.

Two of the Malili lakes, Matano and Towuti, and Lake Poso are known to be oligotrophic, although the three smaller lakes of Mahalona, Masapi and Lontoa are more shallow and probably have a higher nutrient content, and provide very similar ecological properties for its inhabitants.



The majority of the Malili shrimps were first collected in 1932 by R Woltereck and later described in 1937 by his daughter E Woltereck with eight species (Caridina lingkonae, C. lanceolata, pictured above, C. loehae, C. masapi, C. opaensis, C. tenuirostris, C. towutensis and C. spinata), followed by the description of C. spongicola, (Zitzler and Cai, 2006).

Currently Woltereck s species are revised and several new species are added by Kristina von Rintelen and Yixiong Cai from Singapore. Neither Schenkel nor Woltereck knew about the spectacular colours of their shrimps so unusual for the genus Caridina, although some colourful species have been sporadically described, for example C. trifasciata from Hong Kong.

All Malili species exclusively occur in the lake system, including its drainage, but some are widely distributed within the whole system. Others only occur in one or two of the lakes, or only in rivers. The lakes provide a number of micro-habitats with different substrates (soft like sand or plants, hard like rocks or wood), and the majority of shrimp species are specialised to one substrate.

Their detailed food compounds remain unknown, but in the gut of some specimens several diatoms were found, although they might also consume detritus and algae.

Distributed generalists
Not all species are specialised. Some are generalists that often occur on different types of substrate and usually widely distributed within the Malili lake system.

Their choice of habitat is rather unspecific and they can occur on soft substrate (water plants, leaf litter) or hard substrate (wood, rocks).



These are for example Caridina lanceolata, C. masapi and C. sp., a still undescribed riverine species (pictured above).

While the latter only occurs in rivers surrounding the lakes, C. lanceolata and C. masapi mainly be seen in the lakes themselves.

C. masapi has the widest distribution of all shrimps, being the only one living in the small satellite lakes of Masapi and Lontoa, but also occurring in the other three lakes and in rivers.

C. lanceolata can mainly be found in the three major lakes Towuti, Matano and Mahalona and their connecting rivers such as the Tominanga or Petea.

All generalists have a less spectacular coloration than the other more specialised species; from a reddish-translucent pattern in C. lanceolata to brownish with lighter stripes in the other species.

The specialists
More conspicuous are the colourful species usually not widely distributed within the Malili lake system, but rather occurring locally restricted and highly specialised.

One extreme example is C. spongicola which is associated with a yet undescribed freshwater sponge and whose occurrence is limited to those areas where the sponge grows.

Some other examples are described here. Colour patterns are species specific, their intensity however can change depending on food supply (substrate) and water conditions " for example, some red species were observed to turn blue under stress.



Typical rock dwellers
There are a number of rock-dwelling species from Lake Towuti, the largest and southernmost of the Malili lakes, for example the beautiful C. spinata (pictured above), C. loehae and three other yet undescribed Caridina sp. C. lohae is mainly red with some white stripes or dots, C. spinata is rather dark red, sometimes almost purple with yellow or orange stripes.

The first C. sp. shows characteristic red and white longitudinal stripes with conspicuous white front legs (cheliped), the second a rather brown and white pattern of horizontal stripes. The colour pattern of the third closely resembles that of the sponge dweller C. spongicola, although it is a different species with specific substrate preferences.

These three undescribed species often occur together with C. loehae on gravel or smaller rocks in shallow water or with C. spinata between boulders in deeper water below 5m/.16 .

Another beautiful rock dwelling shrimp from Lake Matano is an also undescribed species that has a dark red body with white dots and white body appendages.

Life under leaves
One lake species lives mainly under dead leaves, although it can ocasionally be found on other kinds of substrate.

It is mostly dark brown, sometimes almost black body coloration with lighter stripes optimally adjusted to the mainly dark brown colour of leaf litter in the lakes.

This species behaviour seems to be able to adjust for, when disturbed, it usually lets itself fall downwards instead of moving in other directions.

Swarming typeIn the Malili system, depending on time of day, two species were observed in larger swarms, similar to the red C. ensifera from Lake Poso.

One is C. lanceolata, the other C. lingkonae, whose inconspicuous reddish coloration resembles that of C. lanceolata, but which can also be characterised as a specialised pelagic species.

It often occurs in huge swarms mainly in Lake Towuti, but one specimen was also found in the smaller Lake Mahalona. More details about the life history of C. lingkonae are unknown.

The colour pattern of this as yet undescribed Caridina shrimp closely resembles that of the sponge-dwelling C. spongicola.

Sulawesi lake fauna
The shrimps colour diversity is only one aspect of the fascinating fauna of Sulawesi's ancient lakes.

These are also home to many rare and unusual species, for example the shrimp sponge association that make it similarly worthy of protection as the Galpagos Islands.

Some of the highly specialised and locally restricted species with very small populations, especially the colourful ones, are already threatened with extinction by illegal logging around the lakes and other human impacts.

So, sampling living specimens should be sensibly limited to preserve the species and colour diversity for future generations.

For more information on Sulawesi shrimps check out the article:Eight new shrimps described from Sulawesi.

source: http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk

My Sulawesi Island and Sulawesi Shrimp



Sulawesi (formerly known as Celebes /ˈsɛlɨbz/ or /sɨˈlbz/) is an island inIndonesia. One of the four Greater Sunda Islands, and the world's eleventh-largest island, it is situated between Borneo and the Maluku Islands. In Indonesia, only Sumatra, Borneo, and Papua are larger in territory, and only Java and Sumatra have larger populations.

Sulawesi comprises four peninsulas: the northern Minahassa Peninsula; the East Peninsula; the South Peninsula; and the South-east Peninsula. Three gulfs separate these peninsulas: Gulf of Tomini between northern Minahassa peninsula and East Peninsula;Tolo Gulf between East and Southeast Peninsula; and Bone Gulf between the South and Southeast Peninsula. The Strait of Makassar runs along the western side of the island and separates the island from Borneo.

Sulawesi is part of Wallacea, meaning that it has a mix of both Asian and Australasian species. There are 8 national parks on the island, of which 4 are mostly marine. The parks with the largest terrestrial area are Bogani Nani Wartabone with 2,871 km² and Lore Lindu National Park with 2,290 km². Bunaken National Park which protects a rich coral ecosystem has been proposed as an UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Sulawesi also has several endemic species of freshwater fish, such as those in the genus Nomorhamphus, a species flock of livebearing freshwater halfbeaks containing at least 19 distinct species, most of which are only found on Sulawesi. In addition to Nomorhamphus, the majority of Sulawesi's 70+ freshwater fish species are ricefishes, gobies (Mugilogobius and Glossogobius) and Telmatherinid sail-fin silversides. The last family is almost entirely restricted to Sulawesi, especially the Malili Lake system, consisting of Matano and Towuti, and the small Lontoa (Wawantoa), Mahalona and Masapi. The gudgeon Bostrychus microphthalmus from the Maros Karst is the only described species of cave-adapted fish from Sulawesi, but an apparentlyundescribed species from the same region and genus also exists.



There are many species of Caridina freshwater shrimp and parathelphusid freshwater crabs (Migmathelphusa, Nautilothelphusa, Parathelphusa, Sundathelphusa and Syntripsa) that are endemic to Sulawesi. Several of these species have become very popular in the aquarium hobby, and since most are resitricted to a single lake system, they are potentially vulnerable to habitat loss and overexploitation. There are also several endemic cave-adapted shrimp and crabs, especially in the Maros Karst. This includes Cancrocaeca xenomorpha, which has been called the "most highly cave-adapted species of crab known in the world".

The genus Tylomelania of freshwater snails is also endemic to Sulawesi, with the majority of the species restricted to Lake Poso and the Malili Lake system.

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