Vanni travancorica ( Henderson, 1913 )

Z, Sameer Kumar Pati, 2025, Taxonomic revision of the freshwater crab genera Travancoriana Bott, 1969, and Vanni Bahir & Yeo, 2007 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Gecarcinucidae), with descriptions of eight new genera and two new species from the Western Ghats, southern India, Zootaxa 5634 (1), pp. 1-77 : 31-34

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5634.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:77BC584A-9FF0-42AF-B128-52D708C50360

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15436751

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C436E549-FF9B-324B-A8DB-FA40FEC77FB0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Vanni travancorica ( Henderson, 1913 )
status

 

Vanni travancorica ( Henderson, 1913) View in CoL

[Travancore forest crab]

( Figs. 14 View FIGURE 14 , 15 View FIGURE 15 )

Paratelphusa (Liotelphusa) malabarica var. travancorica Henderson, 1913: 47 View in CoL , fig. 2.

Vanni travancorica View in CoL – Bahir & Yeo 2007: 338, figs. 31, 32.—Pati et al. 2014: 658, pl. 2 figs. 1–3, pl. 3 figs. 16–18.— Rajesh et al. 2017: 146, fig. 30.—Pati 2020: 162 (list).— Pati & Pradhan 2020: 555836 (list).— Sruthi & Thirunavukkarasu 2022: 461 (list).

Vanni View in CoL “ travancoriana ” [sic]– Klaus et al. 2014: 658, table S1 (list).

Not Travancoriana malabarica – Bott 1970b: 42 (part).

Material examined. India– Kerala State: 7 males ( CW 7.9–21.1 mm, CL 6.9–16.5 mm, CH 3.5–10.2 mm, FW 3.1– 6.9 mm), 3 females ( CW 10.5–11.7 mm, CL 8.7–9.9 mm, CH 5.2–5.6 mm, FW 4.0– 4.2 mm) ( ZSI-WRC C.1877), Kollam District , Shendurney Wildlife Sanctuary, Pondimotta, 8.828° N, 77.217° E, elev. 1235 m a.s.l., coll. Md. Jafer Palot et al., 23 January 2019 GoogleMaps ; 7 males ( CW 13.9 –22.0 mm, CL 10.9–16.3 mm, CH 6.6–10.0 mm, FW 5.1–7.3 mm), 5 females ( CW 13.9–21.7 mm, CL 10.1–16.7 mm, CH 6.1–9.9 mm, FW 5.3–7.5 mm) ( ZSI-WRC C.1874), Kollam District , Shendurney Wildlife Sanctuary, Rockwood Estate, 8.870° N, 77.115° E, elev. 627 m a.s.l., coll. Md. Jafer Palot et al., 24 January 2019 GoogleMaps ; 2 males ( CW 12.9 mm each, CL 10.0– 10.3 mm, CH 5.8–6.3 mm, FW 4.7– 4.8 mm), 2 females ( CW 9.2–13.5 mm, CL 7.4–10.9 mm, CH 4.3–6.6 mm, FW 3.6–5.0 mm) ( ZSI-WRC C.1888), Kollam District , Shendurney Wildlife Sanctuary, Kattilapara, 8.915° N, 77.110° E, elev. 190 m a.s.l., coll. Md. Jafer Palot et al., 21 January 2019 GoogleMaps ; 2 males ( CW 16.2–19.2 mm, CL 12.4–14.1 mm, CH 7.5–8.8 mm, FW 5.9–6.6 mm), 2 females ( CW 17.9 –18.0 mm, CL 13.5–13.7 mm, CH 8.1–8.6 mm, FW 6.2 mm each) ( ZSI-WGRC IR/INV/9143), Kollam District , Rosemala, 8.91845° N, 77.17440° E, elev. 355 m a.s.l., coll. K. Rajmohana, 18 December 2015 GoogleMaps ; 4 males ( CW 14.0– 19.4 mm, CL 11.4–14.4 mm, CH 6.5–8.9 mm, FW 5.4–6.9 mm), 2 females ( CW 14.7–15.4 mm, CL 11.8–12.3 mm, CH 6.6–7.4 mm, FW 5.7 mm each) ( ZSI-WGRC IR/INV/9146), Thiruvananthapuram District , Peppara Wildlife Sanctuary, Vayavanthol, 8.67452° N, 77.16330° E, elev. 340 m a.s.l., coll. K. Rajmohana, 14 December 2015 GoogleMaps ; 3 males ( CW 13.4–17.8 mm, CL 10.5–13.5 mm, CH 6.1–8.4 mm, FW 5.1–6.1 mm), female ( CW 14.3 mm, CL 11.1 mm, CH 6.3 mm, FW 5.2 mm) ( ZSI-WRC C.1879), Thiruvananthapuram District , near Ponmudi, Seethakundu, 8.772° N, 77.108° E, elev. 1032 m a.s.l., coll. Md. Jafer Palot et al., 18 January 2019 GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Medium sized crabs (maximum CW 22.6 mm). Carapace relatively broad (CW/CL = ca. 1.2–1.4), relatively low ( CH /CW = ca. 0.4–0.5) ( Fig. 14A, B View FIGURE 14 ); external orbital angle triangular, with short outer margin, ca. 2.5 times length of inner margin ( Fig. 14A View FIGURE 14 ); epibranchial tooth indiscernible ( Fig. 14A View FIGURE 14 ); male sternopleonal cavity reaching to imaginary line joining anterior part of cheliped coxae ( Fig. 14C View FIGURE 14 ); male pleonal somite 6 subquadrate, relatively narrower, appearing elongated, proximal width ca. 1.1 times medial length, as long as telson, with strongly concave lateral margins ( Fig. 14C, E View FIGURE 14 ); male telson relatively more narrow, medial length ca. 1.3 times proximal width ( Fig. 14C, E View FIGURE 14 ); G1 relatively stouter ( Fig. 15A, B View FIGURE 15 ); G1 ultimate article relatively slenderer, straight, relatively shorter, ca. 0.2 times length of penultimate article ( Fig. 15A, B View FIGURE 15 ); G1 penultimate article with distal portion conspicuously narrow than basal portion, outer margin gently sinuous, basally straight ( Fig. 15A, B View FIGURE 15 ); G2 longer than G1, ca. 1.2 times G1 length, ultimate article long, ca. 0.4 times length of penultimate article ( Fig. 15C View FIGURE 15 ); vulvae subovate, relatively large, occupying ca. 0.5 times length of s6, located clearly away from s5/s6 ( Fig. 14F View FIGURE 14 ).

Remarks. Vanni travancorica was described by Henderson (1913) as a new variety of Paratelphusa (Liotelphusa) malabarica . Roux (1931), however, recognised the variety as a distinct species, Paratelphusa (Barytelphusa) travancorica . Bott (1970a) included the species in Travancoriana . Both Roux (1931) and Bott (1970a) supposedly examined the specimens of Santanusus malabaricus ( Henderson, 1912) comb. nov., not V. travancorica (see remarks for S. malabaricus comb. nov.). Bott (1970b) changed his mind later and considered the species a junior subjective synonym of Travancoriana malabarica ( Henderson, 1912) . The figures in Bott (1970b: pl. 5 figs. 45–47, pl. 26 fig. 22) suggest that the species was actually S. malabaricus comb. nov. (see remarks for S. malabaricus comb. nov.), while it also includes the male syntype of V. travancorica from the NHM. Subsequently, Bahir & Yeo (2007) removed the species from the synonym of Travancoriana malabarica and treated it as a valid taxon and the type species for their new genus, Vanni . Pati & Sharma (2011, 2014) erroneously reported the species from the Uttara Kannada district of Karnataka as evident from their figures (Pati & Sharma 2014: 30, fig. 6A–G), and the fact that the said locality (Jog-Honnavar road) is far away (approximately 665 km) from the type locality of V. travancorica (i.e., Ponmudi); it is likely that their specimens belong to an unknown species of Vanni .

Vanni travancorica is unique among known congeners in having a relatively more narrow male telson, with the medial length ca. 1.3 times the proximal width ( Fig. 14C, E View FIGURE 14 ) (versus male telson relatively less narrow, with the medial length ca. 1.0–1.1 times the proximal width; Figs. 16C, H View FIGURE 16 , 18D, G View FIGURE 18 , 20D, G View FIGURE 20 ); in having a conspicuously narrow distal portion of the G1 penultimate article as compared to its basal portion ( Fig. 15A, B View FIGURE 15 ) (versus G1 penultimate article with the distal portion relatively less narrow than the basal portion; Figs. 17A, B View FIGURE 17 , 18H, I View FIGURE 18 , 19A, B View FIGURE 19 , 20H, I View FIGURE 20 , 21A, B View FIGURE 21 ); and in having the vulvae located clearly away from the s5/s6 ( Fig. 14F View FIGURE 14 ) (versus vulvae located relatively close to s5/s6; Figs. 16J View FIGURE 16 , 18K View FIGURE 18 , 20K View FIGURE 20 ).

Vanni travancorica can be further distinguished from V. deepta and V. gracilis sp. nov. mainly by virtue of its relatively shorter G1 ultimate article, ca. 0.2 times the length of the penultimate article ( Fig. 15A View FIGURE 15 ) (versus G1 ultimate article relatively long, ca. 0.3 times the length of the penultimate article; Figs. 17A View FIGURE 17 , 18H View FIGURE 18 , 19A View FIGURE 19 ) and by the basally straight outer margin of the G1 penultimate article ( Fig. 15A, B View FIGURE 15 ) (versus G1 penultimate article with the basally concave to strongly concave outer margin; Figs. 17A, B View FIGURE 17 , 18H, I View FIGURE 18 , 19A, B View FIGURE 19 ); and from V. ashini by virtue of its indiscernible epibranchial tooth ( Figs. 14A View FIGURE 14 ) (versus epibranchial tooth low but discernible; Fig. 20A, B, E View FIGURE 20 ) and by the relatively slenderer G1 ultimate article ( Fig. 15A, B View FIGURE 15 ) (versus G1 ultimate article relatively stouter; Figs. 20H, I View FIGURE 20 , 21A, B View FIGURE 21 ).

Ecological notes. Vanni travancorica prefers to inhabit shady areas and was reported to dwell in shallow burrows in wet soil, underneath small stones and under leaf litters adjacent to small streams, and under stones and logs in wet soil ( Bahir & Yeo 2007; Rajesh et al. 2017). The species was also reported to be very common at the type locality ( Rajesh et al. 2017). The species can occupy both lower and higher elevations (100–1235 m a.s.l.) of the Western Ghats (cf. Bahir & Yeo 2007; present study).

Geographical distribution. Vanni travancorica is currently found in the southern Western Ghats of Kerala (Kollam and Thiruvananthapuram districts), southern India ( Bahir & Yeo 2007; Rajesh et al. 2017; present study) ( Fig. 1B View FIGURE 1 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Malacostraca

Order

Decapoda

Family

Gecarcinucidae

Genus

Vanni

Loc

Vanni travancorica ( Henderson, 1913 )

Z, Sameer Kumar Pati 2025
2025
Loc

Vanni

Klaus, S. & Fernandez, K. & Yeo, D. C. J. 2014: 658
2014
Loc

Vanni travancorica

Sruthi, H. & Thirunavukkarasu, N. 2022: 461
Pati, S. K. & Pradhan, R. N. 2020: 555836
Rajesh, L. & Raj, S. & Pati, S. K. & Kumar, A. B. 2017: 146
Bahir, M. M. & Yeo, D. C. J. 2007: 338
2007
Loc

Travancoriana malabarica

Bott, R. 1970: 42
1970
Loc

Paratelphusa (Liotelphusa) malabarica var. travancorica

Henderson, J. R. 1913: 47
1913
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