First record of Columbus crab Planes minutus (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Grapsidae) Linnaeus, 1758 for the northwestern Indian Ocean

Planes minutus Linnaeus, 1758 is a species of grapsid crab that is known to be symbiotically associated with various species that include but are not limited to sea turtles. This specie is known to occur in tropical and subtropical oceans. In this study, we report a P.minutus specimen from a stranded loggerhead sea turtle from the Sea of Oman coast of the United Arab Emirates, signifying the first record of this specie from the Northwestern Indian Ocean.


Introduction
Grapsoid and ocypodoid crabs are considered to be the two most dominant brachyuran taxa in intertidal zones of the Arabian Gulf and the Sea of Oman (Al- Ghais and Cooper 1996). There, grapsoid crabs are represented by four families (Sesarmidae, Plagusiidae, Varunidae, and Grapsidae), nine genera (Chiromantes, Nanosesarma, Parasesarma, Perisesarma, Plagusia, Metaplax, Thalassograpsus, Grapsus and Metopograpsus) and 12 species (Naderloo 2011;Naderloo and Turkay 2012;Naderloo 2017). Species of the Grapsidae family typically occupy the littoral zone on rocky areas and estuarine waters (Naderloo and Turkay 2012). However, the two members of the Planes genus, neither of which have been recorded in the region, occur in association with flotsam and marine fauna (Carpenter 2014).
Crabs of the Planes genus are known to live on numerous floating objects including buoys, timber, feathers and tarballs and are known to live symbiotically on marine animals such as jellyfish, siphonophores, gastropods and marine turtles (Davenport 1994;Bas 1999;Frick et al. 2004). Planes minutus is known to occur in all tropical and subtropical oceans and was observed associated with marine turtles in the South Atlantic, Pacific Ocean, and Indian Ocean ( Fig. 1) (Frick et al. 2001). However, in the Indian Ocean, observations were limited to the coasts of Somalia and South Africa and none of which were in association with marine turtles (Branch et al. 1994;Pfaller et al. 2019aPfaller et al. , 2019b. In this study, we present the first published record of Planes minutus for the Sea of Oman and the Northwestern Indian Ocean.

Specimen sampling
On Thursday, 11th of January 2018, a stranded sea turtle was discovered by the Environment and Protected Areas Authority rangers on the beach of the Alqurm Wa Lehaffaiiah Protected Area (GPS: 24.984419°N, 56.373445°E) in the city of Kalba, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates (Fig. 2a). The external morphologic features of the specimen-two pairs of prefrontal scutes, five lateral scutes, two claws on each fore-flipper and 3 inframarginal scutes without pores-confirm that the specimen was a loggerhead sea turtle Caretta caretta. The stranding was fresh (condition code 1 as per the NetCet "Standard Protocol for Postmortem Examination on Sea Turtles" (Poppi and Marchhiori 2013). During the post mortem examination process, a live female crab was observed settled on the dorsal surface of the turtle's tail (Fig. 2b). The specimen was sampled opportunistically and examined closely for species identification. The morphologic features of the specimen were documented and compared to those in existing literature. The sampled crab specimen was identified as Planes minutus Linnaeus, 1758 (Fig. 2c), a species of grapsid crab that is occasionally observed associated with hawksbill sea turtles Eretmochelys imbricata and green sea turtles Chelonia mydas, and is known to be symbiotically associated with olive ridley sea turtles Lepidochelys olivacea and loggerhead sea turtles C. caretta (Dellinger et al. 1997;Pfaller et al. 2019b).

Sample analysis
The crab was identified visually and photographed using a Dino-Lite AM7915MZT digital microscope while carefully referring to available identification guides and keys all the while noting recent development in the specie's taxonomy (Chace 1951;Branch et al. 1994;Carpenter 2014;Pfaller et al., 2019b). Morphology (see Fig. 3)

SYSTEMATICS
The carapace width is about as wide as the carapace length; according to (Chace 1951), the carapace length: carapace width ratio equals to 1:0.91-1.12 which is about the ratio found in our specimen (Carapace Length: 20.0 mm; Carapace Width: 21.0 mm =1:1.05). The front is more than half the carapace width ( Fig. 3b) (Carpenter 2014). Specimen has small inner suborbital lobe with antenna entering the orbit. The dorsal surface of the carapace is almost smooth, lacking transverse grooves, ridges or granulations. The lateral margins of the carapace are convex (Fig. 3b), with surface of branchial regions faintly striate. The walking legs, strongly fringed with hairs, are long, slender and flattened (Chace 1951;Carpenter 2014). Propodus of last walking leg about 2 times as long as its maximum width (Fig. 3d) (Carpenter 2014). Chelae with prominent sharp granules around the lower margins with fixed finger bent abruptly downward (Fig. 3c) (Chace 1951). Fig. 1 Global distribution of Planes minutus (red) including the observation from this study (yellow). References largely adopted from Chace (1951) and WoRMS (2020) and references therein

Discussion
Crabs of the Planes genus are relatively small and can inhabit most floating objects in the open ocean. The relative abundance of these oceanic crabs is somewhat dependent on the abundance of floating objects and swimming organisms. The implications of the spread of anthropogenic marine debris may be relevant to the ecology of this specie. The observation of crabs of this genus on the tail or hind legs of sea turtles has suggested to some researchers that they may ingest the excrement of their host while other dietary studies suggest that they may also ingest the sessile epibiota on the host turtle's carapace and hunt neustonic organisms that swim close to the host turtle (Crane 1937;Frick et al. 2001).
Recent molecular studies suggest that the Planes genus currently has only two valid species, P. minutus and P.marinus; with previously known species, like P. cyaneus or P. major, being presently accepted as P. minutus (Pfaller et al., 2009b). The absence of remarkable striations on the branchial surfaces in this specimen indicate that the specimen is P. minutus and not P. marinus (Carpenter 2014). The specimen described in this paper is very similar to specimens that are described and illustrated by Chace (1951) and Carpenter (2014). The absence of crabs from this genus from previous studies on Grapsoid biodiversity from the Arabian Gulf and the Sea of Oman are perhaps due to the absence of research efforts in the investigation of chelonian epibiota. However, one previous study that included investigations of nesting loggerhead sea turtles from Oman seem to suggest that P. minutus does not occur in association with loggerheads from the Sea of Oman (Pfaller et al. 2019a(Pfaller et al. , 2019b. In fact, no documented record of this specie exists for the entire Northwestern Indian Ocean and none of the observations from the Indian Ocean were in association with marine turtles (Chace 1951). Though this is yet another observation of P. minutus from the Indian Ocean, this is the first record of P. minutus from the Sea of Oman and the Northwestern Indian Ocean.

Conclusions
This paper has described a new occurrence of P. minutus from the Eastern coast of the UAE, thus expanding the documented global distribution range of this specie to the Sea of Oman and Northwestern Indian Ocean. The frequency and nature of the symbiotic interactions of this specie with marine turtles in the Sea of Oman remains unknown and requires further sightings. However, this record does imply that this specie may occur in association with loggerhead sea turtles in the region that contains one of their most important nesting rockeries.