Abstract

A recent field trip to Sicily and an examination of decapod crustacean collections at the Museo Geologico G.G. Gemmellaro in the centre of Palermo, Sicily (Italy), has demonstrated that most of the anomuran and brachyuran material described by Gemmellaro (Gemmellaro GG. 1869. Studi paleontologici sulla fauna del Calcare àTerebratula janitordel nord di Sicilia. Palermo: Lao, vol. 1, pp. 11–18) from the Tithonian of that island is still present. Interestingly, a single specimen in this lot was never mentioned, described or illustrated by that author. The species to which this particular individual is here shown to belong,Gastrosacus tuberosus, was first described and named 26 years later, in 1895, by Remeš. The holotype ofG. tuberosus(Remeš M. 1895. Beiträge zur Kenntniss der Crustaceen der Stramberger Schichten.Bulletin international de l'Académie des Sciences de l'Empereur François Joseph I, Classe des Sciences mathématiques et naturelle2: 200–201) has recently been rediscovered; this shows that bothGalathea eminensBlaschke (Blaschke F. 1911. Zur Tithonfauna von Stramberg in Mähren.Annalen des kaiserlich-königlichen Naturhistorischen Hofmuseums25: 143–221) andGalatheites tuberosiformusLőrenthey,inLőrenthey and Beurlen (Lőrenthey E, Beurlen K. 1929. Die fossilen Dekapoden der Länder der Ungarischen Krone.Geologica Hungarica3: 1–420) are junior synonyms. The Sicilian record constitutes the southernmost mention ofG. tuberosusto date.

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