Odontodactylus hawaiiensis Manning, 1967
(Fig. 1 B)
Odontodactylus japonicus .— Bigelow 1893: 145, pl. 1, fig. 1; 1931: 145, pl.1 fig. 1 [not O. japonicus (De Haan, 1844)]. Odontodactylus hawaiiensis Manning, 1967: 16 –18, fig. 4, pl. 1 [type locality: off Maui Island, Hawaiian Islands].— Moosa 1991: 161 –162.— Ahyong 2001: 79.— Retamal 2002: 73 –75, fig. 1.— Ahyong 2002b: 829 –830; 2012a: 36–39, fig. 16, 17, frontispiece 1C.
Odontodactylus brevirostris .— Manning 1991: 4.—Webber et al. 2010: 136, 218. [Not O. brevirostris (Miers, 1884)].
Material examined. AUSTRAL ISLANDS. Bass Islands: MNHN IU- 2016-9515, 2 females (TL 66–78 mm), Neilson Reef, 27°03.58'S, 146°03.84'W, 120–203 m, BENTHAUS stn CP 1920, 11 November 2002 ; MNHN IU- 2016-9516, 1 male (TL 77 mm), 1 female (TL 73 mm), Neilson Reef, 27°03.76'S, 146°03.81'W, 150–160 m, BENTHAUS stn CP 1921, 11 November 2002 ; MNHN IU- 2016-9517, 2 females (TL 76–80 mm), Neilson Reef, 27°03.67'S, 146°03.93'W, 150–163 m, BENTHAUS stn CP 1922, 11 November 2002.
Remarks. The specimens agree well with published accounts. The dactyli of the raptorial claws bear 7 or 8 teeth on the occlusal margin and a posterolateral spine is present on abdominal somite 5 and usually also on abdominal somite 4.
Distribution. Philippines, New Caledonia, the Kermadec Islands, Tonga, Hawaiian Islands, Easter Island, and for the first time from French Polynesia; 109– 276 m.