Strigamia chionophila Wood, 1862

Bonato, Lucio, Dányi, László, Socci, Antonio Augusto & Minelli, Alessandro, 2012, Species diversity of Strigamia Gray, 1843 (Chilopoda: Linotaeniidae): a preliminary synthesis, Zootaxa 3593, pp. 1-39 : 11

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.214898

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:56D84A4E-E8A7-4C78-8C58-F85BAA13B9DF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5613198

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A2607E-8765-FF8E-B398-FAEFFE14F854

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Strigamia chionophila Wood, 1862
status

 

Strigamia chionophila Wood, 1862 View in CoL

Synonym: Linotaenia miuropus Chamberlin, 1902 .

References for morphology: Meinert 1886; McNeill 1888; Chamberlin 1902 (sub Linotaenia miuropus ), 1911, 1912a; Johnson 1952.

Taxonomic notes. Described originally as a species of Strigamia View in CoL , it was assigned subsequently to Linotaenia , Scolioplanes View in CoL or Tomotaenia, until the classification under Strigamia View in CoL prevailed after Crabill (1954b). It was suspected to be identical to S. acuminata View in CoL ( Chamberlin 1920, 1923, 1925; Eason 1964), but most authors maintained it as a distinct species and assigned many new specimens to it. After direct examination of American and European specimens confidently representative of S. chionophila View in CoL and S. acuminata View in CoL respectively, we confirm that the two species differ consistently in the presence vs. absence of sulci between the pretergite and the intercalary pleurites of the ultimate leg-bearing segment, which is one of the major interspecific characters in the genus ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ).

Linotaenia miuropus was described by Chamberlin (1902), cited under Scolioplanes View in CoL by Attems (1929) and synonymized under S. chionophila View in CoL by the same Chamberlin (1925, 1961).

Distribution: northern and western part of North America, northwards to subarctic regions of Alaska and Canada, southwards to California along the Rocky Mountains, Kentucky and Virginia; extending westwards through the Aleutian Islands to at least the Behring Island. Published records of S. acuminata from Japan could actually refer to S. chionophila .

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