Cryptops (Trigonocryptops) bottegii Silvestri, 1897

Simaiakis, Stylianos Michail & Edgecombe, Gregory D., 2013, Scolopendromorph centipedes (Chilopoda: Scolopendromorpha) in the Natural History Museum (London): A review of the hitherto unidentified species collected in Africa, with remarks on taxonomy and distribution, and a new species of Otostigmus (Parotostigmus), Zootaxa 3734 (2), pp. 169-198 : 171

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3734.2.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:36ED88E6-2CEB-4071-8429-A39901B8B9BF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5271259

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B68458-FFB2-FFF5-FF56-A9C7FBA5F90F

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Felipe (2021-08-25 21:13:36, last updated by Plazi 2023-11-04 20:07:28)

scientific name

Cryptops (Trigonocryptops) bottegii Silvestri, 1897
status

 

1. Cryptops (Trigonocryptops) bottegii Silvestri, 1897

Material examined. Sokotra Isl. : Kischen, September 1917, 3 exx., BMNH?. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ) .

Type locality. Somalia (between Matagoi and Lugh) ( Minelli et al. 2006) .

General distribution. East Tropical Africa: Tanzania ( TZ); Northeast Tropical Africa: Sokotra Isl. ( YE) (new region record), Somalia (SO) ( Minelli et al. 2006).

Remarks. The largest of the three specimens in the sample from Sokotra is just 17 mm long, compared to material used in previous descriptions (38 mm: Kraepelin 1903; 45 mm: Silvestri 1897; 60 mm: Attems 1910). The NHM specimens have relatively few marginal setae on the coxosternal margin (4+4, 5+5, 6+5 setae) and have fewer saw teeth on the ultimate leg (9 or 10 teeth on the tibia, three on tarsus 1) than in larger specimens from Somilia or Tanzania. Attems (1930) summarized the latter as having 15–16 teeth on the tibia and three, five or six on tarsus 1. The former count is based on the largest known specimen ( Attems 1910), and we attribute the difference to ontogeny; the 27 mm long specimen on which Ribaut (1914) based a subspecies from Kenya, C. (T.) bottegii kenyae, resembles the Sokotra specimens in having 6+6 setae on the coxosternal margin and three saw teeth on tarsus 1. The Sokotra specimens show the distal spinose processes on the inner side of the ultimate leg prefemur, outer side of the femur, and both sides of the tibia noted in other material, as well as complete paramedian sutures on the head and TT1–20.

Although the Sokotra Archipelago ( Yemen) is the largest and biologically most diverse island group in the Arabian Region ( Van Damme and Banfield 2011), in terms of biodiversity the island of Sokotra is mainly influenced by East Africa, being situated about 100 km east of the Horn of Africa.

Attems, C. (1910) Myriopoden von Madagaskar den Comoren und den Inseln Ostafrikas. In: Voeltzkow A. (ed.) Reise in Ostafrika. Schweizerbart'sche E. Nagele & Dr. Sproessner, Stuttgart, 3, pp. 73 - 115.

Attems, C. (1930) Myriapoda 2. Scolopendromorpha. In: Schulze, F. E. & Kukenthal, W. (Eds.), Das Tierreich, 54. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, pp. 1 - 308.

Kraepelin, K. (1903) Revision der Scolopendriden. Jahrbuch der Hamburgischen wissenschaftlichen Anstalten, 20 (2), 1 - 276.

Minelli, A., Bonato, L., Dioguardi, R., Chagas, J. A., Edgecombe, G. D., Lewis, J. G. E., Pereira, L. A., Shelley, R. M., Stoev, P., Uliana, M. & Zapparoli, M. (2006 and onwards). CHILOBASE. A web resource for Chilopoda taxonomy.

Ribaut, H. (1914) Myriapodes I. Chilopoda. In: Voyage de Ch. Alluaud et R. Jeannel en Afrique orientale (1911 - 1912). Resultats scientifiques. A. Schulz, Paris, pp. 1 - 35.

Silvestri, F. (1897) Chilopodi e diplopodi raccolti dal cap. V. Bottego durante il suo secondo viaggio nelle regioni dei Somali e dei Galla. Annali del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova, 17 (3), 301 - 307.

Van Damme, K & Banfield, L (2011) Past and present human impacts on the biodiversity of Socotra Island (Yemen): implications for future conservation. Biodiversity Conservation in the Arabian Peninsula. Zoology in the Middle East, Supplementum, 3, 31 - 88.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 2. Cryptops (Trigonocryptops) bottegii, C. (T.) gigas, Alipes appendiculatus, A. calcipes and A. grandidieri, distribution records of specimens from Africa housed in the NHM collection.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Brachyceridae

Genus

Cryptops