Newportia (Newportia) tequendama, Jiménez & Chagas-Jr, 2023

Jiménez, Sebastian Galvis & Chagas-Jr, Amazonas, 2023, Three new centipede species of the genus Newportia Gervais, 1847 from Colombia (Scolopendromorpha, Scolopocryptopidae, Newportiinae), Zootaxa 5361 (3), pp. 323-344 : 334-338

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5361.3.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1350F676-2467-43AE-9DB4-6725DBE65708

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10169031

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BED61E-7929-FFEC-57AE-F41CFEE4263F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Newportia (Newportia) tequendama
status

sp. nov.

Newportia (Newportia) tequendama sp. nov.

Figs 29–41 View FIGURES 29–31 View FIGURES 32–35 View FIGURES 36–37 View FIGURES 38–40 View FIGURE 41

Type material examined. Specimen not sexed, holotype from COLOMBIA: Reserva Natural Los Tunos, San Antonio del Tequendama , Cundinamarca (2225 m), 22.05.2012, leg. A. Chagas-Jr., S. Galvis, D. Triana and E. Chaparro ( ICN.MCh-0277) . Paratype: same data as holotype, specimen not sexed ( ICN.MCh-1271) .

Diagnosis. Cephalic plate without paramedian sutures. Anterior margin of forcipular coxosternite straight. Tergite 1 with an anterior transverse suture and incomplete paramedian sutures, only evident in the posterior margin of tergite 1 and immediately behind the anterior transverse suture. Legs 2–20 with only a lateral tibial spur and without tarsal spurs. Tarsi 1–22 clearly biarticulated. Prefemur of terminal legs with a series of four ventral spinous processes. Femur with small medial spinous process. Tibia with distal narrowing to a diameter similar to that of tarsus 1. Tarsi without a clear division between tarsus 1 and 2. Tarsus 2 not divided into different articles.

Etymology. The name of this species refers to the type locality, Tequendama. A noun in apposition.

Description of holotype.

Body length. 28.5mm; length of the ultimate legs: 8.8mm.

Color in alcohol. uniform dark yellow ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 29–31 ).

Antennae. right with 17 articles and left with 16 ( Fig. 30 View FIGURES 29–31 ); three basal articles with some long setae, subsequent articles densely hairy. The first basal article is ventrally depigmented.

Cephalic plate. smooth, longer than wide, with a median sulcus below the anterior margin, and without paramedian sutures ( Figs 30 and 31 View FIGURES 29–31 ).

Forcipular segment. forcipular coxosternite surface without sutures and sulci with only subcondylic chitinous lines ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 32–35 ). Anterior margin of the forcipular coxosternite straight, with two long chitinous lobes reaching the lateral margin of the trochanteroprefemur, separated by a median diastema ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 32–35 ).

Locomotory legs. podomere surface with setae of different sizes. Legs 2–20 with only a lateral tibial spur. Without tarsal spurs. Tarsi 1–22 clearly biarticulated. Tarsus 1 and 2 longer than the tibia. Pretarsi long, with accessory spines.

Tergites. Tergite 1 partially overlapped by the posterior margin of the cephalic plate ( Figs 30 and 31 View FIGURES 29–31 ). Tergite 1 with complete anterior transverse sutures and incomplete paramedian sutures; transverse sutures in the posterior margin of tergite 1 interrupted by very short incomplete paramedian sutures ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 29–31 ). Tergites 2–22 with complete paramedian sutures. Tergites 3–18 bearing oblique sutures. Tergites 2–21 with lateral longitudinal sutures ( Figs 33 and 34 View FIGURES 32–35 ). Tergite 23 longer than wide. Metatergites only visible at tergite 18.

Sternites. trapeziform. Sternites 2–22 and two incomplete lateral sutures. Sternites 2–21 with an incomplete median sulcus ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 32–35 ). Sternite 23 longer than wide, trapeziform, with posterior margin concave ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 36–37 ). Endosternites absent.

Coxopleuron. partially covered by pores of different sizes. Only a narrow band without pores observed near the superior margin. Coxopleural surface with few setae. Coxopleural process short. Posterior dorsal margin triangular ( Figs 36 and 37 View FIGURES 36–37 ).

Ultimate legs. prefemur (1.6mm) sub-triangular in transverse section, with a row of four ventral spinous processes, three proximal ones close to each other, and distal one more separate ( Figs 38 and 40 View FIGURES 38–40 ). Femur (1.7mm) cylindrical, with basal medial spinous process longer than ventral spinous processes of prefemur ( Figs 38 and 40 View FIGURES 38–40 ). Tibia (1.4mm) cylindrical, without a spinous process, shorter than the femur, with a distal narrowing that generates a diameter similar to tarsus 1 ( Figs 38–40 View FIGURES 38–40 ). Tarsi (4.1mm) divided uniformly, without a clear distinction between tarsus 1 and the beginning of tarsus 2. Tarsus 2 not clearly divided into different segments ( Figs 38–40 View FIGURES 38–40 ). Ultimate legs without pretarsus.

Variation in paratypes. The individual analyzed ( ICN.Mch 1271) showed variation in the number of antennal segments compared to the holotype, in this case the individual has the same number of segments (17) in each antenna.

Habitat and sympatric species. The ecosystem where the species was found have the same characteristics in terms of vegetation, humidity, and precipitation as the type locality of N. anopla sp. nov. Only N. monticola Pocock, 1890 , has been recorded in the same locality ( Chagas-Jr et al. 2014).

Distribution. Known only from the type locality, in the central region of the country in the eastern Cordillera ( Fig. 41 View FIGURE 41 ).

ICN

Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Museo de Historia Natural

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