Antichiropus forcipatus Car, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4617.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:50F4058E-2871-4B5B-97D2-1CB216841C1E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10447980 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/732F43CA-D58B-4C2E-8DC6-EDF5F92B0185 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:732F43CA-D58B-4C2E-8DC6-EDF5F92B0185 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Antichiropus forcipatus Car |
status |
sp. nov. |
Antichiropus forcipatus Car , n. sp.
( Figs 15 View FIGURE 15 A–F, 16)
ZooBank: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:732F43CA-D58B-4C2E-8DC6-EDF5F92B0185
Type material examined. Australia: Western Australia: holotype male, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’32.00”S, 119°06’54.01”E, 19 June–28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T107886 About WAM , GenBank accession number 12S, MK 735757 View Materials ; 28S, MK 735817 View Materials ; COI, MK 735872 View Materials ; COIII, MK 735939 View Materials ; CytB, MK 735991 View Materials ) GoogleMaps . Paratype: 1 male, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’32.00”S, 119°06’54.01”E, 19 June–28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T107885 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735871 View Materials ) GoogleMaps .
Other material examined. Australia: Western Australia: 1 female, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’56.01”S, 119°05’27.06”E, 19 June–28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in gorge, P. Bolton ( WAM T107862 About WAM , Gen- Bank accession number COI, MK 735866 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile (damaged) Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°11’15.06”S, 119°05’57.09”E, 22 June 2010, hand collected in sandstone gorge, P. Bolton ( WAM T107866 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735867 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile (damaged) Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°11’15.06”S, 119°05’57.09”E, 22 June–28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap, sandstone gorge, P. Bolton ( WAM T107867 About WAM ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’55.08”S, 119°05’19.07”E, 17 June 2010, hand collected on east facing ridge, P. Bolton ( WAM T107879 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735868 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’55.08”S, 119°05’19.07”E, 17 June–28 July 2010, wet pitfall on east facing ridge, P. Bolton ( WAM T107882 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735869 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile (damaged), Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’32.00”S, 119°06’54.01”E, 19 June 2010, hand collected from gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T107884 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735870 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 2 juveniles (damaged), Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’42.06”S, 119°05’55.02”E, 18 June–28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T107887 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735873 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’42.06”S, 119°05’55.02”E, 18 June– 28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T107888 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735874 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’46.09”S, 119°06’23.03”E, 18 June–28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in north facing gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T107890 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735875 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 female (damaged), Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’46.09”S, 119°06’23.03”E, 18 June 2010 – 28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in north facing gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T107891 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735876 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 female, Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’32.00”S, 119°06’54.01”E, 19 June 2010 – 28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T 112613 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735878 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 6 juveniles, ca. 150 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’17.24”S, 119°11’48”E, 22 January 2012, hand collected, drainage line, A. Scarfone ( WAM T120055 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735880 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 4 juveniles, ca. 150 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’17.24”S, 119°11’48”E, 22 January 2012, hand collected, drainage line, P. Bolton,. ( WAM T120056 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735881 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, ca. 150 km W. Marble Bar, 21°07’36.66”S, 119°12’07.07”E, 23 January 2012, hand collected, drainage line, P. Bolton ( WAM T120057 About WAM , GenBank accession number 12S, MK 735760 View Materials ; 28S, MK 735820 View Materials ; COI, MK 735882 View Materials ; COIII, MK 735941 View Materials ; CytB, MK 735992 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, ca. 150 km W. Marble Bar, 21°07’03.15”S, 119°11’40.95”E, 25 January 2012, hand collected, creekline, A. Scarfone ( WAM T120058 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735883 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 7 juveniles, ca. 150 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’17.24”S, 119°11’48”E, 25 January 2012, hand collected, creekline, P. Bolton ( WAM T120059 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735884 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 2 females, ca. 150 km W. Marble Bar, 21°05’53.19”S, 119°11’10.93”E, 25 January 2012, hand collected, riverine, P. Bolton ( WAM T120060 About WAM , GenBank accession number COI, MK 735885 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 male (posterior segments removed), 27.5 km ENE. of Wodgina, Pilbara Biological Survey site MBW03, 21°03’46”S, 118°54’40”E, 23 September 2005 – 15 May 2006, in ethylene glycol, CALM staff (Pilbara Biological Survey) ( WAM T124509 About WAM , GenBank accession number 28S, MK 735824 View Materials ) GoogleMaps ; 1 male (damaged), 30 km NE. of Wodgina, 21°01’52”S, 118°54’38”E, 23 September 2005 – 15 May 2006, in ethylene glycol, CALM staff (Pilbara Biological Survey) ( WAM T137456 About WAM ) GoogleMaps ; 2 males (1 badly damaged), 3 females, 3 juveniles, ca. 150 km W. of Marble Bar, 21°07’36.66”S, 119°12’07.07”E, 23 January 2012, hand collected, P. Bolton ( WAM T146709 About WAM ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile (damaged), Abydos, ca. 64 km W. Marble Bar, 21°08’46.09”S, 119°06’23.03”E, 18 June 2010 – 28 July 2010, wet pitfall trap in north facing gully, P. Bolton ( WAM T146710 About WAM ) GoogleMaps ; 1 male (posterior segments removed), 1 female, 2 juveniles (badly damaged), 27.5 km ENE. of Wodgina, Pilbara Biological Survey site MBW03, 21°03’46”S, 118°54’40”E, 23 September 2005 – 15 May 2006, in ethylene glycol, CALM staff (Pilbara Biological Survey) ( WAM T146712 About WAM ) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, 30 km NE. of Wodgina, 21°01’52”S, 118°54’38”E, 23 September 2005 – 15 May 2006, in ethylene glycol, CALM staff (Pilbara Biological Survey) ( WAM T146713 About WAM ) GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. Gonopod: there are a number of species in the Pilbara region with relatively slender, upright gonopod femorites, the most similar to A. forcipatus Car , n. sp. being A. procerus Car , n. sp. ( Fig 29 View FIGURE 29 ) and A. sloanae Car , n. sp. ( Fig 36 View FIGURE 36 ). Antichiropus forcipatus . is distinguishable by its long pointed solenomere process and a slender solenomere tip: A. procerus and A. sloanae . have leaf-like solenomere tips. In four species, A. forcipatus , A. uvulus Car , n. sp. ( Fig 38 View FIGURE 38 ), A. nicholasi Car , n. sp. ( Fig 23 View FIGURE 23 ) and A. julianneae Car , n. sp. ( Fig 20 View FIGURE 20 ), the solenomere appears to sit at right angles to the femorite when viewed anteriorly; the latter two are easily distinguished from the former by their curved femorites. Antichiropus forcipatus and A. uvulus both have a well-developed solenomere process, but that of A. forcipatus is long and pointed, while that of A. uvulus is short and triangular.
Description. Male holotype: Body ca. 20 mm long; midbody ring ca. 1.5 mm wide, with distinct, smooth waist, prozonite and metazonite of similar width.
Colour (in alcohol) dark brown overall, paler ventrally ( Fig 15A View FIGURE 15 ); leg colour as for body. No paranota on posterior rings ( Fig 15B View FIGURE 15 ).
Sternites without obvious processes/tubercles, sternal lamella very broad, helmet-shaped. Leg coxal processes absent. Anterior spiracles at midbody flat.
Head smooth, without noticeable sculpturing; frons smooth, with some setae; face narrow, cardines and stipes visible when viewed face-on, maximum width ca. 3x the distance between antennal sockets; sockets separated by ca. 1.5x width of socket.
Antennae of moderate length, reaching to ring 2, not obviously clavate, antennomeres 5 and 6 only slightly wider than proximal ones and relatively slender.
Collum ca. 1x as long as head (in lateral view) ( Fig 15A View FIGURE 15 ).
Gonopod of medium length, reaching posterior edge of ring 5; coxa (C) (damaged in figure) more robust and shorter than femorite with slight ridge on anterior surface; prefemur (PF) considerably shorter than femorite, slightly setose, pronounced prefemoral lip; femorite (F) ca. 2/3 of acropodite length in situ, upright, with a slight narrowing near the apex in medial view; main femoral process (MFP) long (to ca. 1/2 solenomere length), large, relatively broad, asymmetrically pointed; second femoral process (fp1) absent; prolongation of femorite (prof) squat, broad, triangular, coming to a point, ca. 1/3 solenomere length; solenomere (S) relatively short, appearing L-shaped in posterior view, narrower than femorite, of similar thickness along its length to solenomere process 1 (sp1), then narrowing into a rounded end with a small point; solenomere appears to be held at right angles to femorite in posterior and anterior views; solenomere process (sp1) in apical 1/3 of solenomere, as long as prolongation of femorite, large, narrowly pointed, held at right angles to solenomere when viewed posteriorly and anteriorly (Figs 15C–F).
Female: Very similar to male but slightly broader (ca. 2 mm) with a less defined waist on the paranota when viewed dorsally, and stouter when viewed laterally: shorter more slender legs than male (WAM T120057).
Distribution. This species is known only from the Marble Bar area of the Pilbara (as are several other species). This area was originally leased out to pastoralists but has now been extensively mined. It is interesting that, while paradoxosomatids are sensitive to desiccation, several species thrive in Marble Bar, one of the hottest, driest loca- tions in Western Australia (Fig 16).
Remarks. The single juveniles and females listed are assumed to be A. forcipatus as they were collected from the same location and at the same time as the males.
Etymology. This species is named for the shape and position of both the solenomere tip and the solenomere process, together resembling a pair of tongs (Latin, noun, forcipatus, pincers, tongs).
WAM |
Western Australian Museum |
MK |
National Museum of Kenya |
COI |
University of Coimbra Botany Department |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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