Mecistocephalus chuensis Jiang & You, 2024
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1218.130709 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CA2375AE-0470-4D3D-9E7B-693425B25025 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14147720 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/123FE343-C5CC-500D-BB00-E5FECECCD806 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Mecistocephalus chuensis Jiang & You |
status |
sp. nov. |
Mecistocephalus chuensis Jiang & You sp. nov.
Figs 3 View Figure 3 , 4 View Figure 4
Material examined.
Holotype. • ♂; ( CMMI 20210409134 ); China, Hubei Province, Jingshan County, Kongshandong Scenic Area ; 30.9735 ° N, 113.0377 ° E; 110 m a. s. l.; 9 Apr. 2021; coll. Tianyun Chen & Zhidong Wang GoogleMaps . Paratypes. • 2 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀; ( CMMI 20210409130 -133); same data as holotype GoogleMaps . • 1 ♂, 7 ♀♀; ( CMMI 20210408121 -20210408124, - 129, - 131, - 132, - 134); Hubei Province, Wuhan, Ma’anshan Forest Park; 30.5146 ° N, 114.4394 ° E; 110 m a. s. l.; 8 Apr. 2021; coll. Tianyun Chen & Zhidong Wang GoogleMaps . • 1 ♀ ( CMMI 202100121008 ); Hunan Province, Hengyang, Chuanshan Ave ; 30.5146 ° N, 114.4394 ° E; 120 m a. s. l.; 12 Jan. 2021; coll. Chao Jiang GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis.
A Mecistocephalus species with 49 leg pairs. Head length-to-width ratio 1.77, each side of clypeus with five or six smooth insulae, clypeal ratio (areolate part / non-areolate part) of 1.22, sensilla on plagulae absent, posterior 1 / 2 of cephalic pleurite bearing a group of setae, forcipular cerrus composed of two paramedian rows of setae, mandible with ~ 8 well-developed lamellae, and first lamella with seven teeth. Sternal sulcus furcated at an obtuse angle.
Description.
Holotype ( CMMI 20210409134 ).
Body length: 58 mm; posterior part slightly slender. Head and forcipular segment dark red in color; remainder yellow.
Cephalic plate (Fig. 3 A-C View Figure 3 ): sub-rectangular, length-to-width ratio of 1.77; lateral margins slightly convergent backward, strongly convergent backward at proximal three-fourths, maximum width 2.88 mm; transverse suture protrudes to the back edge of the cephalic plate in an arc; two or three setae in the anterior of back side, punctate depressions interspersed throughout. Antennae 5.3 × as long as the head width. Apical sensilla ~ 8 μm long.
Clypeus (Fig. 3 D View Figure 3 ): clypeal ratio (areolate part / non-areolate part) ~ 1.22; five or six insulae on each side of clypeus, only four bearing setae on each side; the transverse suture of clypeal plagulae almost straight, sensilla inside plagulae absent.
Labrum (Fig. 3 D View Figure 3 ): anterior ala with medial margin not reduced to a vertex, medial margin ~ 1 / 3 of the length of posterior ala; mid piece protruding forward over side pieces; posterior margin of side pieces sinuous, concave or convex with respect to straight anterior margin; the hair-like fringes and projections on the labral side pieces absent, the comma-shaped sclerite lateral to the labral side pieces present.
Cephalic pleurite (Fig. 3 E View Figure 3 ): spiculum present, group of setae only on the posterior 1 / 2.
Mandible (Fig. 3 F View Figure 3 ): approximately eight well-developed lamellae; first lamella with seven teeth; average intermediate lamella with ~ 22 teeth; basal teeth as same size as distal teeth; basal tooth large, shorter than the teeth of the first lamella.
First maxillae (Fig. 3 G View Figure 3 ): antero-external corners of coxosternite protruding and short; coxosternite divided by mid-longitudinal sulcus, with eight or nine setigerous insulae on each side; coxal projection 1.2 × wider than long, eleven setae on medial marginal and clavate lappet present; telopodites 2.86 × longer than wide, clavate lappet present.
Second maxillae (Fig. 3 G View Figure 3 ): sclerotic ridge on the middle of coxosternite circumscribing three or four setigerous insulae; each side of coxosternite with setae on the lateral to each metameric pore; telopodite article I 1.4 × longer than wide; anterior end of article II with six surrounding setae; article III 2.78 × longer than wide, with distal end densely setose, pretarsus present, conical in shape.
Forcipular segment (Fig. 4 A, B View Figure 4 ): exposed part of the coxosternite with a width-to-length ratio of 0.68; cerrus composed of two convergent rows of setae and a pair of setae on each side. Forcipular trochanteroprefemur length-to-width ratio of 1.7, proximal tooth slightly smaller than the distal tooth; femur and tibia each with one tooth, equal in size; tarsungulum with two dark brown, small. basal teeth, one dorsal to the other.
Leg-bearing segments (Fig. 4 C, D View Figure 4 ): 49 leg-bearing segments; a few sternites with sternal sulcus and dispersed setae; sternal sulcus of anterior segments furcate, branches at an obtuse angle.
Ultimate leg-bearing segment (Fig. 4 E – H View Figure 4 ): metasternite trapezoidal, length-to-width ratio of 1; each coxopleuron covered with dense pore-field into the distal end ultimate leg telopodite with short setae, apical claw absent.
Postpedal segments (Fig. 4 E, G, H View Figure 4 ): male gonopods tapered and biarticulated.
Variation in paratypes.
Body length up to 64 mm, cephalic plate length-to-width ratio of 1.77–1.97, antennae length-to-head width ratio of 4.8–5.5, medial projection of first maxillae width-to-length ratio of 1.2–2.14 and telopodites length-to-width ratio of 1.43–2.86, telopodites article I of second maxillae length-to-width ratio of 4–6.88, article III ratio of 2.78–3.18, forcipular trochanteroprefemur length-to-width ratio of 1.27–1.7, exposed part of coxosternite length-to-width ratio of 0.68–0.79. Female gonopods also biarticulated.
Remarks.
As shown in Table 5 View Table 5 , M. megittii Verhoeff, 1937 , M. stenoceps Chamberlin, 1944 , M. enigmus Chamberlin, 1944 and M. chuensis sp. nov. are similar in the numbers of leg-bearing segments, furcate sternal sulcus and clypeal ratio, but other features distinguish them. Mecistocephalus megittii notably differs from M. chuensis sp. nov. in the presence of a large tooth on the tarsungulum (only a small tooth at the base of the tarsungulum in the latter) and the presence of one or two setae on each side of clypeus (3 setae on each side of clypeus in the latter) ( Attems 1947).
Similarly, the other two species and M. chuensis sp. nov. can be distinguished by the location of the setae and presence or absence of a tooth on the forcipular femur. The clypeus of M. stenoceps Chamberlin has a series of three setae in a transverse row on each side farther anteriorly than in M. chuensis sp. nov., and M. enigmus lacks a femoral tooth ( Chamberlin 1944), which is present in M. chuensis sp. nov.
Distribution.
China (Hubei, Hunan).
Etymology.
The specific name is derived from its distribution in Hunan Province and Hubei Province, where “ Chu ” in ancient China usually referred to these regions.
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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