Mastigoceras Handschin, 1924
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1217.132351 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2D9F30D6-A5A6-45EA-8BCD-3BE4FA3D7E71 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14014383 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2353D4F8-7069-53D9-BEC3-DF3B1C829E35 |
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scientific name |
Mastigoceras Handschin, 1924 |
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Genus Mastigoceras Handschin, 1924 View in CoL
Type species.
Mastigoceras camponoti Handschin, 1924 .
Diagnosis.
Fusiform small hyaline ciliate scales, without ribs, present at least in dorso-anterior Th. III – Abd. III, present or absent on dorsal head, Th. II, and Abd. IV; antennae, legs, ventral tube, tenaculum and furca scaleless. Body also densely covered by secondary ciliate mic; dorsal macrochaetotaxy reduced. Antennae very long, 2–4 × the body length; antennae with five segments, Ant. I subdivided, Ant. II stiff or weakly annulated, Ant. III – IV longer than other segments, annulated and whip-like; Ant. IV apical bulb absent. Eyes 8 + 8, PAO present. Tergal sensilla and microsensilla formulae of Th. II – Abd. V as 1, 1 | 0, 3, 3, +, 9 and 1, 0 | 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, respectively. Th. II anterior (a) series, including the collar, with up to 17 mac. Abd. IV less than 1.5 × the length of Abd. III in the midline. Abd. VI of males short and rounded; of females long and conical. Trochanteral organ variably developed. Tenaculum without chaetae. Manubrium dorsally with one or two bothriotrichum-like chaetae; dens crenulate, without spines; mucro bidentate with the basal spine (adapted and updated from Handschin 1924; Cassagnau 1963; Mari-Mutt 1978; Cassagnau and Oliveira 1992).
Remarks.
Our updated diagnosis adds the tergal sensilla and microsensilla formulae to Mastigoceras , details on the distribution of body scales, and outlines the presence of the PAO. This last feature was overlooked in the original description of M. camponoti ( Handschin 1924) , along with its subsequent redescriptions ( Cassagnau 1963; Mari-Mutt 1978; Cassagnau and Oliveira 1992). However, we could confirm the presence of this structure in a specimen of M. camponoti from the type locality (Mariana municipality, south of Minas Gerais state, Brazil), as well as in Mastigoceras handschini sp. nov. In Mari-Mutt (1978: 46, fig. 8), there is a SEM picture of the right eyepatch of M. camponoti showing the PAO as a small cuticle fold in front of A eye lens.
The overall morphology of Mastigoceras species resembles other Entomobryoidea in several aspects. These shared features include the presence of a trochanteral organ and post-ocular bothriotricha, dorsal body covered with abundant secondary ciliate mic, alongside some larger ciliate mes and blunt mac, Abd. II – IV bothriotricha formula 2, 3, 2, and dens crenulate with a bidentate mucro holding the basal spine ( Soto-Adames et al. 2008). Even so, the disposition of Abd. IV bothriotricha in Mastigoceras is quite unusual, being posteriorly displaced (see Figs 4 E View Figure 4 , 6 F View Figure 6 ; Cassagnau and Oliveira 1992: 30, fig. 2 b). This condition does not relate with other Orchesellidae or Entomobryoidea ( Szeptycki 1979; Zhang et al. 2019; Nunes et al. 2020) and makes it difficult to understand the homology of the lateral chaetae on the same tergite.
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