Geotypodon papei, Enghoff, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2018.394 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:94028C61-FAC5-4A21-BF2D-A75BBF3CCC4D |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5613976 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3D36FD3A-B534-422E-8354-D0EDCAB2A748 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:3D36FD3A-B534-422E-8354-D0EDCAB2A748 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Geotypodon papei |
status |
sp. nov. |
Geotypodon papei sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:3D36FD3A-B534-422E-8354-D0EDCAB2A748
Fig. 3 View Fig. 3
Diagnosis
Differs from all other species of Geotypodon , except. G. carli ( Kraus, 1960) , by the combination of a very long, slender metaplical spine and a relatively simple telomere mainly consisting of a longitudinally folded sheet. Differs from G. carli by the shape of the basad, metaplical, spine-like process (spine strongly expanded in basal part in G. papei sp. nov., not so in G. carli ). See also Table 1 View Table 1 .
Etymology
The name honours Thomas Pape, collector of the holotype and a leading figure in the Eastern Arc program of the Natural History Museum of Demark.
Material studied (total: 3 ♂♂)
Holotype
TANZANIA: ♂, MorogoroRegion, UdzungwaMountainsNationalPark,SanjeChiniCamp , 07°46′24.6′′S, 36°53′47.7′′ E, 598 m a.s.l., 17–19 Jan. 2014, T. Pape leg. ( ZMUC). GoogleMaps
Paratypes
TANZANIA: 1♂, Morogoro Region, Udzungwa Ecological Monitoring Centre, Mang’ula , 07°50′44.9′′ S, 36°53′28.2′′ E, 339 m a.s.l., 18–20 Jan. 2014, T. Pape and N. Scharff leg. ( ZMUC) GoogleMaps ; 1 ♂, Morogoro Region, Udzungwa Mountains National Park, Kidatu , Plot 1 , 07°41′13.8′′ S, 36°56′28.6′′ E, 650 m a.s.l., 24 Oct. 2014, pitfall trap. J. Malumbres-Olarte leg. ( ZMUC). GoogleMaps
Description
Male
SIZE. Length 5–6 cm, diameter 4.5–4.6 mm, 53–55 podous rings, no apodous rings in front of telson.
COLOUR. After 3 years in alcohol, head reddish brown to dark brown, antennae dark brown, collum, body rings and telson dark grey without contrasting markings, posterior ¼ of metazona amber, legs reddish brown.
HEAD. Without peculiarities. Seven or eight supralabral setae.
COLLUM. With a marginal and two submarginal furrows.
BODY RINGS. Almost perfect cylinders, not vaulted; suture straight; ozopores starting from ring 6, placed midway between suture and limbus. 13–15 metazonital striae, reaching up to ca one metazonite length below ozopore.
ANAL VALVES. Each with a stout dorsal spine; ventrally slightly angular; margins raised; each valve with three marginal setae not borne on tubercles.
LIMBUS ( Fig. 3C View Fig. 3 ). Consisting of isolated hand-like lobes with a length of ca 10 μm, each with 5–9 ‘fingers’ and each with two ridges running along its length.
MALE LEGS. With tiny postfemoral ventral pads from leg-pair 3–5, from leg-pair 6 postfemoral pads large, covering entire podomere, but gradually smaller posteriorly before disappearing completely shortly before posterior end. Tibiae with tiny ventral pads from leg-pair 3 until somewhere between gonopods and mid-body.
GONOPOD COXA ( Fig. 3B View Fig. 3 ). Slender, almost parallel-sided. Proplica (pp) simple, ending in small proplical lobe hidden from view by metaplical spinelike process (msp). Metaplica (mp) with small, basal, anteriad flange (mf); subdistally with angular process (ap); distally terminating in very long, slender, sigmoid spine (tsp); on anterior side with long, pointed, basally expanded, basad spine-like process (msp).
GONOPOD TELOPODITE ( Fig. 3A, D–G View Fig. 3 ). Arculus 90°. Torsotope (tt) simple, without processes ( Fig. 2D View Fig.2 ). Post-torsal narrowing (pn) not very pronounced, yet distinct ( Fig. 2D View Fig.2 ). Telopodite just distal to posttorsal narrowing dividing into simple, slender solenomere and equally long, narrow, almost parallelsided telomere. Solenomere (slm) resting in curvature of telomere ( Fig. 3A, D View Fig. 3 ), terminally taeniate, with thumb-like process (thp) at very tip ( Fig. 3F View Fig. 3 ). Telomere (tm) with stout, curved proximal spine (pst) ( Fig. 2D View Fig.2 ); main body of telomere a long, parallel-sided sheet, folded longitudinally and then curved in almost complete circle, abruptly narrower at ca ⅔ of its length ( Fig. 3D–E, G View Fig. 3 ).
Female
Unknown.
Remarks
In the genus key of Kraus (1966), Geotypodon papei sp. nov. easily keys out in the last couplet (33), where the choice is between Patinatius Attems, 1928 and Odontopyge Brandt, 1841. In the couplet, the two genera are distinguished by Patinatius having the “Lateralblatt” prolonged into a cone or extended into a long spine vs Odontopyge not having such modifications. Couplet 33 in Kraus (1966) is copied from couplet 33 in Kraus (1960) with the difference that in the 1960 version, this couplet separates Odontopygista Kraus, 1960 from Odontopyge. Kraus (1966) synonymised Odontopygista with Patinatius . In both versions of couplet 33, Kraus made an error because the part of the gonopod coxa that has a cone- or spine-like outgrowth is the metaplica, which in Kraus’ terminology is the “Medialblatt” (as also used in his genus and species descriptions). This aside, one might argue that the long, sigmoid terminal spine (tsp) could be the homologue of such a ”long spine”, but Geotypodon papei sp. nov. disagrees with the definition of Patinatius in several respects, including the limbus (spatulate and multicusped in Geotypodon papei sp. nov., rounded lobes in Patinatius ), the internal surface of the telomere (smooth in Geotypodon papei sp. nov., with a row of denticles in Patinatius ) and the tip of the solenomere (“thumb and lamella” in Geotypodon papei sp. nov., simply pointed in Patinatius ). Geotypodon papei sp. nov. therefore keys out to Odontopyge in Kraus’ keys, and as explained by Enghoff (2016a) this generic name is not available for other than a small group of species very different from Geotypodon papei sp. nov. In the key to species of “ Odontopyge ” in Kraus (1960), Geotypodon papei . sp. nov. smoothly keys out to carli Kraus, 1960 , one of the species that was transferred to Geotypodon by Enghoff (2016a), and the two species are indeed very similar. There are, however, enough differences to regard them as separate species, cf. Table 1 View Table 1 .
Distribution
Known from three sites in the northeastern part of the Udzungwa Mts, at moderate altitudes (339–650 m a.s.l.).
G. papei | G. carli (data from Kraus 1960) | |
---|---|---|
Podous body rings | 53–55 | 61 (“62 Segmente”) |
Diameter | 4.5–4.6 mm | 4.6 mm |
Supralabral setae | 7–8 | 4 |
Metazonital striae | 13–16 | ≈ 6 |
Metaplical spine-like process | with a large mesad lobe at base | without a basal lobe |
Telomere | abruptly narrower at ca ⅔ of length | gradually a little narrower towards end |
Solenomere | tip apparently with “finger”, as in Fig. 3F, but difficult to see | simple, according to drawing |
Provenance | Tanzania: Udzungwa Mountains National Park, 339–650 m a.s.l. | Democratic Republic of the Congo: Kivi, Kabare, Fizi M’Boko, 800 m a.s.l. |
ZMUC |
Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen |
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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