Jeekelosoma heptarachne, Enghoff & Reboleira, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.523 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0108D1A3-49B5-4EEE-8152-7714CDD17F3E |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E087EE-FF9B-2C70-FDE7-FEE27233F842 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Jeekelosoma heptarachne |
status |
sp. nov. |
Jeekelosoma heptarachne sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:F43040BD-C8DA-474A-94CD-A9FB3B9202C6
Figs 5–8 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig
Diagnosis
A species of Jeekelosoma with 17 podous rings, with the ozopores borne on chimney-like outgrowths each provided with several macrosetae, with extremely long legs, and without a horizontal row of tubercles on podous rings 5–17.
Etymology
The name is a noun in apposition, composed of Greek ‘hepta’ (= seven) and ‘arachne’ (= spider). A male of the new species has 28 pairs of long, thin walking legs and thus (somewhat) resembles a row of seven spiders.
Material examined
Holotype
MOROCCO • 3; Tazentout , cave Wit Tamdoun; 9 Aug. 1971; C. Ribera leg.; MZB 73-2849 View Materials .
Paratypes MOROCCO • 3 ♀♀; same collecting data data as for holotype; MZB 73-2849 View Materials , MZB 71-8589 View Materials , MZB 71-8590 View Materials • 1 ♂; in part mounted on two SEM stubs; MZB 71-8592 View Materials • 1 ♀; NHMD 302023 .
Description
Male SIZE. Body length ca 8 mm, max. width 0.63 mm, 19 ‘segments’ (17 podous rings + 1 apodous ring + telson).
HEAD. As in J. abadi , but densely covered by long setae. Length of antennae 3.1 × max. body width. Relative length of antennomeres 2–8: 18 / 20 / 17 / 16 / 20 / 7 / 2.3.
COLLUM. As in J. abadi , but setae much longer.
MIDBODY RINGS ( Fig. 6 View Fig A–C). Very narrow/elongated, length of metazona equaling maximum width. Body extremely narrow in anterior part, maximum width attained a little behind midbody; from there until and including ring 18 (the apodous ring in front of telson) body parallel-sided. Surface of metazona with very pronounced microcellulate structure, borders between cuticular scutes raised. Metazona with diameter increasing towards rear margin and with a clear constriction at ca ¹/3 of its length, measured from rear margin; posterior margin of rings finely crenulate but without a proper limbus. Each metazona with three rows of long, rather stout setae borne on distinct tubercles; each row on midbody rings with ca 10 setae; anterior row curving posteriad laterally; intermediate row situated just behind constriction. Metazonal setae much longer than in J. abadi (cf. Fig. 2 View Fig ). No horizontal row of tubercles, but lateral parts of anterior row appearing as oblique row of tubercles in lateral view.
OZOPORES ( Fig. 6 View Fig G–H). On cylindrical peritremata, with 4–5 long, stout setae in a group anterodorsally to pore.
LEGS ( Fig. 6C View Fig , E–F). Length 2.25 × max. body width. Relative length of podomeres: prefemur: 12 / femur: 30 / postfemur: 7 / tibia: 11 / tarsus: 35 / claw: 2.4. Femora clearly longer than body diameter, no distal swelling. No scopulae.
TELSON. As in J. abadi .
GONOPODAL APERTURE ( Fig. 6D View Fig ). Transverse elliptical, with a small median process originating on posterior margin.
GONOPODS ( Figs 7–8 View Fig View Fig ). Coxa (cx) slightly convex on anterior surface; prefemoral part (prf) slightly more than half as long as acropodite; mesal acropodital process (map) a simple broad, dorso-ventrally flattened structure; solenophore (sph) as long as map, slender, apically with a subrectangular lamella (sph‑a) with distal corners drawn out into long processes, but without a terminal appendage; solenomere (slm) slender, simple, largely concealed within sph.
Female
Non-sexual characters as in male, except:
SIZE. Body length 10–13 mm, max. width 0.58–0.80 mm.
ANTENNAE. Length in largest female 2.0 × max. body width. Relative length of antennomeres 2–8: 18 / 18 / 16 / 16 / 21 / 7 / 3.
LEGS. Length in largest female 1.8 × max. body width. Relative length of podomeres: prefemur: 13 / femur: 32 / postfemur: 8 / tibia: 11 / tarsus: 34 / claw: 2.4.
Distribution and habitat
Known only from “Tazentout, cave Wit Tamdoun”. This cave ( Bichain 2008) is also home to a rove beetle Domene cantonsi Español, 1972 known only from this and two further Moroccan caves ( Hernando 2007), and to an endemic North African terrestrial isopod, Trichoniscus soloisensis Vandel, 1959 ( Cruz 1991) .
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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