Paranura convallis Kasai, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5339.6.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C6BD77C1-BEBE-4A24-9C8A-884FAD824490 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8313713 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D08787-FF9A-FFB3-FF6A-FDC5FBFFFAE0 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Paranura convallis Kasai |
status |
sp. nov. |
Paranura convallis Kasai sp. nov.
[Japanese name: Murou-ibonashi-tobimushi]
Figs 35–47 View FIGURE 35 View FIGURES 36–47 , Tables 7–8
Type material. Holotype: female, Japan, Honshu, Nara Prefecture, Uda-shi, Murou (alt. 348 m, 34°32'25"N 136°02'12"E), deciduous broadleaf forest, rotten fallen branch, 18-VII-2020, Hiro Kasai leg. ( NMNS, NSMT-Ap 689) GoogleMaps . Paratypes: female ( NMNS, NSMT-Ap 690) and juvenile ( NMNS, NSMT-Ap 691), same data as holotype GoogleMaps ; male ( NMNS, NSMT-Ap 692), same locality and habitat as holotype, 21-VI-2021, Hiro Kasai leg GoogleMaps ; juvenile ( NMNS, NSMT-Ap 693), same locality and habitat as holotype, 21-VII-2021, Hiro Kasai leg GoogleMaps ; female ( NMNS, NSMT-Ap 694), same locality and habitat as holotype, 16-X-2022, Hiro Kasai leg. GoogleMaps
Etymology. The new species name refers to the mountain valley habitat.
Diagnosis. 3+3 black eyes on head. Orange body color while alive and white in alcohol. Body relatively thick and plump. Some tubercles poorly developed on the dorsal side and reticulations absent. Ant. II with 11 chaetae. Chaetae A, E, and three ocular chaetae present on head, chaeta O absent. Lateral area on head with 6 chaetae Dl and 9 chaetae (L+So). Th. II–III with 3 and 4 ordinary chaetae De respectively. Abd. IV with 3 ordinary chaetae Dl. Tubercles Di on Abd. V developed and separate, each with 3 chaetae Di. Abdomen without clavate chaetae. Furcal remnant with 3–4 mesochaetae and no microchaetae. Tibiotarsi with chaeta M.
Description. Body length (without antennae) 1.51–2.25 mm in adults. The body orange while alive ( Fig. 35 View FIGURE 35 ), white in alcohol. 3+3 black eyes, two anterior and one posterior. Body relatively thick and plump.
Chaetal morphology. Five types of dorsal ordinary chaetae. Long macrochaetae (Ml) relatively long and thick, feebly serrated, and apically acuminated ( Fig. 46 View FIGURES 36–47 ); some lateral chaetae longer and strongly acuminate apex. Short macrochaetae (Mc) and very short macrochaetae (Mcc) morphologically similar to Ml, but much shorter. Mesochaetae (me) and microchaetae (mi) similar to ventral chaetae: thin, smooth, and pointed. S–chaetae of tergites thin and smooth.
Antennal morphology and chaetotaxy. Antenna 4-segmented. Ratio of antennal segments as I: II: III + IV = 1:1:1.8–1.9. Dorso-central area on Ant. III–IV strongly granulated ( Fig. 37 View FIGURES 36–47 ). S-chaetae of Ant. IV short and thick, S1 and S2 slightly thinner than others ( Fig. 37 View FIGURES 36–47 ). Apical bulb distinct and trilobed. Chaetotaxy of the antennae shown in Table 7b and Figs 37–38 View FIGURES 36–47 .
Mouthparts. Buccal cone relatively long and rounded at apex. Labrum chaetotaxy 4/2,2 ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 36–47 ), prelabral chaetae very tiny. Labium with 4 basal, 3 distal, and 3 lateral chaetae, papillae x absent ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 36–47 ). Mandible with 3 teeth ( Fig. 45 View FIGURES 36–47 ). Maxilla styliform.
Cephalic tubercles and chaetotaxy. Some tubercles poorly developed, reticulations absent ( Figs 36, 47 View FIGURES 36–47 ). Chaeta O absent. Lateral area with 6 chaetae Dl and 9 chaetae (L+So) (L1–4, So1, So3–6). Dorsal chaetotaxy of the head shown in Table 7a and Fig. 36 View FIGURES 36–47 . Group Vi with 6+6 chaetae. Groups Vea, Vem, and Vep with 4, 3–4 and 3–4 chaetae respectively.
Body tubercles and chaetotaxy. Some tubercles poorly developed, reticulations absent ( Figs 36, 47 View FIGURES 36–47 ). Tubercles Di on Abd. V developed and separate, around the tubercles Di raised ( Fig. 47 View FIGURES 36–47 ). Th. II–III with 3 (Ml+Mcc+mi) and 4 (Ml+Mcc+ 2mi) ordinary chaetae on tubercles De respectively, very short macrochaeta De2 situated close to long macrochaeta De1 ( Figs 41, 42 View FIGURES 36–47 ), and microchaeta De3 outside the tubercles. Abd. VI weakly bilobed. Dorsal chaetotaxy shown in Table 8 and Figs 36, 47 View FIGURES 36–47 . Furcal remnant with 3–4 mesochaetae and no microchaetae. Genital plate with 14–24 chaetae in females. An with 2 mi, rarely both or one side absent. Ventral chaetotaxy shown in Table 8 and Fig. 43 View FIGURES 36–47 .
Legs. Tibiotarsi I, II, and III with 19, 19, and 18 chaetae respectively, chaeta M present. Unguis without inner tooth ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 36–47 ). Chaetae B4 and B5 relatively long. Chaetotaxy of the legs shown in Table 8 and Fig. 44 View FIGURES 36–47 .
Remarks. The new species is most similar to P. tridentata Lee & Kim, 1984 and P. rosea Lee & Kim, 1984 , having 3+3 eyes, tubercle Oc on the head with 3 ocular chaetae, a head without chaeta O, and Abd. V–Vl without clear clavate chaetae. However, the new species can be distinguished by orange body color (in P. tridentata light yellow, in P. rosea red), inner tooth on the claw absent (in P. tridentata absent, in P. rosea present), 3 teeth on the mandible (in P. tridentata 3, in P. rosea 8), 3 ordinary chaetae De on Th. II (2 in P. tridentate , 4 in P. rosea ), 4 ordinary chaetae De on Th. III (in P. tridentata 2, in P. rosea 4), 2 ordinary chaetae Di on Abd. I–IV (in P. tridentata 2, in P. rosea 3), and 3 ordinary chaetae Di on Abd. V (in P. tridentata 2, in P. rosea 3).
NMNS |
National Museum of Natural Science |
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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Neanurinae |
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Paleonurini |
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