Drepanura cinquilineata Womersley, 1934

Ma, Yitong, Chun, Zhao & Greenslade, Penelope, 2015, The genus Drepanura (Collembola: Entomobryidae) in Australia: descriptions of two new species and redescriptions of five known species, Zootaxa 4058 (3), pp. 373-387 : 380

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4058.3.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:24939C36-9D3B-44DF-B4B9-DCC8BC96E6A7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5670962

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/526187A9-FFB4-FFF0-89F6-FF478128FA55

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Plazi

scientific name

Drepanura cinquilineata Womersley, 1934
status

 

Drepanura cinquilineata Womersley, 1934

Figs 4−5 View FIGURES 1 − 9 , 52−66 View FIGURES 52 − 66

Material examined. 15 females, Western Australia, Barrow Island, 20o 45’S 115o 25’E, 2005/2006, collected by Penelope Greenslade. All deposited in SAM.

Description. Body length up to 2.4mm. Ground colour pale yellow; Antennae with blue pigments on both ends of each segment. Eyepatch dark blue. Anterior and lateral margin of dorsal head with blue pigment. Dorsal side of body with five blue longitudinal stripes. Coxae and femora with blue pigment on distal parts ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 1 − 9 ). In some specimens, the stripes between the middle stripe and the lateral stripes not obvious ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 1 − 9 ).

Antenna 0.51−0.59 times length of body. Ratio of Ant. I −IV as 1.0/1.7 − 2.2/1.3 − 1.5/1.7−2.0. Distal part of Ant. IV with many sensory chaetae and normal ciliate chaetae and an apical bulb ( Fig. 52 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Eyes 8+8, G and H smaller. Interocular chaetae as p, q, r, s, t, p chaeta larger than others. Dorsal cephalic chaetotaxy with 4 antennal (An1, An2, An3a1, An3), 2 median (M2, M4) and 7 sutural (S0, S2, S3, S4, S 4i, S5, S 5i) macrochaetae ( Fig. 53 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Labrum chaetae 4/5, 5, 4, prelabral chaetae finely ciliate, others smooth, distal labral margin with 4 papillae, each with 3 secondary spinules ( Fig. 54 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Basal chaetae of labium as M, R, E, L1, L2, all ciliate ( Fig. 55 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ).

Macrochaetae of Th. II −III as shown in Fig. 56 View FIGURES 52 − 66 . Th. II with 3 (m1, m 2i, m2) macrochaetae in Mm area and 4 (m 4i, m4, m4p, a5) macrochaetae in Ms area. Th. III with 3 (a1, a2, a3) macrochaetae in Am area and 6 (a 4i 2, a 4i, a4, a5, m 5i, m5) macrochaetae in As area.

Trochanteral organ with 10−15 chaetae ( Fig. 57 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Inner differentiated tibiotarsal chaetae ciliate, the most distal one smooth ( Fig. 58 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Tenent hair clavate, 1.3−1.5 × length of inner side of unguis; Unguis with 4 inner teeth, first pair at about 0.5 distance from base of claw, and 2 unpaired teeth, first one at 0.7 and distal one at 0.8 distance from base respectively; unguiculus acuminate and outer edge serrate ( Fig. 59 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ).

Abd. IV 3.3−5.5 times as long as Abd. III along dorsal midline. Abd. I with 9 (10) (m 2i, m2, a2, a3, m3, m4p, m4, a5, m5, rarely a6) macrochaetae. Abd. II with 4 central (a2, a3, m3, m3e) and 2 lateral (m5, m6) macrochaetae, Abd. III with 1 central (m3) and 3 lateral (am6, pm6, p6) macrochaetae ( Fig. 60 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Macrochaetae, sensory chaetae and bothriotricha of Abd. IV as shown in Fig. 61 View FIGURES 52 − 66 , lateral side with 16−23 macrochaetae on each side, central part with 21−25 macrochaetae. Ventral tube anteriorly with 8−11 ciliate chaetae on each side ( Fig. 62 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ); posteriorly with 6 smooth chaetae ( Fig. 63 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ); each lateral flap with 8–9 smooth chaetae and 1 ciliate chaeta ( Fig. 64 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Tenaculum with 1 large striate chaeta. Manubrial plaque with 4 ciliate chaetae and 2 pseudopores ( Fig. 65 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ). Distal smooth part of dens 2.7−3.2 times as long as mucro in length. Mucro falcate and tip of basal spine not reaching apex of apical tooth ( Fig. 66 View FIGURES 52 − 66 ).

Remarks. The species can be easily distinguished from other species in its possession of five longitudinal brownish-black stripes. The colour pattern of our specimens agrees well with Womersley’s original descriptions. This species is the most widespread, common and abundant of all other Australian Drepanura species.

Type locality. Australia: Western Australia, Bridgetown ( SAMA I12257)

Distribution. Australia: all states.

SAM

South African Museum

SAMA

South Australia Museum

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