Rhopalomeris nagao, Nguyen & Nguyen & Eguchi, 2021

Nguyen, Anh D., Nguyen, Son G. & Eguchi, Katsuyuki, 2021, A new Rhopalomeris species (Diplopoda: Glomerida: Glomeridae), and notes on the phylogenetic relationships between glomeridans in Vietnam, Zootaxa 4927 (2), pp. 257-264 : 259-263

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4927.2.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1D717006-1144-4221-A996-823C34E8EB26

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4565609

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038C87A7-FF91-FFF8-FF7C-F8E5FDE4CAAA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rhopalomeris nagao
status

sp. nov.

Rhopalomeris nagao View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs 2–5 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 )

Material examined. Holotype. 1 male (IEBR-Myr 854H) Vietnam, Cao Bang Province, Pia Oac – Pia den National Park, on the trail to the peak, near Lung Pham mining site, N22.6082 – E105.8693, elev. 1,600m, natural forest, 7 June 2020, leg. Anh D. Nguyen.

Paratypes. 3 males (IEBR-Myr 854P) same data as for the holotype ; 1 male (IEBR-Myr 852) same locality as the holotype, but on the trail to Hang Ong, N22.5540 – E105.8622, elev. 850m, 8 June 2020, leg. Anh D. Nguyen. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. The new species can be recognized by the following combination of characters: antennal tip with numerous sensory cones; telopods with short prefemoral and femoral trichosteles, with long, straight and acute tuberculiform distomesal femoral process, and shorter lobuliform distolateral tibial process; syncoxial lobe being slightly concave medially; syncoxial horns being longer than lobe.

The new species differs from R. variegata Golovatch & Semenyuk, 2016 (from Highlands of Vietnam) and R. sauda Nguyen, Sierwald & Marek, 2019 (from northern Vietnam) in colouration (black colour plus several yellow spots ( R. nagao sp. nov.) vs. variegated colour ( R. variegata ) vs. yellow colour plus black spots ( R. sauda )). The new species also differs from R. sauda in length of trichosteles (short in R. nagao sp. nov. vs. long in R. sauda ), shape of syncoxial lobe (slightly concave medially ( R. nagao sp. nov.) vs. slightly convex medially ( R. sauda )) and shape of femoral and tibial processes (long, straight and acute tuberculiform femoral process ( R. nagao sp. nov.) vs. large tuberculiform process with bowed distal part ( R. sauda ); shorter lobuliform tibial process ( R. nagao sp. nov.) vs. a long, sigmoid mesad, acute tuberculiform process ( R. sauda )). Moreover, femoral process of telopods lacks a membranous apical sac which is clearly observed as in R. carnifex and R. variagata .

Another species, R. tonkinensis Silvestri, 1917 , was described from female specimens, the male remains unknown. However, the new species is clearly distinguishable from R. tonkinensis by the colour pattern (black plus yellow spots vs. mostly black in R. tonkinensis ), number of ocelli (7+1 vs. 8+1), and number of striae on thoracic shield (10–11 vs. 7).

Etymology. “ nagao ”, noun in apposition, refers to the Nagao Environmental Foundation of Japan which significantly contributes to the biodiversity inventory and conservation in Vietnam.

Description. Holotype length ca. 12.9 mm, width of thoracic shield ca. 5.4 mm.

Terga black with a yellow broad median line or yellow triangular median spot on terga 3–5, and with four yellow lateral spots forming two oval marbled spots laterally ( Fig. 2A, B View FIGURE 2 ). Thoracic shield with similar color pattern to other terga, but smaller spots ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Anal shield (= pygidium) with a yellow large triangular spot caudomedially ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ).

Ocelli 7+1 ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ), lenses convex, black contrasting against light brown background of head. Tömösváry organs transverse strongly horseshoe-shaped, 2X as long as wide ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ). Antenna clavate, antennomere 6 largest and longest, 1.7–1.8X long as wide. Antennal tip with numerous apical sensory cones ( Fig. 3C, D View FIGURE 3 ).

Collum semicircular, light brown, with a marbled yellow-brown, transverse oval spot in the middle, with two distinctly transverse striae ( Fig. 2D View FIGURE 2 ). Second tergum with a narrow hyposchism, not reaching to caudal margin, with 10–11 striae; other terga with a stria distolaterally. Anal shield rounded, not concave medio-caudally ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ).

Leg pair 17 strongly reduced, with 4 podomeres, with a high, regularly rounded outer coxal lobe; coxa with an apical setiferous spine ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ); podomere 4 with an apical seta. Leg pair 18 also strongly reduced as legs of legpair 17, with 4 podomeres, with a simple V-shaped syncoxial notch ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ).

Telopods ( Figs 4C, D View FIGURE 4 , 5 View FIGURE 5 ) with a trapeziform, slightly concave medially, sparsely setose, central syncoxial lobe accompanying two setiferous horns, each directed ventrad, longer than syncoxial lobe. Prefemur and femur with short trichosteles. Prefemur without additional processes. Femur with a large, long, straight-directed and acute tuberculiform distomesal process. Tibia with a shorter lobuliform distolateral process. Tarsus slightly sigmoid anteriomesad, subacuminate apically, with a seta distoventrally.

Variation. Length from 11.1–15.5 mm, width of thoracic shield varies 5.4–7.8 mm. Two paratypes have 6+1 ocelli.

DNA barcode. COI barcode data (partial) for the paratypes has been uploaded to GenBank under the accession numbers MT749392 View Materials and MT749411 View Materials . The new species shares 89.25% and 83.2% identity with Glomeridella minima and Trachysphaera sp., respectively.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Glomerida

Family

Glomeridae

Genus

Rhopalomeris

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