Leptherpum Attems, 1931

Bouzan, Rodrigo S., Means, Jackson C., Ivanov, Kaloyan, Almeida, Thaís Melo de, Brescovit, Antonio Domingos & Iniesta, Luiz Felipe M., 2022, Three new species of the Amazonian millipede genus Leptherpum (Polydesmida: Chelodesmidae), Zoologia (e 22020) 39, pp. 1-18 : 2

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1590/S1984-4689.v39.e22020

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D85610D9-F396-43F6-8F8C-E57

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13173866

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F5B7B-9A5E-FF92-CDF6-FD91224AF98B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Leptherpum Attems, 1931
status

 

Leptherpum Attems, 1931 View in CoL

Leptherpum Attems, 1931: 48 View in CoL . Type species: Leptodesmus carinovatus Attems, 1898 View in CoL , by original designation; Attems, 1938: 90; Schubart, 1958: 205; Jeekel, 1963: 119; Hoffman, 1966: 542; Jeekel, 1971: 269; Hoffman, 1978: 550; Hoffman, 1980: 153; Hoffman, 1997: 6; Golovatch and Hoffman, 2004: 50; Hoffman, 2005: 69.

Diagnosis. Males of Leptherpum differ from those of other Chondrodesmini by the following combination of characters: gonopodal prefemoral process large, concave, with an elongated and slender secondary process ( Figs 15, 17 View Figures 15−18 ); solenomere falcate and not branching ( Figs 15–18 View Figures 15−18 , 26–28 View Figures 23−28 , 32–34 View Figures 29−34 , 38–40 View Figures 35−40 , 44–46 View Figures 41−46 ); presence of marginal projections on the caudal edge of the paranota (= posterior margin of paranota with acute projections; Figs 11 View Figures 9−14 , 23–25 View Figures 23−28 , 35–37 View Figures 35−40 , 41–43 View Figures 41−46 ), except in L. capiberibei .

Taxonomic notes. Leptherpum species have characteristically shaped paranota, related to the size and position of the peritrematic swelling ( Jeekel 1963, Hoffman 1966). The large, prominent marginal projection (or “tooth”) of the caudal edge of the paranota forms a caudolateral angle by displacing the peritremata to an anterior position ( Jeekel 1963: fig. 33, Hoffman 1966: fig. 3). In L. loomisi , the peritremata are elongated, extending directly caudad, forming a small and weakly developed projection along the caudolateral corner of the paranota, as typical for Chelodesmidae ( Jeekel 1963: fig. 34).

Distribution. Widespread in the Amazon Rainforest region of Brazil, Guyana, French Guiana, Suriname, and Venezuela.

Composition. Now composed of twelve species: Leptherpum battirolai sp. nov.; Leptherpum buenovillegasi sp. nov.; Leptherpum californicum ( Daday, 1891) ; Leptherpum capiberibei Golovatch and Hoffman, 2004 ; Leptherpum carinovatum ( Attems, 1898) ; Leptherpum geijskesi Jeekel, 1963 ; Leptherpum huebneri Attems, 1901 ; Leptherpum jeekeli Hoffman, 1966 ; Leptherpum loomisi Jeekel, 1963 ; Leptherpum schomburgkii ( Erichson, 1848) ; Leptherpum staheli Jeekel, 1950 ; Leptherpum tialaura sp. nov.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Polydesmida

Family

Chelodesmidae

Loc

Leptherpum Attems, 1931

Bouzan, Rodrigo S., Means, Jackson C., Ivanov, Kaloyan, Almeida, Thaís Melo de, Brescovit, Antonio Domingos & Iniesta, Luiz Felipe M. 2022
2022
Loc

Leptherpum

Hoffman RL 2005: 69
Golovatch SI & Hoffman RL 2004: 50
Hoffman RL 1997: 6
Hoffman RL 1980: 153
Hoffman RL 1978: 550
Jeekel CAW 1971: 269
Hoffman RL 1966: 542
Jeekel CAW 1963: 119
Schubart O 1958: 205
Attems CG 1938: 90
Attems CG 1931: 48
1931
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