Newportia monticola Pocock, 1890

Schileyko, Arkady A., 2014, A contribution to the centipede fauna of Venezuela (Chilopoda: Scolopendromorpha), Zootaxa 3821 (1), pp. 151-192 : 170-173

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3821.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:372CEC90-946B-4352-8996-835F33BE05D7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6126262

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0392244D-FF9D-936D-FF6B-FDF3FE63F9B3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Newportia monticola Pocock, 1890
status

 

Newportia monticola Pocock, 1890 View in CoL

Figs 35–41 View FIGURES 35 – 39 View FIGURES 40 – 45

Newportia monticola: Attems, 1930: 277 View in CoL ;

Newportia monticola: Schileyko & Minelli, 1998: 284 View in CoL ; Newportia monticola: Schileyko, 2002: 498 View in CoL ;

Newportia monticola: Schileyko, 2013: 51 View in CoL .

Locus typicus: Ecuador, Chimborazo.

Material. Venezuela, Trujillo State: 1 juv, [loc.19], Boconó, Ande, N 85, la Cristalina, 2500, Subparamo, rotten wood, 0 2.1987, N 7287; 1 ad, [loc.18], Guaramacal National Park, N 76, bosque humedo montano, LI, 2500 m, by hand, 0 2.1987, N 7078; 1 ad, [loc.18], Guaramacal National Park, N 82, 2500, Subparamo, soil 30x30, 0 2.1987, N 7286; 1 ad, [loc.18], Guaramacal National Park, N 57, 3000, Paramo, soil 30x30, 0 2.1987, N 7285. 4 specimens in all.

Additional material. Peru, Region Loreto, Iquitos, 1 subad, N 7195. Brazil, Amazônas, Manaus: 5 subad, NN 6634, 6642, 6644, 7196. Panama, Colon Prov., San Lorenzo forest, 1 ad, N 7156. Jamaica Isl., Manchester Parish, 1 ad, N 6771.

Description of adult N 7078. Length of body ca 39 mm; maximal length for this species 40 mm. Color in ethanol: uniformly yellow with cephalic plate, forcipular segment and ultimate segment somewhat darker. Body with very sparse small setae; distal articles of the legs and ultimate legs more setose.

Antennae composed of 17 articles, reaching the anterior margin of tergite 4 when reflexed. 2.5 basal articles with very few long setae, subsequent articles (from the distal part of the 3rd) densely pilose. Basal articles cylindrical.

Cephalic plate ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ) longer than wide with posterior margin rounded; this margin with short paramedian sutures.

Second maxillae ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ): article 2 of telopodite distally with a well-developed dorsal spur. Pretarsus without accessory spines.

Forcipular segment: coxosternite without sutures but very short chitin-lines. Anterior margin of coxosternite divided by median diastema into two strongly sclerotized low lobes, ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ). Each lobe has a very low lateral tubercle and a long curved setae posterior to sclerotized margin. Trochanteroprefemur without process. Tarsungula of normal length, thin and pointed; their interior surface with two parallel longitudinal ridges.

Anterior margin of tergite 1 covered by the cephalic plate; this tergite ( Fig. 37 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ) with an anterior transverse suture in the form of a very obtuse (ca 120°) angle and a shallow median depression just behind its center. Incomplete paramedian sutures of tergite 1 stretch from the posterior tergal margin to the transverse suture. Anterior ends of these sutures bifurcated forming a "W" with their inner branches reaching the median depression. A short transverse suture connects the inner branches of those “forks” thus forming a triangle ( Fig. 37 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ). Tergite 2 with a few transverse sutures close to its anterior margin; tergite 3 with thin oblique sutures, bordering anterior corners of this tergite. Less developed oblique sutures present at tergites 4–6. Tergites 2–22 with complete paramedian sutures; tergites 3–20 with lateral longitudinal sutures ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ). Tergite 23 ( Fig. 38 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ) lacks sutures, its posterior margin practically straight. Tergites 1–22 with very unclear lateral margination, only tergite 23 distinctly marginate. Tergite 23 somewhat wider than long, not narrowed posteriorly; its sides slightly curved. Tergites 2–22 with pretergites ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ).

Sternites: trapeziform; sternites 1–21 with incomplete lateral sutures. Sternites (2)3–21 with well-developed median sulcus which is shortened anteriorly. Sternites 14(15)–22 with well-developed transverse sulcus between the coxae. Sternite 23 narrow, considerably longer than wide narrowing to concave posterior margin ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ). Well-developed endosternites at sternites (1)2–20.

Legs: basal articles with a few short setae, tarsi more setose. Legs 1–20 with lateral tibial spur; legs 1–22 with undivided tarsus. Pretarsi of legs 2–21 with two small accessory spines; these spines are rudimentary on legs 1 and 22. Pretarsi short, strongly pointed and almost straight.

Coxopleuron ( Figs 39 View FIGURES 35 – 39 , 40 View FIGURES 40 – 45 ) (excluding coxopleural process) somewhat longer than sternite 23, with scattered coxal pores of various size except for coxopleural process and an area which borders the coxopleuron posteriorly. Coxopleural process long, conical and curved outwards; coxopleural surface without setae. Posterior margin of ultimate pleuron forming an obtuse angle.

Ultimate legs ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 40 – 45 ) long and slender, 13–14 mm long, width of prefemur 0.7–0.8 mm. Prefemur triangular in cross-section, femur practically cylindrical. Right ultimate leg is evidently regenerated being somewhat shorter than left one. Left prefemur ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 40 – 45 ) with a row of 4 (right prefemur with 3; Fig. 39 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ) ventral spinous processes. These processes are of the same size and apically curved posteriorly; prefemur with many small spines on the lateral and medial surfaces ( Figs 38–40 View FIGURES 35 – 39 View FIGURES 40 – 45 ). Femur with 2 small spinous processes ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ): the medial one is close to base of femur and the ventral one is in the distal third. Tibia cylindrical, practically as long as prefemur and femur. Tarsus divided; tarsus 1 as long as two basal articles of tarsus 2. Tarsus 2 consists of nine distinct articles; ultimate article very long (as long as 7th and 8th articles combined).

Range. Ecuador: Chimboraso; La Dormida; Paramo el Angel; Galapagos Islands. Colombia. Costa Rica: Volcano Yrazu; Cocos Island; San José. British Guayana: Dunoon. Brazil: Amazônas. Peru: Loreto.

In Venezuela. Mérida State. Aragua State, Municipio Mario Briceño Iragorry, Henri Pittier National Park. Trujillo State, Municipio Boconó, Guaramacal National Park.

Variability. More than 100 specimens of monticola from Brazil, Peru, Venezuela, Jamaica, Costa Rica and Panama examined show some variability in the shape of anterior margin of forcipular coxosternite. In Venezuelan specimens it varies from two very low wide lobes with very small lateral tubercles (for example in NN 7078, 7286; Fig. 36 View FIGURES 35 – 39 ) to much narrower but very high and strongly convex margin clearly divided by a median diastema (for example in N 7285; Fig. 41 View FIGURES 40 – 45 ).

Some specimens (for example NN 7078, 7286 as well as all specimens of additional material) have two welldeveloped longitudinal ridges on the mesal surface of forcipular tarsungula, but specimen N 7285 has three of them and in juvenile N 7287 (small and poorly pigmented) these keels are not recognizable at all. Thus in Newportia the number of these ridges seems to be not species-specific (see also Remarks to Scolopocryptops ). It is interesting, that in Venezuelan specimens of N. monticola this character correlates with a shape of anterior margin of forcipular coxosternite, but this correlation is not seen in the additional material.

Schileyko & Minelli (1998: 284) noted the presence of a small forcipular trochanteroprefemur process in some populations of this species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Chilopoda

Order

Scolopendromorpha

Family

Scolopocryptopidae

Genus

Newportia

Loc

Newportia monticola Pocock, 1890

Schileyko, Arkady A. 2014
2014
Loc

Newportia monticola:

Schileyko 2013: 51
2013
Loc

Newportia monticola:

Schileyko 2002: 498
Schileyko 1998: 284
1998
Loc

Newportia monticola:

Attems 1930: 277
1930
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