Oiclus nanus Teruel et Chazal, 2010

Teruel, Rolando & Chazal, Léonard, 2010, A new species of the genus Oiclus Simon, 1880 (Scorpiones: Scorpionidae: Diplocentrinae) from Guadeloupe, Lesser Antilles, Euscorpius 92 (92), pp. 1-9 : 1-9

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.18590/euscorpius.2010.vol2010.iss92.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F9FC3994-7948-41C1-86A0-7A3EAC8C6D06

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5507481

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E4154796-2759-4DCB-BCE1-0D857FDDC8B7

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:E4154796-2759-4DCB-BCE1-0D857FDDC8B7

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Oiclus nanus Teruel et Chazal
status

sp. nov.

Oiclus nanus Teruel et Chazal View in CoL , sp. nov.

( Figures 1–5 View Figure 1 View Figure 2 View Figure 3 View Figure 4 View Figure 5 , Table 1 View Table 1 )

(?) Oieclus purvesii purvesii: Francke, 1978: 33 , 35.

(?) Oiclus purvesii purvesii: Teruel & Francke, 2006: 286 , fig. 2; Teruel, 2008: 95, fig. 5.

Diagnosis (males only, females unknown): species of small size (20–23 mm) for the genus. Body light brown, diffusely patterned with dark brown; legs yellowish; pedipalps and metasoma with carinae and fingers faintly infuscate. Entire body conspicuously hirsute, especially on pedipalps, mesosoma and metasoma. Carapace polished, with very finely and densely granulose areas symmetrically scattered; tergites finely and densely granulose. Punctate tegument restricted to pedipalp patella and chela in adults, absent in juveniles. Pedipalp chela robust, with dorsoexternal surfaces granulose and strongly reticulate. Metasoma moderately to weakly carinated in dorsal and lateral surfaces, intercarinal tegument smooth and polished. Pectines with fulcra variable from moderately well developed to essentially absent; tooth count 7/7. Modal tarsal spine formula 3/3: 4/4: 5/5: 5/5.

Holotype: adult ♂ ( RTO: Sco.0409): Guadeloupe, Grande-Terre , Saint François, Pointe des Châteaux, 9 July 2009, leg. L. Chazal. Paratypes: 2 adult ♂♂ and 1 juvenile ♂ ( RTO: Sco. 0410), with same data as holotype .

Etymology: the selected name is a Latin adjective that means “dwarf” and literally reflects the tiny size of this scorpion, which represents together with O. questeli and Heteronebo pumilus Armas 1981 (from southeastern Haiti), the smallest adult size known so far amongst all Diplocentrinae.

Distribution ( Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ): this scorpion appears to be endemic from the Guadeloupe insular bank, as it has been collected from a single locality in the eastern tip of Grande-Terre, but it seems to occur also in western Basse-Terre (Bouillante) and Les Saintes (Terre-de- Haut); see more details below, in the Remarks section.

Description (adult male holotype). Coloration ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 , 3a View Figure 3 ) basically light brown, with a dense but diffuse pattern of dark brown reticulate spots over carapace and tergites; pedipalps and metasoma with all carinae and fingers faintly infuscate; carapace with anterior margin, ocular tubercle and eyes blackish; mesosoma venter and pectines yellowish immaculate; legs yellowish, immaculate to very faintly spotted. Carapace ( Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ) as long as wide, anterior margin with 2–3 pairs of macrosetae alternated with abundant shorter setae of different size, frontal lobes very wide and rounded, frontal notch very wide and shallow. Tegument basically smooth and polished, with circum-ocular, mediolateral and posterolateral areas very finely and densely granulose. All furrows obsolete except for the lateral ocular, posterior median, posterior lateral and posterior marginal, which are relatively narrow and deep. Median eyes relatively small but larger than the lateral eyes, and separated by clearly less than one ocular diameter, median tubercle subtly raised; two pairs of lateral eyes. Tergites ( Fig. 2b View Figure 2 ) with median carina vestigial to weak on I–VI, flanked on each side by narrowly depressed furrows; tegument very finely and densely granulose, with irregular and polished lateral areas increasing in size from I–VI. Tergite VII with moderately bilobed lateroposterior region and with two pairs of lateral carinae which are all similar and composed by several large, rounded granules. Chelicerae ( Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ) with dentition typical for the family, tegument smooth and polished. Pedipalps ( Figs. 2c–d View Figure 2 ) orthobothriotaxic C. Femur deeper than wide, with dorsal surface markedly convex; dorsointernal and ventrointernal carinae very poorly defined, irregularly granulose, ventroexternal carina absent; tegument smooth and polished, dorsal surface with some coarse granules scattered. Patella with all carinae obsolete except for the dorsointernal (moderate, costate to subgranulose) and the dorsoexternal (weak, costate to subgranulose); tegument smooth and polished except on the internal surface, which is very finely and densely granulose; dorsal and external surfaces sparsely punctate. Chela very short and robust, moderately depressed laterally in cross-section and much deeper than wide; hand with all carinae obsolete to absent, digital carina vestigial, subgranulose, ventrointernal carinae absent, ventroexternal carinae strong, costate to subgranulose and directed essentially towards its articulation condyle, dorsal marginal and dorsointernal carinae strong, irregularly granulose; tegument densely punctate and covered with granulose reticulations which cross even over some of the carinae, dorsointernal surface densely granulose. Fingers very short, densely punctate, acarinate and densely setose, without lobe/notch combination; opposable edges with irregular granulation not arranged in rows. Legs ( Fig. 1a–b View Figure 1 ) with tegument smooth and polished; pedal spurs absent; tarsomere II without laterodistal lobes; tarsal spine formula 3/3: 4/4: 5/5: 5/5. Sternum ( Fig. 2e View Figure 2 ) type 2, strongly pentagonal, with parallel sides. Genital operculi ( Fig. 2e View Figure 2 ) ellipsoidal; genital papillae moderately developed and subtly exposed. Pectines ( Fig. 2e View Figure 2 ) hirsute, with 7/7 teeth; fulcra well developed basally but becoming reduced distally in each pecten; basal plate much wider than long; anterior margin weakly notched, posterior margin straight. Sternites ( Fig. 1b View Figure 1 ) smooth, polished and moderately hirsute, especially on lateral and posterior margins; VII with lateral carinae moderately granulose and ventrosubmedian carinae weakly granulose; spiracles narrow, oval-elongate. Metasoma ( Figs. 1a–b View Figure 1 , 2f–k View Figure 2 ) with segment I wider than long and II- V longer than wide; intercarinal tegument smooth and polished, with only a few small and medium-sized granules scattered on dorsal and lateral surfaces, especially on V; segments I–III, with ten carinae, IV with eight, V with five, all densely covered by rigid macrosetae; dorsolateral carinae moderate and irregularly granulose on I–IV, absent on V; lateral supramedian carinae moderately granulose on all segments; lateral inframedian carinae very weak and subcostate on I, vestigial and smooth on II–III, absent on IV–V; ventrolateral carinae moderately crenulate to serratocrenulate on I–II, weakly crenulate on III, very weakly subcrenulate on IV, composed by irregularly arranged conical granules on basal two-thirds of V but replaced on distal third by the ventral transverse carina; ventral submedian carinae strongly crenulate to serratocrenulate on I–II, moderately crenulate on III, very weakly subcostate on IV, absent in V; ventromedian carinae on V strong and composed by irregularly arranged conical granules; ventral transverse carina strong, dentate and evenly arched; segment V slightly longer than telson, with anal arc denticulate, laterodistal lobes bluntly triangular and not projected. Telson ovaldepressed and moderately slender; vesicle polished, irregularly granulose and densely covered by rigid macrosetae, ventrobasal area coarsely granulose, subaculear tubercle large, laterally compressed and covered by many rigid setae and a few coarse granules; aculeus short, sharp and strongly curved.

Variation: one adult male paratype ( Fig. 3b View Figure 3 ) is identical to the holotype in size, coloration, morphometrics, sculpture of the tegument, pectinal tooth count and tarsal spine formula, but the other adult male paratype ( Fig. 3c View Figure 3 ; Tab. 1 View Table 1 ) shows some subtle differences: size slightly larger (supposed to represent another size class), coloration somewhat lighter and less conspicuously spotted, prolateral row of leg I with 3–4 spines, and a few trivial morphometric discrepancies.

A very interesting and strong variation was observed in the development of the pectinal fulcra, which is an unusual trend among scorpions in general: all type specimens show individual variations of this structure both within each pecten and between both pectines. The largest male has fulcra weakly developed to absent, but the other two males (including the holotype), and the juvenile have well developed to vestigial fulcra.

The single juvenile specimen available ( Fig. 3d View Figure 3 ) differs from the adults by the same basic features as in all other diplocentrine scorpions: 1) coloration with the base conspicuously paler, and the spotted pattern darker and more contrasting; 2) body overall more slender; 3) pedipalps and metasoma with weaker carinae; 4) carapace and tergites smooth and polished; 5) pedipalps not punctate. The last feature is very important from a taxonomic point of view, as this is the first time that such variation is observed in Diplocentrinae: in all other species of this subfamily with punctate tegument, this character is invariably present in all juvenile and adult instars (R. Teruel, personal observation); this fact must be taken into account when identifying Oiclus populations from small samples to avoid taxonomic errors and misinterpretations.

Ecological notes: all specimens of O. nanus sp. n. were collected under small rocks in dry coastal forest, at an altitude of 12 m a.s.l.; every scorpion burrows a shallow horizontal gallery which follows the lower contour of the rock, and has an enlarged bottom where each individual rests and retreats for shelter ( Fig. 4a–b View Figure 4 ). It occurs both sympatrically and syntopically with two buthid scorpions: Centruroides barbudensis (Pocock, 1898) and Centruroides pococki Sissom et Francke, 1983 .

Comparisons (adult males only): O. nanus sp. n. is most closely related to O. purvesii s. s. in overall morphology, but the latter can be unequivocally distinguished by having: 1) sternites and metasomal segment V punctate; 2) size considerably larger (28–32 mm); 3) metasomal segment II wider than long. The two populations assigned to O. purvesii s. l. by Francke (1978) as O. p. sabae (from Saba) and a supposed hybrid between O. p. purvesii and O. p. sabae (from Saint Kitts) are in urgent need of a thorough revision, as both will possibly prove to be distinct at species level from O. purvesii s. s.; they are not referable to O. nanus sp. n. either, on the basis of the strong differences in size, metasomal proportions and tarsal spine formula.

On the other hand, O. questeli is about the same size and base coloration of O. nanus sp. n., but differs conspicuously by: 1) entire body much less hirsute; 2) pedipalp chela more robust, with fingers shorter and hand globose (not flattened); 3) metasoma remarkably less slender, with segments I-III each wider than long; 4) sternite VII without ventrosubmedian carinae; 5) pedipalp patella not punctate; 6) carapace, tergites and pedipalp chela more densely and strongly granulose; 7) coloration with the spotted pattern much darker and denser.

Remarks

Francke (1978) recorded O. p. purvesii from Terrede-Haut, a small islet of Les Saintes just off the south shore of Basse-Terre, but this record appears to be based upon a misidentification. Very recently, one of us (RT) had the chance to examine a series of high-quality color pictures of one adult male, one adult female and one juvenile from this population (taken by François Meurgey and kindly shared by our friend and arachnid enthusiast Karl Questel), which closely match the types of O. nanus sp. n. Also, together with these images we received a second series of high-quality color pictures of five juvenile specimens of Oiclus collected in Bouillante (western Basse-Terre), which also look referable to O. nanus sp. n. Both records are here tentatively referred to this species and appear to indicate that it could be widely distributed in mainland Guadeloupe and at least some of its offshore islets.

Since the classic diplocentrine revision of Francke (1978), Oiclus appeared to be the only Antillean genus of this subfamily represented by a single and widespread species, a biogeographical pattern totally different from the one typical of the remaining genera of Diplocentrinae occurring throughout the insular Caribbean: Cazierius Francke, 1978 and Heteronebo Pocock, 1899 in the Greater Antilles, Didymocentrus Kraepelin, 1905 in the Lesser Antilles (Windward Islands) and southern Netherlands Antilles; each of these genera is composed by not less than 10 species, none of which is present in more than one independent island. When O. questeli was recently described, Teruel (2008: 98) hypothesized that Oiclus was possibly more diverse than suspected. This was quickly confirmed with the discovery of O. nanus sp. n., which represents both the third species-level taxon added to this genus and also its southernmost known geographical occurrence. Based on the general correlation of this confirmed species diversity to their distribution, now it seems very likely that Oiclus also shares the same biogeographical pattern as the other members of the subfamily: multiple species endemic from each independent insular bank, in this case in the Leeward Islands.

Last, it is not yet possible to prepare a key to the species of Oiclus until its type species O. purvesii is redescribed according to current taxonomy, and the true identity of all populations previously assigned to it is revised.

Comparative Material Examined

Oiclus purvesii purvesii (Becker, 1880) : Antigua, English Harbour , south end of the island; January 1918, leg. R . Forrest , 1 adult ♀, 1 juvenile ♂ ( MCZ 12422). Montserrat, Cassara Ghant, 31 May 2002, leg. K. Marske, 1 adult ♀ ( MSU) .

Oiclus questeli Teruel, 2008 : Guadeloupe, Saint- Barthélemy , Petit Anse, 14 February 2008, leg. K. Questel, 1 adult ♂ holotype ( RTO: Sco.0379); same locality, 7 February 2008, leg. K. Questel, 1 juvenile ♂ and 1 juvenile ♀ paratypes ( RTO: Sco.0378); Saline, 16 October 2005, leg. K. Questel, 1 adult ♀ paratype ( RTO: Sco.0314); Flamand, 30 July 2007; leg. K. Questel, 1 adult ♀ paratype ( RTO: Sco.0365) .

Oiclus sp. (supposed hybrid between O. p. purvesii and O. p. sabae): St. Kitts, St. Thomas Middle Island Parish , Wingfield National Park, Peter Manning Trail, 4 July 2003, leg. M. A. Ivie, 1 juvenile ♀ ( MSU) .

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

MSU

Michigan State University Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Scorpiones

Family

Diplocentridae

Genus

Oiclus

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