Koiulus interruptus, Enghoff & Jensen & Mikhaljova, 2017

Enghoff, Henrik, Jensen, Laura Mark & Mikhaljova, Elena V., 2017, A new genus of mongoliulid millipedes from the Far East of Russia, with a list of species in the family (Diplopoda, Julida, Mongoliulidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 326, pp. 1-19 : 3-9

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2017.326

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4A10A88C-4D6D-4F72-9219-71EA353A074E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3847996

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/04617A80-8F8D-47E0-A237-F1A5030EBAA8

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:04617A80-8F8D-47E0-A237-F1A5030EBAA8

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Koiulus interruptus
status

gen. et sp. nov.

Koiulus interruptus gen. et sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:04617A80-8F8D-47E0-A237-F1A5030EBAA8

Figs 1–9 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig

Etymology

The species is named after the interrupted series of ozopores.

Material examined

Holotype

RUSSIA: ♂, Khabarovskii Krai (southern), Sikhote-Alin (Central) range, upper course of river Ko, 47.074° N, 136.478° E, 700–800 m, fir-birch forest, 23–25 May 2015, wet leaf litter, A. Hansen, M. Justesen and A. Solodovnikov leg., sample RUS 15-7a ( ZMUC 00040235 View Materials ).

GoogleMaps

Paratypes

RUSSIA: 4 ♂♂ (incl. 2 used for SEM), 18 ♀♀ (incl. 1 used for SEM), 8 juv. ♂♂, 1 juv. unsex., same data as holotype ( ZMUC 00040238); 2 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀, 1 juv. ♂, same data as holotype ( ZMUM P 3534); 2 ♂♂, 3 ♀♀, same data as holotype, but 47.037° N, 136.396° E, 580 m, mixed forest, 22 May 2015, leaf litter and river bank and flood debris, samples RUS 15-6a and RUS 15-6b ( ZMUC 00040239, ZMUC 00040240); 2 ♂♂, 4 ♀♀, 2 juv. ♂♂, 2 juv. ♀♀, same data as holotype, but 47.0716° N, 136.4572° E, 750 m, firbirch forest, 26 May 2015, leaf litter, samples RUS 15-8a and RUS 15-8e ( ZMUC 00040241, ZMUC 00040242); 3 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀, same data as holotype, but 47.04° N, 136.37° E, 400–500 m, mixed forest along the road, sample RUS 15-9 ( ZMUC 00040243); 1 ♂ (6 trunk fragments + slightly broken head + leg pairs 1, 2 and 7, gnathochilarium and gonopods in Canada balsam), Khabarovskii Krai, ca 75 km SE of Khabarovsk, environs of Zolotoi village, mixed forest, 5 Oct. 1981, G.N. Ganin leg. ( FSCB).

Description

MEASUREMENTS. See Fig. 2 View Fig for a graphical representation of size parameters. Males: length (14) 19– 20 mm (all males from river Ko site 19–20 mm), diameter 0.94–1.01 mm, 38–44 podous rings + 2–5 apodous rings in front of telson (fewer apodous rings in larger males). Females: length up to 21 mm,

diameter up to 1.31 mm, up to 46 podous rings + at least one, usually 2–5 apodous rings in front of telson (fewer apodous rings in larger females).

COLOUR ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). Marbled brownish, darker dorsally, no pronounced colour pattern. Defense glands visible as dark spots on the body rings on which they occur (see below). Male from environs of Zolotoi village beige (probably faded by preservation). Eye patches black. Antennae brown.

EYE PATCHES. Subtriangular, composed of 30–45 ocelli. A pair of long frontal (epicranial) setae (broken in many specimens), at least some individuals with scattered additional long setae between antennal sockets and labrum. 2+2 supralabral setae, at least 5+5 labral setae.

ANTENNAE. Reaching body ring 3 when folded back. Antennomeres 5, 6 and 7 each with an external subapical group and corolla of sensory bacilli; sensory bacilli of antennomere 7 minute. Antennomere 3 longer than the others: 3>2≈4≈5>6>>7>1.

MANDIBLES ( Fig. 3 View Fig A–C). External tooth (odontomere of Hoffman & Howell 1995), with three cusps decreasing in size from posterior to anterior. Internal tooth (dentate lamella of Hoffman & Howell 1983, sectile edge of psectromere of Hoffman & Howell 1996), with ca 5 cusps decreasing in size from posterior to anterior. Eight rows of simple pectinate teeth. Molar plate without grooves, with a row of hand-like processes, each with 3–5 bent ‘fingers’, along anterior margin.

GNATHOCHILARIUM ( Fig. 3 View Fig D–E). Three apical setae on each stipes and four or five setae in a longitudinal row on each lamella lingualis; promentum (modified in male, see below) completely separating lamellae linguales.

COLLUM ( Fig. 4B View Fig ). Smooth, with one or two striae along lower margin.

BODY RINGS ( Figs 1 View Fig , 4 View Fig A–D). Slightly vaulted, prozonites smooth, metazonites with longitudinal striae in ventral half. A row of short setae on posterior margin, length of setae ca 0.1 × body diameter. Ozopores present from ring 6 onward, but missing from rings 7, 11, 14 or 15, one of rings 17–20 and several single rings further backward ( Fig. 4C View Fig ).

TELSON ( Figs 1 View Fig , 4A View Fig ). Preanal ring with a short dorsal process and setae along posterior margin. Anal valves each with two setae. Subanal scale with two setae.

LEGS ( Figs 1 View Fig , 4 View Fig A–C). Moderately long and slender. Claws long, weakly curved, without modifications.

Male sexual characters

MANDIBLES ( Fig. 4B View Fig ). Stipes with a small, protruding, ventro-posterior lobe.

GNATHOCHILARIUM ( Fig. 3 View Fig D–E). Promentum swollen, transversely microstriate, anteriorly produced in triangular tip overreaching lamellae linguales.

FIRST PAIR OF LEGS ( Figs 4 View Fig A–B, 5A–C). Strongly enlarged, consisting of an unpaired coxosternum and five-segmented telopodites. Interpretation of basal sclerite as a coxosternum supported by narrow ‘trochanters’ (not visible on Fig. 5 View Fig ) situated between unpaired sclerite and each of the telopodites. Third telopodomere longer than the others: 3>4>1> 2>5. Telopodomore 1 (prefemur?) massive, ca as broad as long, with an area densely covered in short bristles on anterior side (obscured by a secretion-like substance on imaged specimen). Telopodomere 2 (femur?) much broader than long, with a hump on anterior surface, i.e., in inner curvature of telopodite. Telopodomere 3 (postfemur, or postfemur + tibia?) much longer than any of the others, its basal ca 40% flattened, much more slender than distal ca 60%. Telopodomere 4 (tibia, tarsus, or tibia+tarsus?) flattened, of uniform width throughout. Telopodomere 5 (strongly reduced tarsus or claw?) very small, hemisphaerical. Telopodomeres 1–4 with scattered setae, 5 entirely smooth.

SECOND PAIR OF LEGS ( Fig. 5 View Fig D–F). Strongly reduced, consisting of an unpaired (coxo?)sternum and threesegmented telopodites. Telopodomere 1 cylindrical, gently curved, ca 3 times as long as broad, with scaly microsculpture on posterior surface and a long disto-mesal seta on anterior surface. Telopodomere 2 barrel-shaped, slightly longer than broad, with a long disto-mesal seta on anterior surface and several shorter, scattered setae. Telopodomere 3 contrastingly black, tapering to narrow tip, here with a bunch of ca 7–8 stout setae with irregularly multi-spiked tips ( Fig. 5F View Fig ); several normal setae scattered over telopodomere surface.

PENIS ( Fig. 5 View Fig D–E). Unpaired, cylindrical, longer than second legs, gradually narrowing towards end or with a slender, parallel-sided tip.

SEVENTH PAIR OF LEGS ( Figs 5 View Fig G–I, 6). Strongly reduced, each leg consisting of three-four podomeres of uncertain homology. Podomere 1 almost twice as long as podomere 2; podomere 1, sometimes also podomeres 2 and 3, with scaly microsculpture on mesal surface and a long (disto-)mesal seta, podomere 2 further with a few short setae. Podomere 3 contrastingly black, pear-shaped or conical, smooth or with a few short setae, sometimes surmounted by a tiny podomere 4 carrying 5 strong setae laterally and a claw apically ( Fig. 6 View Fig ).

SEVENTH PLEUROTERGITE ( Fig. 4 View Fig B–C). With triangular-rounded ventral lobes (protecting gonopods).

ANTERIOR GONOPODS ( Fig. 7 View Fig ). Coxal processes (CX) separate, long and slender, slightly curved posteriad, laterally excavated for accommodation of telopodites, tips rounded. Flagella (FL) strongly reduced, short, finger-like, projecting perpendicularly from coxal process, with strong scaly microsculpture. Telopodite (TLP) almost as long as coxal process, apically with large mesal lobe; tip of lobe with scaly microsculpture and a group of ca 6 short setae. Remaining surface of telopodite smooth, except for some tiny (~ 10 µm) sub-circular, densely porose structures (PS, Fig. 7 View Fig C–D).

POSTERIOR GONOPODS ( Fig. 8 View Fig ). Each posterior gonopod divided from the basis into two equally long branches. Anterior branch (AB) slender, almost parallel-sided, mesally excavated, apical ⅓ with dense cover of retrorse mico-spicules; tip slender, curved up in densely microspiculate spiral. Posterior branch (PB) broad at base, tapering regularly towards tip and hence with a triangular outline; anterior surface excavated for accommodation of anterior branch; an anterior-lateral row of ca 15 short setae; mesal margin distally with subtriangular, anteriad lobes.

Female sexual characters

VULVA ( Fig. 9 View Fig ). Placed vertically in short vulval sacs behind unmodified second leg-pair, very slender, oblong pyriform. Operculum (OP) slightly longer than bursa, with two parallel rows of short setae on anterior surface and several strong setae on distal half; tip subtriangular. Bursa (BU) consisting of a single sclerite, but with longitudinal sutures in basal ¾ of mesal and lateral sides; four longitudinal rows of setae, one on each side of the two longitudinal sutures. Posterior surface apically divided into two rounded lobes.

A tiny (~ 15 µm) structure of unknown identity was observed next to one of the apical bursal setae ( Fig. 9D View Fig (arrow)–E). It is sausage-shaped, has an apical pore and is apparent attached by its basal end to the surface of the bursa as well as laterally attached to the neighbouring seta.

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

ZMUM

Zoological Museum, University of Amoy

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Julida

Family

Mongoliulidae

Genus

Koiulus

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