Lagynochthonius maanensis, Hou & Feng & Zhang, 2023

Hou, Yanmeng, Feng, Zegang & Zhang, Feng, 2023, New cave-dwelling pseudoscorpions of the genus Lagynochthonius (Pseudoscorpiones, Chthoniidae) from Guizhou in China, Zootaxa 5309 (1), pp. 1-64 : 31-35

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5309.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C930242A-041C-4CEC-8B2F-2DB671A2395D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8090054

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DA1A1E-FF84-FF86-FF05-3BEFE3C23CA6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lagynochthonius maanensis
status

sp. nov.

Lagynochthonius maanensis sp. nov. (ḢḊṄṁae)

Figs 23–26 View FIGURE 23 View FIGURE 24 View FIGURE 25 View FIGURE 26

Type material. Holotype ♀ (Ps.-MHBU-GZZA-20-18-01): China, Guizhou Province, Zheng’an County, Hexi Town, Maan Village , Pianxiao Cave , under stones in the deep zone [28°24′37.86″N, 107°26′31.84″E], 932 m a.s.l., 25 August 2020, Zegang Feng, Hongru Xu & Yanmeng Hou leg. GoogleMaps Paratype: 1 ♀ (Ps.-MSWU-GZZA-20-18-02), with the same data as the holotype GoogleMaps .

Etymology. Named after the village of Maan, near the type locality.

Diagnosis (♀). Moderately sized troglomorphic species with elongated appendages; carapace without eyes or eyespots; anterior margin of carapace thin, finely denticulated, epistome obtuse and small, round; posterior margin of carapace with two setae; tergites Ⅰ–II each with two setae, tergites III–Ⅴ each with four setae. Pedipalps slender, femur 5.43–5.75 times longer than broad; chela 5.84–5.88 times longer than broad; chelal fingers without intercalary teeth but fixed chelal finger with a modified accessory tooth (td) on retrolateral face; chemosensory setae (sc) present on dorsum of chelal hand.

Description. Females (holotype and paratype), male unknown ( Figs 23E View FIGURE 23 , 24–26 View FIGURE 24 View FIGURE 25 View FIGURE 26 ).

Colour: generally pale yellow, chelicerae, pedipalps and tergites slightly darker, soft parts pale.

Cephalothorax ( Figs 25C View FIGURE 25 , 26A View FIGURE 26 ): carapace 0.93–0.96 times longer than broad, gently narrowed posteriorly; surface smooth, without furrows; no traces of eyes; anterior margin slightly serrate; epistome obtuse and small, round, with two setae flanking base; with 18 setae arranged s4s: 4: 4: 2: 2, most setae heavy, long and gently curved, anterolateral setae much shorter than others; with two pairs of lyrifissures, first pair situated middle to setae of ocular row, second pair situated lateral to the sole pair of setae of posterior row. Chaetotaxy of coxae: P 3, Ⅰ 3, II 4, III 5, IV 5; manducatory process with two acuminate distal setae, anterior seta more than 1/2 length of medial seta; apex of coxa Ⅰ with small, rounded anteromedial process; coxae II with 8–9 terminally indented coxal spines on each side, set as an oblique row, longer spines present in the middle of the row, becoming shorter distally and proximally and incised for about half their length ( Fig. 26C View FIGURE 26 ); intercoxal tubercle absent; without sub-oral seta.

Chelicera ( Figs 25D View FIGURE 25 , 26B View FIGURE 26 ): large, about as long as carapace, 2.14–2.17 times longer than broad; five setae and two lyrifissures (exterior condylar lyrifissure and exterior lyrifissure) present on hand, all setae acuminate, ventrobasal seta shorter than others; movable finger with one medial seta. Cheliceral palm with moderate hispid granulation on both ventral and dorsal sides. Both fingers well provided with teeth, fixed finger with 11–13 teeth, distal one largest; movable finger with 11–12 retrorse contiguous small teeth; galea represented by a very slight bump on movable finger ( Fig. 26B View FIGURE 26 ). Serrula exterior with 17–18 blades and serrula interior with 13–14 blades. Rallum with eight blades, the distal one longest and recumbent basally, with fine barbules and slightly set apart from the other blades, latter tightly grouped and with long pinnae, some of which are subdivided ( Fig. 26D View FIGURE 26 ).

Pedipalp ( Figs 25A–B, F View FIGURE 25 , 26E–G View FIGURE 26 ): long and slender, trochanter 1.18–1.38, femur 5.43–5.75, patella 2.00–2.08, chela 5.84–5.88, hand 2.29–2.32 times longer than broad; femur 2.71–2.76 times longer than patella; movable chelal finger 1.55–1.56 times longer than hand and 0.61 times longer than chela. Setae generally long and acuminate; one distal lyrifissure present on patella ( Figs 25F View FIGURE 25 , 26E View FIGURE 26 ). Chelal palm gradually constricted towards fingers, apodeme complex of movable chelal finger strongly sclerotized, with weak granulation dorsally at base of fixed chelal finger and hand. Fixed chelal finger and hand with eight trichobothria, movable chelal finger with four trichobothria, ib and isb situated close together, submedially on dorsum of chelal hand; eb, esb and ist forming an oblique row at base of fixed chelal finger; it slightly distal to est, situated subdistally; et slightly near to tip of fixed chelal finger, very close to chelal teeth; dx situated distal to et; sb closer to st than to b; b and t situated subdistally, t situated distal to b; it and est situated between t and b ( Fig. 26F View FIGURE 26 ). A tiny retrolateral lyrifissure present at base of fixed chelal finger (situated distal to ist). Both chelal fingers with a row of teeth, homodentate, spaced regularly along the margin, larger and well-spaced teeth present in the middle of the row, becoming smaller and closer distally and proximally: fixed chelal finger with 25 macrodenticles, slightly retrorse and pointed, plus a modified accessory tooth on retrolateral face (td, close to dx), 26 in total; movable chelal finger with 11 macrodenticles (slightly smaller than teeth on fixed chelal finger), slightly retrorse and pointed, plus 14–15 vestigial, rounded and contiguous basal teeth, 25–26 in total ( Fig. 26F View FIGURE 26 ). Chelal fingers straight in dorsal view; microsetae (chemosensory setae) present on dorsum of chelal hand ( Figs 25B View FIGURE 25 , 26G View FIGURE 26 ).

Opisthosoma: generally typical, pleural membrane finely granulated. Tergites and sternites undivided; setae uniseriate and acuminate. Tergal chaetotaxy Ⅰ–XII: 2: 2: 4: 4: 4: 4–5: 5: 5–6: 5–6: 4: T2T: 0. Sternal chaetotaxy IV–XII: 13–14: 9–10: 8: 9–10: 9: 10–12: 10–11: 0: 2. Anterior genital operculum with ten setae, posterior margin with 14–15 marginal setae, 24–25 in total ( Fig. 25E View FIGURE 25 ).

Legs ( Fig. 26H–I View FIGURE 26 ): generally typical, long and slender. Fine granulation present on anterodorsal faces of femur IV and patella IV. Femur of leg Ⅰ 2.00–2.06 times longer than patella and with one lyrifissure at the base of femur; tarsus 2.35–2.37 times longer than tibia. Femoropatella of leg IV 2.80–2.94 times longer than deep; tibia 4.63–5.00 times longer than deep; with basal tactile setae on both tarsal segments: metatarsus 3.00 times longer than deep (TS = 0.33–0.39), tarsus 10.00–11.50 times longer than deep and 2.22–2.56 times longer than metatarsus (TS = 0.30–0.35). Arolium slightly shorter than the claws, not divided; claws simple.

Dimensions (length/breadth or, in the case of the legs, length/depth in mm; ratios in parentheses). Females: body length 1.64–1.83. Pedipalps: trochanter 0.13–0.18/0.11–0.13 (1.18–1.38), femur 0.69–0.76/0.12–0.14 (5.43– 5.75), patella 0.25–0.28/0.12–0.14 (2.00–2.08), chela 1.00–1.11/0.17–0.19 (5.84–5.88), hand 0.39–0.44/0.17–0.19 (2.29–2.32), movable chelal finger length 0.61–0.68. Chelicera 0.45–0.50/0.21–0.23 (2.14–2.17), movable finger length 0.24–0.26. Carapace 0.40–0.47/0.43–0.49 (0.93–0.96). Leg Ⅰ: trochanter 0.11/0.10–0.11 (1.00–1.10), femur 0.37–0.40/0.06–0.07 (5.71–6.17), patella 0.18–0.20/0.06 (3.00–3.33), tibia 0.17–0.19/0.04 (4.25–4.75), tarsus 0.40–0.45/0.04 (10.00–11.25). Leg IV: trochanter 0.17–0.19/0.11–0.12 (1.56), femoropatella 0.50–0.56/0.17–0.20 (2.80–2.94), tibia 0.37–0.40/0.08 (4.63–5.00), metatarsus 0.18/0.06 (3.00), tarsus 0.40–0.46/0.04 (10.00–11.50).

Distribution. Known only from the type locality.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF