Rhysida H.C. Wood, 1862

Schileyko, Arkady A., Vahtera, Varpu & Edgecombe, Gregory D., 2020, An overview of the extant genera and subgenera of the order Scolopendromorpha (Chilopoda): a new identification key and updated diagnoses, Zootaxa 4825 (1), pp. 1-64 : 50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4825.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F230F199-1C94-4E2E-9CE4-5F56212C015F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4457021

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DE092D-FFC3-D73B-FF13-FE5729D0D950

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rhysida H.C. Wood, 1862
status

 

(!) Rhysida H.C. Wood, 1862 View in CoL View at ENA

Figs 106–109 View FIGURES 102–107 View FIGURES 108–112

Type species. Branchiostoma lithobioides Newport, 1845 (by subsequent designation of Attems 1930) .

Diagnosis. Median tooth of labrum well developed. Forcipular tooth-plates present, trochantero-prefemur with well-developed process ( Fig. 106 View FIGURES 102–107 ). Tergites never with longitudinal keels (except for median one in a few species). Sternites with incomplete paramedian sutures (in some species much shortened, sometimes also with median and lateral depressions of various sizes/shapes. LBS 7 with spiracles, the latter with atrium ( Fig. 108 View FIGURES 108–112 ). Legs with tarsal spur(s), legs 1 without prefemoral spur. Coxopleural process ( Fig. 109 View FIGURES 108–112 ) ranging from short to very long and much enlarged (figs 4F and 9F in Siriwut et al. 2018, respectively), with spines (at least with apical ones). Prefemur of the ultimate leg with spines ( Fig. 107 View FIGURES 102–107 ), more rarely (for example in R. celeris ) without them; pronounced corner spine absent (in some species 1(2) spines at its place, Fig. 107 View FIGURES 102–107 ). Ultimate pretarsus well-developed, with accessory spines.

Number of species. 36 ( Joshi et al. 2020).

Sexual dimorphism. Unknown.

Remarks. Treated as a genus in Edgecombe & Bonato (2011: 402), Vahtera et al. (2012a: 7, 2012b: 238, 2013: 578), Chagas-Jr (2013: 17), Schileyko (2014: 182), Schileyko & Stoev (2016: 255), Siriwut et al. (2018: 1005); Joshi et al. (2020); the latter work is the most recent account on this genus (see also Remarks to Alluropus below). In 2013 Chagas-Jr synonymized seven species of Rhysida (namely R. caripensis , R. guayanica , R. maritima , R. monaguensis , R. neoesparanta , R. porlamarensis and R. sucupaensis ) described by González-Sponga (2002) to R. celeris . Five new species were described from India by Joshi et al. (2020).

We re-investigated a dozen specimens of R. celeris from Peru (Rc 6685) and Brazil (Rc 7272), R. immarginata (Porat, 1876) from Papua New Guinea (Rc 7091), R. longipes (Newport, 1845) from Cambodia (Rc 7003) and Peru (Rc 6683), R. lithobioides (Newport, 1845) from Sumatra (Rc 7232). All the studied specimens showed a total absence of both a corner spine of the ultimate legs ( Fig. 107 View FIGURES 102–107 ) and a prefemoral spur on legs 1.

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