Amplaria adamsi, Shear, William A. & Krejca, Jean K., 2007

Shear, William A. & Krejca, Jean K., 2007, Revalidation of the milliped genus Amplaria Chamberlin 1941 (Diplopoda, Chordeumatida, Striariidae), and description of two new species from caves in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, California, Zootaxa 1532, pp. 23-39 : 35-38

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.177736

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628959

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E0612E-FF96-FFE4-FF02-C89A29CAFD6E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Amplaria adamsi
status

sp. nov.

Amplaria adamsi View in CoL , n. sp.

Figs. 16–22 View FIGURES 15 – 18 View FIGURES 19 – 22 , 25 View FIGURES 24 – 26. 24

Types: Male holotype from Hidden Cave, Sequoia National Park, Tulare Co., California, collected 15 November 2003 by Jean Krejca and V. Loftin (FMNH); male and female paratypes from Overhang Cave, Sequoia National Park, Tulare Co., California, collected 29 April 2004 by J. Krejca and P. Sprouse (FMNH).

Diagnosis: This species is smaller, more darkly pigmented ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 24 – 26. 24 ), and has more ocelli than A. muiri ; details of the gonopods are also different.

Etymology: After the late Ansel Adams, an extraordinary photographer whose finest pictures depict the Sierra Nevada.

Description: Male: length, 12.0 mm, width, 0.89 mm. Structure much as in A. muiri , but with 5–7 small, irregular, depigmented ocelli. Metazonites with reticulate pattern of purplish brown, darker pigment along posterior borders of metazonites, edges of crests. Legs and antennae light tan to yellowish white. Secondary sexual modifications as described for genus.

Gonopods ( Figs. 17–22 View FIGURES 15 – 18 View FIGURES 19 – 22 ) robust, anterior angiocoxites appressed in midline, apically only gently curved, with even margin lacking teeth, broad, thin lateral branch not much curved, with teeth as shown in Figs. 21, 22 View FIGURES 19 – 22 ; posterior angiocoxites with flagellar sheathing branch long, accessory process extending a little beyond tip of sheathing groove, posterior branch narrow, geniculate, evenly rounded apically. Colpocoxites typical of genus (note: poorly sclerotized lateral lobe of colpocoxite collapses in SEM preparation). Legpair 9 as in Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15 – 18 .

Female: length, 12.0 mm, width, 0.81 mm. Similar to male in nonsexual characters.

Distribution: See Table 1 View TABLE 1 and fig. 23.

Habitat and abundance: Thirteen specimens from Hidden Cave, Overhang Cave and Clough Cave were positively identified, and another immature specimen from Windy Pit was tentatively identified ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ), and the following data are based on those 14 individuals. Air temperatures were recorded for 10 of those collections and the average air temperature where specimens were collected was 11.2 deg C (range = 8 to 15.3 deg C). Substrates were recorded for 13 of those collections, and 54% (7/13) were found under a rock on the floor, 15% (2/13) were found on a gravel floor, and 8% (1/13) were found on each of these substrates: under woody debris, on a silt floor, on ringtail scat, and on a calcite wall. Of those 13 collections, 62% (8/13) were associated with some kind of energy source, including woody debris, bat guano, ringtail scat, roots, and moldy applesauce. For all fourteen specimens, the average distance they were found into the cave was 74 m (range = 0 to 153 m). On average one A. adamsi was found per 25 linear meters of cave passage (range = 10 m to 70 m), and 54 person minutes of search effort (range = 16 to 154 person minutes).

Methods for habitat and abundance: The same methods were used for this species as for Amplaria muiri , above.

Notes: Amplaria adamsi has been collected in caves of Cluster 5, namely Clough, Hidden, Overhang, and Windy Pit Caves ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 , Fig. 23 View FIGURE 23 ). Males were not taken in Windy Pit Cave, but it seems unlikely that cave harbors a different species. Noticeably smaller than A. muiri and consistently pigmented, with 5–7 pale ocelli, A. adamsi is at best a troglophile, and surface collecting in suitable habitats would undoubtedly turn it up. Having described these two species, it should be noted that all the caves named on the map ( Fig. 23 View FIGURE 23 ) were visited, many repeatedly, so the absence of strirariids from a given cave is important. Collectors noted, however, that repeat visits continued to produce new species records and that the fauna were sparse and infrequently detected, suggesting that continued search efforts may yield more localities. These two species might be quite local, but in the absence of extensive surface collecting, full distribution of either species has not been established.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Chordeumatida

Family

Striariidae

Genus

Amplaria

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