Cernethia inopinata Mesibov

Mesibov, Robert, 2015, A new genus and species of dalodesmid millipede from New South Wales, Australia (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Dalodesmidae), ZooKeys 517, pp. 141-148 : 143-148

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.517.10187

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B6A7723E-A29E-4003-8DAC-87D92CEDEFF3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C4B48F32-BB9A-4C24-9B84-BC363F4C75D0

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C4B48F32-BB9A-4C24-9B84-BC363F4C75D0

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Cernethia inopinata Mesibov
status

sp. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Polydesmida Dalodesmidae

Cernethia inopinata Mesibov View in CoL sp. n. Figs 1, 2, 3, map Fig. 4

Holotype.

Male, Glenbog State Forest near junction of Steeple Flat Road and Snowy Mountains Highway, ca. 10 km SE of Nimmitabel, NSW, -36.6128 149.3686 ± 100 m, 1160 m a.s.l., 17 May 2006, C.A. Car, transect site T21, AM KS.124129 (ex AM KS.114908).

Paratypes.

AM: 5 males, 7 females, 10 juveniles, details as for holotype, KS.114908; 2 males, 3 females, same details but 19 September 2006, KS.114909; 6 males (1 male missing head + rings 2-5), 2 females, 6 juveniles, same details but 29 March 2006, C.A. Car, KS.94875.

Other material.

AM: 1 male, ca. 5 km SE of Nimmitabel at Bombala turnoff, NSW, -36.5806 149.3153 ± 100 m, 1100 m a.s.l., 14 February 2007, C.A. Car, transect site T20, under bark of fallen log in wattle grove, KS.114919; 1 male, ca. 50 km W of Bega, Brown Mountain, Pipers Lookout, Monterey Road, NSW, -36.6203 149.4033 ± 100 m, 1100 m a.s.l., 16 February 2007, C.A. Car, transect site T22, under bark scraps on ground, KS.114912; 3 stadium 6 juveniles, same details, KS.114913. ANIC: 3 males, Brown Mountain, NSW, -36.6 149.3833 ± 2 km, 5 January 1967, R.W. Taylor, ANIC berlesate no. 9, rainforest, 64-000344; 1 male, same locality but 9 December 1967, R. Taylor and J. Brooks, ANIC berlesate no. 41, leafmould, 64-000345; 5 males, 2 females, same details but ANIC berlesate no. 42, leafmould, 3000 feet, 64-000346; 2 males, same details but ANIC berlesate no. 42C, 64-000347; 1 male, Rutherford Creek, Brown Mountain, NSW, -36.6 149.4167 ± 2 km, 9 January 1968, M. Upton, ANIC berlesate 55, rainforest, leafmould, 64-000348; 2 males, same locality but 15 January 1969, S.R. Curtis, ANIC berlesate no. 129, 64-000349; 8 males, same locality but 26 May 1970, R.W. Taylor and R. Bartell, ANIC berlesate 287, rainforest, 64-000350.

Description.

Male and female adults with head+19 rings (Fig. 1A). Male/female approximate measurements: length 16/14 mm, maximum width across paranota 1.7/1.9 mm, maximum prozonite width 1.3/1.7 mm. In alcohol, well-coloured specimens yellowish brown with faintly reddish brown antennae, distal podomeres and lateral paranotal margins; some specimens with larger reddish-brown patches elsewhere, but patterning inconsistent.

Male with vertex of head bare, frons and clypeus sparsely setose; vertigial sulcus extending ventrally ca. halfway to line joining antennal socket centres; postantennal groove narrow, slightly impressed; antennal sockets separated by about 1.5 × socket diameter. Antenna clavate, reaching dorsally to rear of tergite 2; relative antennomere lengths 6>3>2>(4=5), antennomere 6 widest. Collum half-moon-shaped in dorsal outline, anterior margin straight, posterior corner rounded. Relative overall ring widths collum<(head=2,3)<4<(5-15 equal)>16>17>18. Waist on diplosegments shallow, without striations; prozonites and metazonites smooth; metazonites with three transverse rows of sparse, very short, fine setae, mainly missing; limbus with widely spaced, narrow, pointed elements. Ring 2 paranotum with lateral margin straight, lower than collum and ring 3 paranotal margin. Midbody paranota (Figs 1B, 1C) with anterior corners widely rounded, posterior corners narrowly rounded and not extending posteriorly; lateral margins more or less horizontal, at ca. 1/2 ring height. Paranota greatly reduced on rings 16 and 17, not detectable on 18. Midbody sternites moderately setose, longer than wide; impressions well developed, longitudinal deeper than transverse. Ozopore small, round, opening dorsolaterally at posterior corner of paranotum; pore formula 5+7-18. Spiracle openings small, round; on diplosegments with anterior spiracle dorsal to anterior leg and posterior spiracle midway between legs and dorsal to leg bases. Midbody legs short, relative podomere lengths (femur=tarsus)>prefemur>(postfemur= tibia). Prefemur dorsally swollen on anterior legs except 1 and 2; femur slightly swollen dorsally on anterior legs. Sphaerotrichomes on all legs except 1 and 2, more numerous anteriorly, mainly on tarsus and tibia, anteriorly also on postfemur; sphaerotrichomes with shafts tapering to fine point, on midbody legs directed at ca. 45° to long leg axis, shorter and more erect anteriorly. Brush setae unbranched, slightly tapered with blunt tips, on all legs except 1 and 2, anteriorly on coxa, prefemur, femur and postfemur, denser anteriorly. Pre-anal ring very sparsely setose; hypoproct paraboloid; epiproct extending well past anal valves, tip truncate and slightly emarginate; spinnerets in trapezoidal array, ventral spinnerets slightly further apart than dorsal.

Gonopore on short, truncate cone arising distomedially on leg 2 coxa. Leg 6 and 7 bases equally widely separated by shallow concavity, leg 5 bases more narrowly separated; small tab on sternite close to each leg 6 base. Aperture 1/3-1/2 width of ring 7 prozonite, rim posterolaterally greatly extended ventrally (Fig. 2A), sternite between legs 9 overlapping posterior margin of aperture (Fig. 2B). Gonopod telopodites more or less straight (Fig. 2B), when retracted reaching space between leg 5 bases.

Gonocoxae short, truncated-conical, incompletely fused anteriorly in syncoxite, sparse setae on posterolateral and anteromedial surfaces. Cannula swollen at base, tapering abruptly and looping tightly to enter base of telopodite towards medial side. Telopodite (Figs 2B, 3) with cylindrical base, tapering from ca. 1/4 telopodite height, the main portion divided at ca. 3/4 telopodite height into two closely appressed processes: mediolaterally flattened solenomere with rounded tip and rounded subapical projection on posterior margin, and bluntly acuminate anteromedial process, slightly shorter than solenomere. Just basal to this telopodite division (i.e., just under 3/4 telopodite height), a small, finger-like, blunt process arising on posterolateral telopodite surface curving basally and posteromedially. Large, more or less flat process arising anteromedially, closely appressed to medial telopodite surface, directed distally and slightly posteriorly, curving slightly laterally to lie just medial and posterior to solenomere; apex laminar, slightly expanded with broadly rounded distal margin, terminating at about solenomere height; small tooth on anterior edge of process at ca. 2/3 process length (ca. 3/4 telopodite height). Sparse, long setae on posterior telopodite surface from base to just basal to level of short, finger-like process. Prostatic groove running more or less straight to tip of solenomere, posterior to base of large medial process.

Female more robust than male but shorter, legs thinner and without swellings, paranota not as well developed. Epigynum 1/3-1/2 ring 2 width, slightly raised medially; cyphopods not examined.

Distribution.

So far known only from high-elevation, open eucalypt forest and rainforest in the southeastern corner of the Monaro Tablelands in New South Wales (Fig. 4). The climate in the Cernethia inopinata sp. n. range is cool temperate but fairly dry, with a mean annual rainfall at nearby Nimmitabel (1075 m a.s.l.) of 687 mm, well-distributed through the year, and mean temperature minima and maxima of ca. -1.5 °C and 8 °C in June and July and ca. 9 °C and 22 °C in January and February (http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/tables/cw_070067.shtml; accessed 13 June 2015). Snow patches lie on the ground in the open forest in the winter months.

Name.

Latin inopinatus, ‘unexpected’, for the unexpected presence of sphaerotrichomes (see Introduction).

Remarks.

The gonopod in Cernethia inopinata sp. n. resembles the gonopods of some species of Gephyrodesmus Jeekel, 1983 and Orthorhachis Jeekel, 1985 (Mesibov 2008) in having two large, closely appressed branches at the end of a strongly tapering telopodite. In all species of Orthorhachis the major branching occurs at more than half the telopodite height, in Cernethia inopinata sp. n. and all species of Gephyrodesmus at one-third or less the telopodite height. Cernethia inopinata sp. n. differs from Gephyrodesmus species in having an apically divided solenomere, as opposed to an undivided one. Gephyrodesmus and Orthorhachis species also differ from Cernethia inopinata sp. n. in having a head+20 rings body plan, wide paranota and a square spinnerets array.

The type specimens of Cernethia inopinata sp. n. were first examined in 2007, not long after they were collected. The samples smelled strongly at the time with an odour similar to that of the acrid defensive secretions of Tasmanian Atalopharetra and Bromodesmus species. The samples have had several changes of alcohol since 2007 and no longer have a strong odour.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Polydesmida

Family

Dalodesmidae

Genus

Cernethia