Eustrongylosoma maculatum, Golovatch, Sergei I. & Stoev, Pavel, 2011

Golovatch, Sergei I. & Stoev, Pavel, 2011, Review of the millipede genus Eustrongylosoma Silvestri, 1896 in the island of New Guinea, with descriptions of nine new species (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Paradoxosomatidae), International Journal of Myriapodology 5, pp. 1-26 : 6-7

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/ijm.5.2090

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8C454563-BF19-4315-AF04-353A3B4E99BC

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EFBC2841-A6A2-4BED-93D4-E1EBCAADF757

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:EFBC2841-A6A2-4BED-93D4-E1EBCAADF757

treatment provided by

International Journal of Myriapodology by Pensoft

scientific name

Eustrongylosoma maculatum
status

sp. n.

Eustrongylosoma maculatum   ZBK sp. n. Figs 15-19

Type material.

Holotype♂(NMNHS),Papua New Guinea, West Sepik Province, Telefomin area, September 1975, leg. B.S.E.

Name.

To reflect the wide spots/bands in the front halves of the collum, following metaterga and epiproct.

Diagnosis.

Distinguished by the very poorly developed paraterga, coupled with a non-fringed tip of the solenophore (see also Key below).

Description.

Length ca 24 mm, width of pro- and metazona 2.0 and 2.4 mm, respectively. Coloration light yellow-brown with front halves of collum, following metaterga and epiproct, as well as entire head and antennae contrasting brown, thus creating a clear cingulate pattern.

In width, head > collum = segment 3 = 4 < 2 < 5-16; thereafter body gently tapering towards telson. Head densely setose, only vertex bare. Antennae rather short, clavate, reaching beyond segment 2 dorsally; antennomere 6 longer than 2nd. Collum transversely oval, lateral flaps small, regularly and broadly rounded. Tegument generally smooth and shining. Paraterga of postcollum segments very poorly developed (Fig. 15), set low (at about 1/2-1/3 midbody height); paratergum 2 a low ridge with a few wrinkles above; paraterga 3 and 4 virtually missing, traceable only as 3-4 similar wrinkles; following paraterga retained only as a dorsal sulcus/line (Fig. 15), barely vi sible in segment 19. Ozopores lateral, superficial. Tergal setae mostly abraded, retained ones about 1/4 the length of metaterga; setation pattern vague, sometimes traceable as 1+1 paramedian insertion points in front row. Axial line wanting. Transverse sulcus on metaterga highly superficial, incomplete, far from reaching bases of paraterga, visible only in metaterga 9-17. Stricture between pro- and metazona rather distinctly beaded. Pleurosternal carinae very small, complete crests or nearly so only in segments 2-4. Epiproct (Fig. 16) short, flattened dorsoventrally, digitiform; apical papillae very large, spiniform, directed more caudally than ventrally; subapical papillae missing. Hypoproct subtriangular, apex rounded, setigerous paramedian knobs at caudal margin small and rather faintly separated.

Sterna densely setose; a rather high, linguiform, caudally rounded, ventral, setose lamina only between ♂ coxae 4 (Fig. 17). Legs relatively long, midbody ones ca 1.5-1.6 times longer than body height, apparently slightly incrassate and longer compared to ♀; ♂evident tarsal brushes increasingly well reduced towards legs of segment 10.

Gonopods as in Figs 18 & 19. Distal part of solenophore split into a distinct frontomesal tooth (k) and a longer, somewhat curved lateral branch (j) with two subapical denticles and a lobule. Femorite with a large, rounded, apicolateral lobe (l).