Kebodesmus zonarius Mesibov & Rodriguez, 2020

Mesibov, Robert & Rodriguez, Juanita, 2020, A new genus and species of narrow-range millipede (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Dalodesmidae) from Tasmania, Australia, ZooKeys 966, pp. 1-8 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.966.56308

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B5ADDAFD-2C20-4765-B956-C5E1A4E79BFE

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/348F8840-84F7-428D-8541-5D783B95F659

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:348F8840-84F7-428D-8541-5D783B95F659

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Kebodesmus zonarius Mesibov & Rodriguez
status

sp. nov.

Kebodesmus zonarius Mesibov & Rodriguez sp. nov. Figures 1A View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2

Holotype.

Male, Mountain Road (State Forest), Great Western Tiers, Tasmania, Australia, -41.6830, 146.7434 ± 25 m, 820 m a.s.l., 2 June 2020, R. Mesibov, QVMAG QVM:2020:23:0001.

Paratypes.

All from Great Western Tiers, Tasmania, Australia: 9 males, 5 females, details as for holotype, QVMAG QVM:2020:23:0002; 2 males, 2 females, Mountain Road (private property), -41.6855, 146.7515 ± 25 m, 770 m a.s.l., 29 May 2020, R. Mesibov, in 95% ethanol, ANIC 64:000351-64:000354; 9 males (2 dissected), 15 females (1 dissected), same details, QVMAG QVM:2020:23:0003; 1 male, 1 female, Mountain Road (private property), same details but -41.6865, 146.7509 ± 25 m, 780 m a.s.l., in 95% ethanol, ANIC 64:000355-64:000356; 1 male, Mountain Road, -41.6867, 146.7485 ± 25 m, 800 m a.s.l., 12 November 2019, K. Bonham, QVMAG QVM:2020:23:0004.

Other material.

3 females, Mountain Road (private property), -41.6865, 146.7509 ± 25 m, 780 m a.s.l., 29 May 2020, R. Mesibov, in methanol, ANIC 64:000357-64:000359; 5 males, 2 females, Mountain Road (State Forest), -41.6830, 146.7434 ± 25 m, 820 m a.s.l., 2 June 2020, R. Mesibov, in methanol, ANIC 64:000360-64:000366; 6 females, same details but in RNAlater, ANIC 64:000367-64:000372.

Description.

Male and female (Fig. 1A View Figure 1 ) both with head + 19 body rings + telson (H+20). Male/female approximate measurements: length 17/20 mm, midbody vertical diameter 1.4/1.9 mm. Freshly collected specimens pale yellow to pale reddish-brown, with reddish-brown speckling concentrated at rear of body rings and in distinct halo around ozopore; head pale and telson reddish-brown.

Male with clypeus and frons sparsely setose, vertex bare. Antennal sockets separated by ca 2 × socket diameter. Antenna short, slender, just reaching anterior margin of ring 3 when manipulated backwards; relative length of antennomeres 6>(2,3)>(4,5), antennomere 6 widest. Collum in dorsal outline with anterior and posterior margins subparallel, corners smoothly rounded; a few long setae near anterior collum margin. Head slightly wider than ring 2; ring widths 2-17 almost uniform, slightly narrower on rings 2-4. Body cylindrical, waist only slightly impressed in lateral view. Prozonites and metazonites bare, unsculptured; limbus a narrow, uniform lamella. No trace of paranota on diplosegments; paranotum on rings 2, 3 reduced to thin, narrow ridge low on ring, longer on ring 2. Ozopore small, round, opening laterally at ca 2/3 ring height close to posterior metazonite margin; pore formula 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15-19 (normal). Spiracles on diplosegments small, round; anterior spiracle on slightly produced process; posterior spiracle about midway between leg bases. Sternites slightly longer than wide, with deep transverse and longitudinal impressions, sparsely setose. Legs slender, about as long as maximum ring diameter at midbody; anterior legs with prefemur only very slightly swollen dorsally; relative podomere lengths (femur, tarsus)>prefemur>(postfemur, tibia) on midbody legs; tarsus straight. Sphaerotrichomes on tarsus, tibia and postfemur of anterior legs; sphaerotrichome numbers rapidly diminishing posteriorly with only a few sphaerotrichomes on tibia and tarsus of posterior legs; sphaerotrichome hemispherical with sharply pointed seta inclined distoventrally. No brush setae on any legs. Pre-anal ring with sparse, long setae; hypoproct trapezoidal; epiproct extending well past anal valves, tapering to truncate tip ca 1/6 maximum width of ring 19; spinnerets in square array in shallow cavity just ventral to epiproct tip.

Gonopore small, opening distomedially on leg 2 coxa. Bases of legs 6 and 7 well separated by shallowly concave sternite with sparse long setae. Aperture ovoid, wider than long, about 1/3 width of ring 7 prozonite, rim not produced. Gonocoxae subcylindrical, lightly joined basomedially; posteromedially with broad oblique depression bearing very short setae, cannula arising at distomedial end of depression, looping basally and inserted into deep, wide anterobasal groove on telopodite.

Telopodite (Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ) extending just past leg 6 bases when retracted, erect, divided at ca 1/2 telopodite height into a solenomere and complicated medial and lateral branches. Telopodite base below branching point subconical, posterolaterally depressed with field of long setae, at branching point on medial surface with rounded, tab-like extension.

Solenomere arising from anterior surface of telopodite, subcircular in cross-section, bending posteriorly at base, then slightly laterally, tapering gradually to sharply pointed tip at ca 7/8 of telopodite height.

Medial branch of telopodite divided into three processes. Medial processes from anterior to posterior: (a) large, thin, “fishtail” -shaped process bent anteriorly with rounded distal and basal margins, the distal tip of process approaching solenomere but bent away from it and terminating at ca 2/3 solenomere height; (b) short, thick, tab-like process directed posterobasally, terminating at same level as lower portion of process (a); (c) long, flattened process arising posteriorly, bending distomedially, then anterodistally, gradually tapering with minutely tricuspid apex distal to tip of solenomere and basal to tip of lateral branch of telopodite. Right and left (c) processes cross each other in gonopods in situ (Fig. 2A View Figure 2 ).

Lateral branch of telopodite expanded distally into lamellar, cowl-like structure, concave posteromedially, with two groups of apical marginal teeth; posterior margin of cowl produced as large triangular tooth approaching process (c) of medial branch of telopodite; anterior margin of cowl produced as large, rounded tab approaching solenomere; anterolateral (convex) surface of cowl with oblique, triangular tab.

Prostatic groove running from anterobasal groove along anteromedial surface of telopodite to base of solenomere, then along solenomere to tip.

Female resembling male but distinctly stouter (Fig. 1A View Figure 1 ). Genital aperture with posterior margin produced as rounded triangle medially; cyphopods not examined.

Name.

Latin zonarius , zonal, adjective. This species appears to be restricted to a narrow altitudinal zone on Tasmania’s Great Western Tiers.

Distribution and ecology.

So far known from four sites in wet eucalypt forest at ca 800 m a.s.l. on the Great Western Tiers in northern Tasmania, south of the town of Deloraine, with a linear range extent of less than 1 km (Fig. 1B View Figure 1 ). Adults and juveniles are found in patches of richly organic soil and humus in the forest, which is dominated by Eucalyptus delegatensis subsp. tasmaniensis Boland. The new species co-occurs in humus with the native dalodesmids Lissodesmus alisonae Jeekel, 1984 and L. perporosus Jeekel, 1984, but was found in greater numbers than the other two species during searches in 2020.

Remarks.

Kebodesmus zonarius gen. nov., sp. nov. closely resembles a Paredrodesmus species in appearance and habits, and the new species occurs just on the eastern edge of the Paredrodesmus range (Fig. 1B View Figure 1 ). Although a juvenile Paredrodesmus was collected together with the new species at the 2019 site (QVMAG QVM:2020:23:0008), the senior author saw no Paredrodesmus individuals while searching for the new species in 2020. The interesting juxtaposition of ranges suggests that the two genera may exclude each other as competitors in the humus microhabitat.

Only a few of the adult K. zonarius gen. nov., sp. nov. collected in 2020 produced a strongly pungent defensive secretion in the field, even when disturbed, but the alcohol in which 2019 and 2020 specimens were first preserved had a phenolic smell.