Leucogeorgia longipes Verhoeff, 1930
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.713 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A6CB58F5-1ECC-47F0-AA07-798844AF80A7 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4335802 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A96362-2850-FFBF-2E11-1AF60E6EFEA4 |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar |
scientific name |
Leucogeorgia longipes Verhoeff, 1930 |
status |
|
Leucogeorgia longipes Verhoeff, 1930 View in CoL
Figs 2B View Fig , 7–10 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig , 56 View Fig , 58 View Fig
Leucogeorgia longipes Verhoeff, 1930: 34 View in CoL .
Diagnosis
This species belongs to the group of Leucogeorgia spp. with modified mouthparts and it differs from all of them by several gonopodal and habitus structures, viz., the absence of teeth on the mesomeral claw (vs presence in all other Leucogeorgia with modified mouthparts), the absence of a process on the epiproct (vs presence of a very short to long process in all other Leucogeorgia with modified mouthparts), and the presence of a characteristic distal row of 3–5 long setae on the lamellae linguales (vs absence of such a row of setae in other Leucogeorgia with modified mouthparts or presence of 9–10 setae in two irregular rows in L. mystax sp. nov.).
Material examined
Lectotype (here designated)
CENTRAL-WEST GEORGIA – Kutaisi District • ♂; Imereti, Rionhesi Cave ; 42.29° N, 42.75° E; “ Kaukasus, Rion Höhle bei Kutais, Pfützen, 11.11.1929, Borutzky Dr. leg., Verhoeff don. 1940”; alcohol material; NHMW 3063 View Materials . GoogleMaps
Paralectotype
CENTRAL-WEST GEORGIA – Kutaisi District • 1 ♂; same collection data as for lectotype; NHMW 9980 View Materials GoogleMaps .
Other material
CENTRAL-WEST GEORGIA – Ambrolauri District • 1 ♂; Racha karst Massif, 1 km from Velevi village, Dolabistavi Cave , dark zone ; 42.45° N, 43.17° E; 13 Oct. 2014; S. Barjadze leg.; SMNG GoogleMaps • 2 ♀♀; Verkhiye Tlugi village , Sakishore Cave , beyond siphon; 42.44° N, 43.16° E; 20 Jan. 1987; V. Bogdanov leg.; ZMUM GoogleMaps • 1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; IZB. – Chiatura District GoogleMaps • 2 ♂♂; Sveri village , Kotias Cave ; 42.21° N, 43.32° E; 1 Mar. 2018; Z. Tsutskiridze, T. Arabuli and G. Nebieridze leg.; IZISU. – Kutaisi District GoogleMaps • 1 ♂; Tskhal-Tsiteli Cave ; 42.27° N, 42.73° E; 1 Aug. 1939; J. Birstein leg.; ZMUM GoogleMaps .
Redescription
SIZE AND NUMBER OF BODY RINGS. Males 19–20 mm long, vertical diameter of largest body ring 1.3–1.4 mm, body with 33–36 podous rings + 0–1 apodous ring + telson. Females 18–22 mm long, vertical diameter of largest body ring 1.5–1.6 mm, body with 31–37 podous rings + 0–1 apodous ring + telson.
COLOUR ( Figs 7–8 View Fig View Fig ). Specimens in alcohol yellowish white to yellowish brown; a recently collected male greyish white.
HEAD ( Figs 8 View Fig B–C, 9B–E). Without ommatidia. Frontal setae absent. Labrum without labral teeth, with four supralabral and 12–19 labral setae. Gnathochilarium with rhomboid promentum; lamellae linguales with 2+2–3+3 shorter basal setae and 3+5 or 4+4 long distal setae in a transverse row; stipites with 3+3–4+4 distolateral setae and 5+5–9+9 medial setae. Antennae 1.8 mm long (in male from Kotias Cave), their length ca 130% of vertical diameter of largest body ring. Lengths of antennomeres I–VIII (in mm): 0.16 (I), 0.44 (II), 0.33 (III), 0.27 (IV), 0.35 (V), 0.15 (VI), 0.08 (VII) and 0.02 (VIII). Length/width ratio of antennomeres I–VII: 0.8 (I), 2.7 (II), 1.9 (III), 1.6 (IV), 1.8 (V), 0.9 (VI) and 0.7 (VII). Antennomeres V and VI each with a terminal corolla of large sensilla basiconica bacilliformia; antennomere VII with a terminal corolla of small sensilla basiconica bacilliformia.
BODY RINGS ( Fig. 8G View Fig ). Ventrolateral sides of metazonae with longitudinal striations; dorsal and dorsolateral sides smooth. Length of midbody setae ca 6% of vertical diameter of rings.
TELSON ( Figs 7D View Fig , 8 View Fig D–E). Epiproct without preanal process. Paraprocts rounded, setose, mesal edges strongly bulging, resembling lips. Hypoproct more or less lanceolate, with a slightly protruding mesodistal margin and two long apical setae.
LEGS IN MALES. First pair of legs modified, hook-shaped ( Figs 9A View Fig , 10D View Fig ), with three complete podomeres; coxa with one seta; prefemur with 3–5 setae; femur, postfemur and tibiotarsus coalesced; femur with three setae; postfemur with one seta. Tip slightly tuberculated. Postfemoral and tibial ventral pads poorly developed, more or less clearly visible on pregonopodal legs, only remnants on postgonopodal legs.
VENTRAL MARGIN OF MALE BODY RING 7 ( Fig. 8F View Fig ). Low, more subquadrate in lateral view.
PENES. Not checked.
GONOPODS ( Figs 2B View Fig , 9F View Fig , 10 View Fig A–C). Promere (p) long and slender, with a flagellum (f); apical part spatulate, with denticulate margins; basal half with two developed ridges. Mesomere (m) with a hook-shaped mesomeral claw (mc), without denticles; mesomeral lamella (ml) high, slightly serrate, posterior part finely fimbriate. Opisthomere (o) bipartite. Anterior branch of o with a solenomere (s) with a mediumsized tip, and a well-developed and fimbriate velum (v). Posterior branch of o in form of a shield-like protective lamella (pl). Mesomere and opisthomere connected basally with an accessory membrane (am).
Distribution
Known from five caves in Kutaisi, Ambrolauri and Chiatura districts in Central-West Georgia ( Fig. 58 View Fig , blue square).
Remarks
The type locality Rionhesi (= Sapichkhia) Cave is submerged due to the construction of the Rioni Hydroelectric Power Station near Kutaisi, in the early 1930s. This species was declared as probably extinct by Golovatch (1983, 1985) and Barjadze et al. (2018), but now with the discovery of new specimens in four additional caves in the same region, it has really been ‘brought back to life’.
Verhoeff (1930) stated that specimens he examined had been found in small ponds. In addition to this, two males collected from the Kotias Cave were observed crawling on stones under the water (G. Nebieridze pers. comm.). In the same cave, L. longipes lives in sympatry with L. gioi sp. nov., a species with normal mouthparts.
Together with L. gioi sp. nov., these species represent the southeasternmost records of the genus Leucogeorgia .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Leucogeorgia longipes Verhoeff, 1930
Antić, Dragan Ž. & Reip, Hans S. 2020 |
Leucogeorgia longipes
Verhoeff K. W. 1930: 34 |