Buthidae C. L. Koch, 1837

Sherwood, Danniella & de Armas, Luis F., 2023, On some teratological scorpions in the Natural History Museum, London and checklist of the scorpiological literature on morphological anomalies (Arachnida: Scorpiones), Euscorpius 381, pp. 1-20 : 1-14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.10621581

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:979D1CE2-FC74-4044-8346-7BBECC535B7D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC87AF-A142-D619-F4E5-4381FE755CC5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Buthidae C. L. Koch, 1837
status

 

Family Buthidae C. L. Koch, 1837 View in CoL

Hottentotta scaber (Ehrenberg, 1828) ( Figures 1 View Figures 1 –2)

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 2♂ ( NHMUK 015211780 View Materials ), BMNH 1890.12.4.1–2 [old accession number], Perim Island , [ Yemen] .

ANOMALIES. One of the males has the left leg III with two claws at the end of a short and modified femur; the other segments (i.e. patella, tibia and tarsi) are lacking ( Fig. 1 View Figures 1 ). The second specimen has a notably deformed left leg IV without claws and only having the coxa, trochanter and a very short, modified, article which does not resemble any normal segment (Fig. 2).

REMARKS. A leg with claws inserted at the end of the femur was recorded for Centruroides griseus (see Santiago-Blay, 1986). Also, González-Sponga (2004: 60, 61, fig. 6e) described a subadult male of Broteochactas garciai having leg I with only coxa, trochanter, and a stump-like femur, without claws; nevertheless, in H. scaber the distal anomalous article is clearly undifferentiated and subconic.

Tityus insignis (Pocock, 1889) (Figure 3)

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 1♀ ( NHMUK 015211784 View Materials ), BMNH 1889.4.13.23 [old accession number], St. Lucia, [Lesser Antilles] .

ANOMALY. The left leg III of this specimen has a single claw at the apex of the patella, with absence of the tibia, and tarsi (Fig. 3).

REMARKS. Legs lacking the tibia and tarsi, with the claws implanted in the patella, have also been recorded for at least three other Neotropical species, but always having two claws, not a single claw ( Armas, 1977: fig. 2 C; González-Sponga, 2004: figs. 3e, 6c). In two other species, the patella is the last segment, but it has no claws (González-Sponga, 2004: figs. 6f, 8d). Armas (2018: 4, 6, fig. 3) described the right leg I of the female holotype of Microtityus eustatia Armas, 2018 as having, after the femur, a short unidentified segment (modified patella?) with claws.

Family Caraboctonidae Kraepelin, 1905 Hadruroides sp. ( Figures 8–9 View Figures 8–13 )

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 1♂ ( NHMUK 015211785 View Materials ), The Andes, [coll.] P. O. Simons ; 1♀ ( NHMUK 015211786 View Materials ), The Andes, [coll.] P. O. Simons .

ANOMALIES. A male and female of Hadruroides sp. from an unspecified locality in the Andes both present deformities. The male specimen has the right chelicera malformed and tiny (Figs. 4–7). The female has the left pedipalp chela with very short movable finger, which also has an irregular row of denticles and absence of a basal lobe ( Figs. 8–9 View Figures 8–13 ).

REMARKS. Pedipalp chela with one of the fingers shorter than the other, and also having anomalies in the number and pattern of the rows of denticles, has been described for some species ( Lourenço, 1984: fig. 14; Crucitti & Chine, 1994: 19–20, fig. 2; González-Sponga, 2004: 61, figs. 6b, 7b).

Family Hormuridae Kraepelin, 1905 Opisthacanthus validus Thorell, 1876

( Figures 10–11 View Figures 8–13 )

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 1♂ ( NHMUK 015211782 View Materials ), ‘ King Wi Town 76.70’ [sic] .

ANOMALIES. The left leg IV is anomalous; it has no tarsi, instead a single claw emerges from a malformed tibia ( Figs. 10–11 View Figures 8–13 ).

Family Scorpionidae Latreille, 1802 Deccanometrus phipsoni (Pocock, 1893) ( Figure 12 View Figures 8–13 )

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 1♀ ( NHMUK 015211778 View Materials ), BMNH 1894.8.21.4 [old accession number], Millgivi Gille, [coll.] Mr. Daler .

ANOMALY. Left leg I has fused tarsi with deformed left-hand claw, its apex is blunted and it is marginally shorter than the normal right-hand claw ( Fig. 12 View Figures 8–13 ).

Heterometrus longimanus (Herbst 1800) ( Figure 13 View Figures 8–13 )

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 1 ♀ ( NHMUK 015211779 View Materials ), BMNH 1888.22 [old accession number], N. W. Borneo .

ANOMALY. An adult female which possesses an anomalous right-hand comb, very short, with only six teeth ( Fig. 13 View Figures 8–13 ); left pectinal comb has 17 teeth.

REMARKS. Similar anomaly has been recorded for other scorpions (Crucitti & Chine, 1994: 21, fig. 3; González-Sponga, 2004: 55, fig. 2).

Pandinurus pallidus (Kraepelin, 1894) ( Figure 14 View Figures 14–19 )

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 1♀ ( NHMUK 015211781 View Materials ), BMNH 1897.6.20.1 [old accession number], Banara [= Barawa], Somalia .

ANOMALY. The left leg IV of this female specimen lacks the tarsi, and a claw is emergent from the tibia ( Fig. 14 View Figures 14–19 ).

REMARKS. We suspect “Banara” is a phonetic misspelling of Barawa, which is the type locality of this species. Misspelled locality names are common in arachnid specimens which were accessioned in the Victorian era (DS pers. obs.). Thus, this specimen may be topotypic.

Sahyadrimetrus scaber (Thorell, 1876) ( Figures 15–17 View Figures 14–19 )

MATERIAL EXAMINED. 1♀ ( NHMUK 015211783 View Materials ), Travancore , [ India], [coll.] Ferguson .

ANOMALY. The left telotarsus has a malformed and shortened tarsal claw ( Figs. 15–17 View Figures 14–19 ).

REMARKS. An anomaly to one of the tarsal claws was also found in D. phipsoni (see above).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Scorpiones

Family

Buthidae

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