Conotylidae, Cook, 1896

Shelley, Rowland M., Medrano, Michael F., Shear, William A., Ovaska, Kristiina, White, Ken J. & Havard, Erin I., 2009, Distribution extensions of the milliped families Conotylidae and Rhiscosomididae (Diplopoda: Chordeumatida) into northern coastal British Columbia and Southern Alaska, Insecta Mundi 2009 (71), pp. 1-6 : 3

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5405021

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CD87EA-4110-F05C-0E87-3F74B4FF5F55

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Conotylidae
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Conotylidae View in CoL

Shear (1971, 1972, 1976) established the

Conotylidae in south-central and southeastern BC;

Figure 2. Distribution of the Conotylidae along the Shelley (1990) provided additional localities and Pacific Coast of northwestern North America. Stars, extended the family as far north as Pine Pass, 129 Taiyutyla shawi ; diamond, T. lupus ; dots, Taiyutyla sp. km (80 mi) west of Dawson Creek and ca. 483 km nr. T. shawi and T. lupus ; asterisk,? Bollmanella sp. A (300 mi) south of the Yukon, where no millipeds few dots denote two closely proximate localities. have been collected. All prior records were sum- Abbreviations as in Fig. 1 View Figure 1 .

marized by Hoffman (1999). Kevan (1983) and

Kevan and Scudder (1989) cited a number of conotylid genera as potential inhabitants of western Canada, and Shear (2004) confirmed Taiyutyla Chamberlin, 1952 , for this region by describing T. shawi and T. lupus from northern and southern Vancouver Island, respectively. Sampling by RMS in 2006 and the authors in 2007 establish Conotylidae in the Alexander Archipelago, northern coastal BC, the continental land mass as far north as Gustavus, Alaska (only ca. 182 km [113 mi] south of the Yukon), and also near Hyder, Alaska, and Stewart, BC (Fig. 2), at roughly the same latitude as Pine Pass. These records constitute a familial range extension of approximately 1,054 km (655 mi), the northernmost previous site being the type locality of T. shawi (Shear 2004) . However, the northernmost continental locality for both the class and order in western North America is that of the female caseyid provisionally assigned to Opiona columbiana Chamberlin, 1951 , by Shelley et al. (2007) -- the confluence of the Tatshenshini and O’Connor Rivers in the “Haines Triangle” region of BC, around 30 km (19 mi) south of the Yukon. As Diplopoda are known from so proximate a site, it seems a foregone conclusion that millipeds inhabit at least the southern periphery of the Yukon Territory, and substantiation is warranted.

Two body forms of conotylids were encountered that we interpret as representing distinct genera. The first is an immature male that we provisionally assign to Bollmanella Chamberlin, 1941 , because of its small size and advanced maturity; a genus of small-bodied conotylids ( Shear 1974), Bollmanella is one of the potential west Canadian genera cited by Kevan (1983) and Kevan and Scudder (1989). The second, Taiyutyla , a large-bodied taxon, is represented by 3 males and 33 females that are anatomically similar to the Vancouver Island species; seven females were discovered on a single log on “ 20 mi Spur Trail” on POW. The? Bollmanella juvenile was encountered ca. 160 km (100 mi) inland under bark of a decaying log at a moderately moist locality, but Taiyutyla was solely in coastal rain forests in association with decaying P. sitchensis logs and stumps, usually under thick layers of moss. Thirty-four individuals is a sizeable sample, and for only three males to be collected, and none on the log with seven females, is striking. Cook and Collins (1895) collected 80 specimens of the parthenogenetic caseyid, Underwoodia iuloides (Harger, 1872) (= Underwoodia polygama Cook and Collins, 1895 ) on Long Island, New York, only two of which were males, yielding a sex ratio of 40 females: 1 male ( Shelley 1992). With 33 females and 3 males, the sex ratio of our samplings in Alaska and adjacent BC suggests that parthenogenesis may be operative in Taiyutyla at higher latitudes.

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