Sphaerotherium rotundatum Brandt, 1833

Spiegel, Didier Van den, Golovatch, Sergei I. & Hamer, and Michelle L., 2002, Revision of some of the oldest species in the millipede genus Sphaerotherium Brandt, 1833 (Diplopoda, Sphaerotheriida, Sphaerotheriidae), with new synonymies, African Invertebrates 43, pp. 143-181 : 168-171

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7666078

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1A76E76B-4075-FC16-02C8-FC967282D109

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sphaerotherium rotundatum Brandt, 1833
status

 

Sphaerotherium rotundatum Brandt, 1833 View in CoL

( Figs 6, 7 View Figs 1–11 , 33a–h View Figs 33 )

Oligaspis puncticeps Wood, 1865 View in CoL . Syn. n.

Sphaerotherium viride Porat, 1872 View in CoL . Synonymy confirmed.

Sphaerotherium pubescens Porat, 1872 View in CoL . Synonymy confirmed.

Material studied:

Type material: S. rotundatum : ^ holotype, Caput Bonae Spei (Cape), Krebs leg. ; ZMB 61 View Materials .

S. viride : ^ holotype, Caput Bonae Spei (Cape), 1854, [det.] von Porat ; SMNH.

S. pubescens : Ò holotype (without telopods), South Africa, Caffraria 1840–45, J. A. Wahlberg ; SMNH.

Oligaspis puncticeps : Ò neotype (selected herewith), RSA, KwaZulu-Natal, Umhlali, environs of Durban , October 1960, R. F . Lawrence ; NMSA .

Other material: Numerous Ò and ^ from MRAC, SAMC and TMSA, various dates and collectors.

Description:

Total length ranging from 7–25, width from 4–12, average length 16.

Colour: Head, antennae and collum orange brown to olive green. Thoracic shield, tergites and pygidium light brown to olive green bordered with brown along posterior margin. Underside and legs olive green to light brown.

Head with a few hairs growing longer towards clypeus; gnathochilarium pilose. Both sides of labrum broadly rounded laterad, middle scarcely emarginate, with a single median tooth. Ocelli obvious, almost black. Antennae short, last segment with four apical sensory cones.

Collum smooth, bordered with one row of long setae.

Thoracic shield smooth, brim relatively large, accompanied by a row of long setae.

Tergites without median keel, surface smooth, with neither punctures nor setae.Anterior margin with hairs growing longer laterally. Endotergum highly characteristic, comprising one row of pinnate marginal bristles not reaching tergal edge, a marginal ridge without callosities but underlined by a row of circular impressions, and an intersegmental membrane with dark cones and long setae ( Figs 6, 7 View Figs 1–11 , 33e View Figs 33 ).

Pygidium smooth, without peculiarities in both sexes.

Legs highly characteristic, without lobes on coxae but apical part of tibia showing two strong spines above ( Fig. 11 View Figs 1–11 ). Coxa, femur and tibia more or less fully covered with sensory organs consisting of an intraintegumental round cavity opening by a small aperture supporting a short sensitive hair ( Figs 11 View Figs 1–11 , 33c View Figs 33 ).

Male sexual characters:

Second pair of legs without coxal lobe.

Anterior telopods with a 2-segmented tarsus ( Fig. 33f View Figs 33 ). Posterior telopods relatively slender, lateral side of tibial process with one digitiform protuberance, tarsus incompletely or indistinctly divided in its apical part, with a row of striated knobs on anterior side and a concavity with two lobes supporting small tactile spines ( Fig. 33f, g View Figs 33 ).

Female sexual characters:

No coxal lobe. Vulvae with operculum extremely elongated distally (rod-like) and sparsely pilose ( Fig. 33d View Figs 33 ).

Comments: S. rotundatum is a widespread species in South Africa ( Hamer 1998), so easily identifiable that the holotype has never been re-examined prior to this study. Our observations generally indicate that S. rotundatum auct . is conspecific with the holotype. However, we have noticed certain discrepancies in the structure of the endotergum of the holotype and non-type material. This mainly concerns the cuticular pattern of the marginal ridge, which can be inconspicuous in some specimens.

We also confirm the synonymy established by Silvestri (1910), as the types of viride and pubescens also prove to represent rotundatum auct .

As S. rotundatum View in CoL , the type species of Sphaerotherium View in CoL , appears indeed to possess only four sensory cones on antennomere 8, this is of additional nomenclatural importance. This means that Oligaspis Wood, 1865 View in CoL , with Oligaspis punticeps Wood. 1865 as type-species (see next paragraph), Neobournellum Attems, 1908 View in CoL (see above under Sphaerotherium compressum View in CoL ) and Tetraconosoma Verhoeff, 1924, with Sphaerotherium weberii Silvestri, 1910 View in CoL as type-species, are to be confirmed here as representing strict junior subjective synonyms of Sphaerotherium View in CoL s. str. To avoid the introduction of a new genus-group name, e.g. the invalidly proposed Plethoconium (cf. Attems 1943; Jeekel 1970; Hoffman 1980) to replace the subgeneric name Sphaerotherium sensu auctorum , we revive Bournellum De Saussure & Zehntner, 1902 View in CoL as currently the earliest available substitute name (cf. Hoffman 1980), with the type species Sphaerotherium retusum C. L. Koch, 1847 View in CoL , showing ≥7 sensory cones on the last antennomere. However, a subgeneric division of Sphaerotherium View in CoL based on the number of sensory cones on antennomere 8 alone is abandoned (see above under S. dorsale View in CoL ).

As regards the identity of Oligaspis puncticeps Wood, 1865 a View in CoL , the decision has been made to select a neotype because the holotype that was claimed to have been deposited in the collection of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philedalphia ( Wood 1865 a) is presumably lost (Hoffman, in litt.). Based on the original description ( Wood 1865 a) and illustrations published elsewhere (Wood 1865 b), there is no doubt that the holotype represented a juvenile male possessing about 10 body segments and under-developed telopods.The only useful information contained in the description and drawings concerns the type locality indicated as Port Natal (= Durban), the generally olive-brown colour with red-brown hind margins on the posterior tergites, the laterally swollen tibia of the posterior telopods, the gently sloping pygidium, and the smooth terga.

The neotype is an adult male kept in the NMSA collection, selected from among the samples identified by R. F. Lawrence as Sphaerotherium rotundatum . The male is 15 mm long and 7 mm wide, with the colour faded light brown, and with the hind margins of the posterior four tergites red-brown. The head is smooth, with sparse hairs, which are denser and longer towards the clypeus. The latter is somewhat punctate. The tergites have a smooth appearance, and the endotergum is as in Figs 6 View Figs 1–11 and 33e View Figs 33 , but the depressions behind the marginal ridge are not as obvious as illustrated.All other characters, including the telopods, the collum, the antennae, the leg coxae and tibial spines, are as described above for rotundatum auct .

The neotype comes from Umhlali, about 30 km north of Durban, collected in October 1960 by R. F. Lawrence, thus representing a strict topotype as well .

SMNH

Department of Paleozoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History

NMSA

KwaZulu-Natal Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Sphaerotheriida

Family

Sphaerotheriidae

Genus

Sphaerotherium

Loc

Sphaerotherium rotundatum Brandt, 1833

Spiegel, Didier Van den, Golovatch, Sergei I. & Hamer, and Michelle L. 2002
2002
Loc

Plethoconium

Attems 1944
1944
Loc

Sphaerotherium weberii

Silvestri 1910
1910
Loc

Neobournellum

Attems 1908
1908
Loc

Bournellum

De Saussure & Zehntner 1902
1902
Loc

Sphaerotherium viride

Porat 1872
1872
Loc

Sphaerotherium pubescens

Porat 1872
1872
Loc

Oligaspis puncticeps

Wood 1865
1865
Loc

Oligaspis

Wood 1865
1865
Loc

Oligaspis punticeps

Wood. 1865
1865
Loc

Oligaspis puncticeps

Wood 1865
1865
Loc

Sphaerotherium

: C. L. Koch 1847
1847
Loc

Sphaerotherium

: C. L. Koch 1847
1847
Loc

Sphaerotherium retusum

C. L. Koch 1847
1847
Loc

Sphaerotherium

: C. L. Koch 1847
1847
Loc

S. rotundatum

Brandt 1833
1833
Loc

Sphaerotherium compressum

Brandt 1833
1833
Loc

Sphaerotherium rotundatum

Brandt 1833
1833
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