Trichoniscoides bellesi Reboleira & Taiti, 2015

Reboleira, Ana Sofia P. S., Gonçalves, Fernando, Oromí, Pedro & Taiti, Stefano, 2015, The cavernicolous Oniscidea (Crustacea: Isopoda) of Portugal, European Journal of Taxonomy 161, pp. 1-61 : 9-13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2015.161

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2297E4A3-D279-4D0A-923C-D5E0D5DCB3C0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815785

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FE37F766-5E77-430F-87C2-C5CB28A78D5D

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:FE37F766-5E77-430F-87C2-C5CB28A78D5D

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Trichoniscoides bellesi Reboleira & Taiti
status

sp. nov.

Trichoniscoides bellesi Reboleira & Taiti View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:FE37F766-5E77-430F-87C2-C5CB28A78D5D

Figs 4 View Fig A–G, 5A–E, 6A–D

Diagnosis

A blind and colourless Trichoniscoides characterised by the male pleopod 1 exopod having a broadly rounded outer margin and two equal distal lobes, and the male pleopod 2 endopod having a distal article thickset for ⅔ of its length, ending with a narrow point.

Etymology

The new species is named after Prof. Xavier Bellés for his invaluable contribution to the synthesis of knowledge on the subterranean fauna from the Iberian Peninsula.

Material examined

Holotype

PORTUGAL: ♂, Algar do Javali , Montejunto Massif, 26 Dec. 2012 ( MZUF).

Paratypes

PORTUGAL: 1 ♂, 1 ♀, same data as holotype ( MZUF).

Description

Maximum size: ♂ 1.7× 0.8 mm; ♀ 1.8× 0.8 mm. Body colourless and slightly convex ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). Cephalon and pereon with granulated dorsal surface; granules on pereonites arranged in double rows; each granule bearing a triangular scale-seta ( Fig. 4B View Fig ) on top. Cephalon ( Fig. 4 View Fig C–D) with quadrangular frontal lateral lobes not protruding frontwards. Eyes absent. Pereonites 1–4 ( Fig. 4A View Fig ) with rounded posterior corners; pereonites 5–7 ( Fig. 4A View Fig ) with epimera pointing backwards. Pleon ( Fig. 4A, E View Fig ) narrower than pereon; pleonites 3–5 with small epimera and short posterior points. Telson ( Fig. 4E View Fig ) more than twice as wide as long, distal part trapezoidal with concave sides and slightly convex apex. Antennula ( Fig. 4F View Fig ) with three articles; third article with distinct spine and three long aesthetascs at apex. Antenna ( Fig. 4G View Fig ) with fifth article of peduncle shorter than flagellum; flagellum with three articles, with three long aesthetascs on second article. Mandibles ( Fig. 5 View Fig A–B) with two penicils on the right and three on the left; molar process without penicils. Maxillula ( Fig. 5C View Fig ) with inner branch bearing three penicils at apex, proximal one distinctly longer than other two; outer branch with 11 teeth and two thin stems, one among outer group and one among inner group of teeth. Maxilla ( Fig. 5D View Fig ) apically bilobed, with outer lobe smaller than inner one; inner lobe with several long, stout setae. Maxilliped ( Fig. 5E View Fig ) endite triangular, with stout penicil at apex; palp distally rounded, with long setae, basal article with two short, compound setae. Uropod ( Fig. 4E View Fig ) with exopod distinctly longer than endopod; exopod with several long, pointed setae and endopod with a long and a short seta at apex.

MALE. Pereopod 1 ( Fig. 6A View Fig ) and pereopod 7 ( Fig. 6B View Fig ) with no particular modifications. Pleopod 1 ( Fig. 6C View Fig ) exopod almost as long as wide, with broadly rounded outer margin and two equal distal lobes each bearing a short seta at apex; endopod with triangular and flagelliform basal article and setose distal article. Pleopod 2 exopod missing in the specimen examined; endopod ( Fig. 6D View Fig ) biarticulated, distal article about twice as long as basal one, thickset for first ⅔ and ending with narrow point.

Remarks

In the shape of the male pleopod 2 exopod, with a thickset distal article ending in a narrow point, the new species is similar to Trichoniscoides lusitanus Vandel, 1946 , T. broteroi and T. heroldi Vandel, 1952 . It differs from T. lusitanus , an epigean species from north-western Spain and northern Portugal, in lacking eyes and pigment, in the male pleopod 1 endopod having a triangular basal article, and in the male pleopod 2 endopod having a stouter distal article ending in a shorter point; from T. broteroi in lacking the hook on the male pereopod 7 merus, and in the triangular shape of the basal article of the male pleopod 1 endopod; from T. heroldi , an epigean species from eastern France, in the lack of eyes and the shape of the male pleopod 1.

Ecological notes

Trichoniscoides bellesi sp. nov. is typically a troglobiotic species, lacking eyes and body pigment. It was discovered in the deepest and most thermally insulated parts of Algar do Javali, around 10 m deep. Javali is currently the richest cave of the Montejunto karst massif. Four other caves in the same massif were also sampled (Algar do Escorpião, Ralo das Fontaínhas, Algar da Terra da Rolha and Buracos Mineiros) without recovering any specimens of T. bellesi . The subterranean community of Algar do Javali includes other troglobiotic species, such as the campodeid Podocampa cf. fragiloides, a species of the oniscidean genus Paraschizidium (see below), the ground beetle Trechus tatai Reboleira & Ortuño, 2010 , a new pselaphid beetle, and the pseudoscorpions Chthonius cardosoi Zaragoza, 2012 and Roncocreagris occidentalis Zaragoza & Reboleira, 2013 ( Reboleira et al. 2010 a, 2013 c).

MZUF

Italy, Firenze, Museo Zoologico "La Specola"

MZUF

Museo Zoologico La Specola, Universita di Firenze

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