Spirobolinae Bollman, 1893
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5179125 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:91F84CDC-6A07-40B6-83F1-35083D171267 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/325C879C-1D65-6323-D1F8-FD4BFD9AF8E5 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Spirobolinae Bollman, 1893 |
status |
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Subfamily Spirobolinae Bollman, 1893 View in CoL
Spirobolinae Bollman, 1893:156 View in CoL . Jeekel, 1971:210 (list). Kevan, 1983:2962.
Type-genus. Spirobolus Brandt, 1833 View in CoL .
Diagnosis. Body form rounded/cylindrical ( Fig. 33 View Figure 33 ). Anterior gonopod sternum with variably broad medial lobe substantially separating coxal endites; telopodites apically uncinate. Posterior gonopod telopodite with variably long, lobate prefemoral process overhung and enveloped to varying degrees by acropodite. Latter thin and laminate, variably cupulate with cavity/depression of varying depth; either short and marginally irregular with indentations, lobes, and spiniform projections, or long with smoothly curvilinear margins.
Components. Two tribes: Spirobolini Bollman, 1893 , and Aztecolini , new tribe.
Distribution ( Fig. 27 View Figure 27 ). Four regions including the entire familial areas in Asia and eastern North America along with the point locality in Minnesota. Spirobolinae occur syntopically with Floridobolinae / Floridobolini in their Floridian locations and while absent from western North America and Guatemala, they partly overlap Floridobolinae / Tylobolini in central Mexico, occurring from northern Nuevo León to central Jalisco and northern Guanajuato ( Fig. 28 View Figure 28 ). The distance between Taiwan and Jalisco, the closest New World locality, is approximately 13,315 km (8,322 mi), one of the greatest subfamilial lacunas in the Diplopoda. Distances between areas in Mexico and the US are as cited in Table 3.
Origin. Substantial evolutionary changes had to take place for Floridobolinae / Tylobolini / Hiltonius to evolve into Spirobolinae / Aztecolini / Aztecolus , so this divergence logically took longer than that which yielded Tylobolini . We arbitrarily allow 5 my for these changes and assign an age of <296 my to Spirobolinae , which likely evolved in Mexico before Tylobolus arose in California and perhaps before Hiltonius even reached this state.
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.
Spirobolinae Bollman, 1893
Shelley, Rowland M. & Floyd, Samuel D. 2014 |
Spirobolinae
Kevan, D. K. 1983: 2962 |
Jeekel, C. A. W. 1971: 210 |
Bollman, C. H. 1893: 156 |