Spirostreptida (Jeekel, 1985)

Shelley, Rowland M. & Golovatch, Sergei I., 2011, Atlas of Myriapod Biogeography. I. Indigenous Ordinal and Supra-Ordinal Distributions in the Diplopoda: Perspectives on Taxon Origins and Ages, and a Hypothesis on the Origin and Early Evolution of the Class, Insecta Mundi 2011 (158), pp. 1-134 : 33-34

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5164069

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/350B6716-0D1D-FFE2-FF71-FC7BFC55FC17

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Spirostreptida
status

 

Order Spirostreptida View in CoL s. l. ( Fig. 29 View Figure 29 )

Spirostreptida View in CoL s. l. (sensu Hoffman 1980 a, Shelley 2003a) occur on all continents except Europe ( Fig. 29 View Figure 29 ). They span the Equator and both Tropics in the New World and Africa, the former being continuous and the latter, discontinuous, the Tropic of Cancer and Equator in Asia, and the Tropic of Capricorn in Australia. They also inhabit islands in the Atlantic (Cape Verdes, Bioko, both São Tomé and Principe [Appendix]) and Indian ( Comoros, Madagascar, Seychelles, Mauritius, Rodriguez) Oceans, which we combine with sub-Saharan Africa; except for the Hawaiian Islands, they are absent from Oceania. Spirostreptida View in CoL also inhabit Bermuda, which is isolated because occurrence is not ubiquitous in the eastern US.

The New World distribution comprises four areas, the smallest in the northern Rocky Mts. of the US. An elongate region along the Pacific Coast, extending from southwestern Washington to northern Baja California Norte, includes the Channel Islands, and another elongate strip, with unknown southern limit, occupies central Chile. Finally, there is a large area that encompasses most of the southeastern and south-central United States, all Caribbean Islands except the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos, all of Mexico and Central America except the Baja California Peninsula, and extends south-southeastward in South America to east-central Argentina. Arising in western Pennsylvania and northern Virginia, the area ranges southward to the panhandle and north-central Florida, but it does not penetrate the peninsula and also excludes the Outer Banks/Coastal Plain of North Carolina. It angles southwestward to Oklahoma, curves north westward into the Rocky Mts. of Colorado, dips into northern Arizona, then heads southward through “mainland” Mexico (Sonora) into the Gulf of California, incorporating Tiburon Island. It encompasses the northern 1/2-2/3 of South America, as the western border slants through southern Peru and southwestern Bolivia north of the Atacama Desert. In Argentina, Spirostreptida View in CoL veer south-southeastward away from the Andes and terminate north of Spirobolida View in CoL .

Distributions in Africa, the Middle East, and Indian Ocean islands represent the nominate suborder. Restricted to the coastal region of the Republic of South Africa ( Fig. 32 View Figure 32 ), Epinannolenidea are entirely subsumed by spirostreptideans. The Iranian area represents Cambalidea ( Chiraziulus Mauriès, 1983 ), whereas that in India /southeast Asia combines Cambalidea and Spirostreptidea . It extends from the vicinities of Mumbai and New Delhi to Shanghai and encloses Taiwan, the Philippines, all of Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and peninsular India and Sri Lanka. We recognize a separate area in east/southeastern Australia that represents Cambalidea and Epinannolenidea , spreads eastward around New Zealand and New Caledonia, and is detached from the small range in southwestern Western Australia.

Spirostreptida s. l. are extinct from Europe. Past occurrence is shown by the Oligocene French fossil, Protosilvestria sculpta (Cambalidea) , redescribed by Mauriès (1992).

Taxonomists differ as to the constitution of Spirostreptida s. l., and Shear et al. (2003) and Shelley (2007a) promoted the “8th gonopod clade” concept that, if substantiated, will disrupt the concepts of Hoffman (1980a) and Shelley (2003a) and potentially elevate the component suborders to full orders. To cover this possibility, we map and discuss the distributions of Cambalidea , Epinannolenidea , and Spirostreptidea ( Fig. 30 View Figure 30 , 32 View Figure 32 , 34 View Figure 34-35 ) separately; they demonstrate decidedly different patterns with little congruency, which supports elevating the first two to full orders.

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