Sinella hexaseta, Qu & Zhang & Chen, 2010

Qu, Jiqiang, Zhang, Feng & Chen, Jian-Xiu, 2010, Two new species of the genus Sinella Brook, 1882 (Collembola: Entomobryidae) from East China, Journal of Natural History 44 (41 - 42), pp. 2535-2541 : 2536-2538

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2010.499576

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8C7B87D8-B841-FFA1-D4F6-4EB1FEF05D1A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sinella hexaseta
status

sp. nov.

Sinella hexaseta View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figure 1 View Figure 1 , Table 1)

Types

Female holotype and three female paratypes. China: Anhui Province, Yi County, Taoyuandong village , in and under rotting timbers, 19 October 2004, J. Qu .

Description

Body length. Up to 1.43 mm.

Colour. White to pale yellow.

Head. Eyes absent. Antennae 1.6–1.9 times as long as cephalic diagonal. Ant. III organ with setae 2 and 3 rod-like, others not clearly seen. Apical bulb absent on Ant. IV. Labral setae 4/5, 5, 4, all smooth; labral papillae absent. Lateral process of labial palp slightly thicker than normal setae with tip exceeding apex of same papilla by 0.14–0.16 of its length ( Figure 1A View Figure 1 ). Labial setae M 1 REL 1 L 2 all smooth; seta R about 0.84–0.88 as long as seta M 1. Postlabial setae G 1–4 and H 1–4 smooth; seta X smooth, X 2 weakly ciliate, X 3 weakly ciliate, respectively 0.27–0.29, 0.54–0.62, 0.28–0.36 as long as seta R; X 4 not clearly seen ( Figure 1B View Figure 1 ). Dorsal cephalic chaetotaxy with four macrochaetae in Gr. I and four in Gr. II ( Figure 1C View Figure 1 ).

Thorax. Th. II with three (m1, m2, m2i) macrochaetae in Gr. I, three (a5, m4, m4p) in Gr. II, three (p1a, p1, p1i) in Gr. III, five or six in Gr. IV, five plus five in Gr. V and one (p4) in Gr. VI; Th. III with 9–11 in Gr. I, 9–11 in Gr. II, three (m5, a6i, a6) in Gr. III, three (m6, p5, p6) macrochaetae and three (m6ai2, m6e, m6p) mesochaetae in Gr. IV ( Figure 1D View Figure 1 ).

Abdomen. Abd. I with six (m2i, m2, m3, m4, m4p, a3) macrochaetae; Abd. II with three (m3e, m3ep, m3) in m3 arch and one (m5) lateral macrochaeta; Abd. III with one (m3) central and two (am6, pm6) lateral macrochaetae ( Figure 1E View Figure 1 ); Abd. IV with six (A3, A4, A6, B4, B5, C1) central and five (E2, E2p, E3, E4, D3) lateral macrochaetae ( Figure 1F View Figure 1 ).

Appendages. Trochanteral organ with 16 setae seen in holotype. Inner differentiated setae of tibiotarsus ciliate with ciliations moderatedly appressed to setal axis. Outstanding inner macrochaeta of hind tibiotarsus at about 0.25–0.35 distance from base, basal half somewhat swollen, distal half gradually tapered and strongly tapered at extreme tip. Unguis with three inner teeth, basal paired two unequal, outer one obviously larger with tip reaching 0.53–0.59 distance from base to tip of inner edge; odd tooth 0.69–0.74 from base. Unguiculus with large outer tooth. Tenent hair longer than unguiculus, with tip acuminate ( Figure 1G View Figure 1 ). Ventral tube with 12 smooth setae on posterior face and six smooth setae on each lateral flap ( Figure 1H View Figure 1 ); anterior face not clearly seen. Manubrium without posterior smooth setae. Manubrial plaque with three ciliate setae and two pseudopores on each side ( Figure 1I View Figure 1 ). Distal smooth part of dens about 1.25–1.40 times as long as mucro. Mucronal apical tooth about 1.41–1.61 times as long as subapical tooth, distal base of latter at about 0.65–0.70 of mucro. Mucronal basal spine long, with tip about reaching apex of apical tooth ( Figure 1J View Figure 1 ).

Etymology

The name of the new species is derived from Latin hex and seta referring to the existence of 6+6 central macrochaetae on Abd. IV.

Remarks

The new species differs from all known species of the genus by the Abd. IV with unique dorsocentral chaetotaxic pattern, which was designated by Chen and Christiansen (1993) as pattern II, but has not been recorded in any known Sinella species.

So far, 18 blind Sinella species have been reported all over the world. Among them, two Chinese species, Sinella insolens Chen and Christiansen, 1993 and Sinella christianseni Ma and Chen, 1997 , share many characters with the new species, but differ from the latter in some important characters. A comparison of the three species is given in Table 1.

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF