Scolopendra oraniensis Lucas, 1846

Doménech, Carles, 2024, Taxonomic and nomenclatural reassessment of the Iberian Peninsula’s nomina obscura, Scolopendra viridipes Dufour, 1820 and S. chlorotes L. Koch in Rosenhauer, 1856 (Chilopoda, Scolopendromorpha, Scolopendridae), ZooKeys 1208, pp. 49-80 : 49-80

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1208.122126

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:56CC7AA9-4B0A-4EA0-86A5-B066E6A57FC3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12827516

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C03A6625-891E-551F-B071-36160948D577

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Scolopendra oraniensis Lucas, 1846
status

 

Scolopendra oraniensis Lucas, 1846 View in CoL

Types: Figs 7 View Figure 7 , 8 View Figure 8 ; Table 3 View Table 3 . Non-types: Figs 1 C – I View Figure 1 , 2 B, D View Figure 2 , 3 View Figure 3 , 4 View Figure 4 , 5 View Figure 5 , 6 View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 , 8 View Figure 8 , 9 View Figure 9 ; Tables 1 View Table 1 , 2 View Table 2 , 3 View Table 3 ; Suppl. material 1: files 1, 3

Scolopendra viridipes Dufour, 1820 View in CoL ; nomen oblitum; senior syn. nov.

S. oraniensis Lucas, 1846 View in CoL ; nomen protectum.

S. chlorotes L. Koch View in CoL in Rosenhauer, 1856; junior syn. nov.

S. mediterranea Verhoeff, 1893: 318 View in CoL .

S. mediterranea lusitanica Verhoeff, 1893: 318 View in CoL .

S. clavipes Silvestri, 1897: 7 View in CoL (sic.).

S. oraniensis africana Attems, 1902: 556 View in CoL .

Rhadinoscytalis canidens oraniensis : Attems 1926: 246.

S. canidens oraniensis : Attems 1930: 19, 36, 37, fig. 50.

S. canidens lusitanica Verhoeff, 1931: 309.

S. oraniensis View in CoL : Würmli 1980: 348–350.

Morphological diagnosis

[based on S. oraniensis type series]. Body length up to 64 mm. 18 or 19 antennal articles; 5 ½ basal ones glabrous in their entire surface. Antennae / cephalic plate length ratio ≈ 3.30. Forcipular trochanteroprefemoral process clearly defined, with two or three rather inconspicuous denticles. Tooth plate with 4 + 4 (rarely 3 + 3) teeth, divided into two groups. T 1 without sutures or sulci. Paramedian sutures complete on tergites TT 2–20. T 21 with a complete median longitudinal suture. Margination starting at T 14, complete on TT 19–21. Sternite paramedian sutures on TT 2–20. Coxopleuron basally pore-field, with a single medio-distal spine. Coxopleural process with a small pore-field, sub-cylindrical and quite elongated, with 9–14 spines altogether, disposed in sub / apical, dorsal, or lateral positions. Legs 3–20 with few setae. Two tarsal spurs on legs 1; a single tarsal spur on legs 2–18 or 19. Ultimate leg elongated, sometimes with a sinusoid transverse sulcus on the ventro-distal part; prefemoral spines (usually between 18–28) arranged in five frequently miss-aligned or duplicated rows with the VL: 1-5, V: 2-6, VM: 2-6, M: 4-8 and DM: 2-4 formula. Prefemoral process inconspicuous ending with two or three (rarely four) spines. Prefemur and femur of UL glabrous; tibia distally covered by sparse setae; tarsi 1 and 2 covered by small setae. UL / T 21 length ratio ≈ 5.15.

Etymology.

from the toponym “ Oran ”, Algeria and the feminine (or masculine) suffix - ensis (from) meaning “ from Oran ”, Algeria, in reference to the type locality.

Type series and type depository.

Lucas (1846) did not declare on which specimens he based the nominal taxon of S. oraniensis (type series) ( ICZN 1999: Art. 72.4. 1), neither exposing the specimens’ depository nor designating a holotype ( ICZN 1999: Art. 72.1. 1). Otherwise, Kraepelin (1904) indicated the presence of the types [syntypes] at the MNHN in writing “ – [ Scolopendra ] oraniensis Lucas. – Algérie: envir. d’Oran [surroundings of Oran] (H. Lucas, 1849 [sic.]. Types) ”, without further data. Therefore, after the examination of the MNHN specimens and their labels (Figs 7 View Figure 7 , 8 View Figure 8 ) ( ICZN 1999: Art. 72.4. 2), I conclude that the type series for the S. oraniensis nominal taxon was erected on the basis of seven syntypes, all of them unsexed adults (Table 3 View Table 3 ). Depository MNHN, Paris, France. Jar Number 282. Samples (Figs 7 View Figure 7 , 8 A – C View Figure 8 ) and labels (Fig. 8 D View Figure 8 ) separated in three different assay tubes (containing 2 / 2 / 3 specimens, respectively).

Collector and collection date.

P. H. Lucas, during winter, between 1839 and 1842 ( Lucas 1846).

Type locality and habitat

from Lucas 1846: Ravines of the “ Sauton’s ” (sic.) [Santon] mountains and ravines between Oran and Mers-el-Kebir, Oran wilayah; Algeria ( ICZN 1999: Recommendation 76 A. 2). Lapidicolous.

Distribution.

Known from southern France (including Corsica), southern Italy (including Sardinia and Sicilia), Malta, Spain (including Balearic Islands), Portugal, Morocco, and Algeria. Introduced in Japan ( Attems 1930; Würmli 1980; Bonato et al. 2017 a).

Proposed new nomenclatural status.

Nomen protectum.

Type series composite redescription

(Table 3 View Table 3 ). Colouration: Colouration of specimens preserved in ethanol is toasted to pale yellow (Figs 7 View Figure 7 , 8 A – C View Figure 8 ). According to Lucas (1846), colouration of living specimen was as follows [morphological traits are interpreted in brackets]:

(Original colour description available from: https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/2362627#page/301/mode/1up)

Upper body part [anterior tergites] coppery black, lower [posterior tergites] green, in the middle ornamented with a yellowish green longitudinal stripe [probably, the translucence of the Malpighian tubule], [...] jaw [forcipules] reddish [...] palps greenish [second maxillae]; base of antenna green, in the middle greenish and in front stained dark red; feet [locomotory legs] green with dark red nails [unguis proper]; last pair of legs [UL] dark green [...].

Morphological description of the type series.

[notes on brackets are comprehensive annotations from this text author]: Body length up to 64 mm. Antennae reaching up to T 2 [maybe up to T 3; actual length shrivelled by ethanol retraction]; with 18 or 19 articles, the basal 5 ½ ones dorsally and ventrally glabrous (Fig. 7 A, B View Figure 7 ). Antennae / cephalic plate length ratio: 2.01 [reduced because of the antennae articles retraction caused by the preservation in ethanol; estimated to be ~ 3.30].

Cephalic plate with disperse puncta and a short anterior longitudinal depression; disto-median or / and paramedian sutures are absent. Posterior edge of cephalic plate overlapping the T 1 (Fig. 7 A View Figure 7 ). Coxosternal surface with disperse puncta, without sutures (Fig. 7 B View Figure 7 ). Article 2 of second maxillary telopodite with spur. Forcipular trochanteroprefemoral process with one apical and two (rarely one) medial poorly differentiable teeth (Fig. 7 C View Figure 7 ). Tooth plates slightly wider than tall, forming an obtuse angle (> 120 °) with respect to the coxosternite; sensillae present. Each tooth plate with 4 + 4, rarely 3 + 3 teeth: the external one separated from the other three and inner ones sometimes fused. (Fig. 7 C View Figure 7 ).

Spiracles triangular with three valves, present on body segments 3, 5, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, and 20.

T 1 without sutures or sulcus (Fig. 7 A View Figure 7 ); TT 2–20 with complete paramedian sutures (Fig. 7 D View Figure 7 ); T 21 with a longitudinal median suture, surface of all tergites smooth, without depressions (Fig. 8 A View Figure 8 ). T 21 width / length ratio ≈ 1.35. Margination starting at T 14, being complete in TT 19–21.

Sternites with complete paramedian sutures from TT 2–20 (Fig. 7 E View Figure 7 ). Sternite of ultimate leg-bearing segment (Fig. 8 B View Figure 8 ) with sides converging posteriorly; surface smooth, without depressions.

Coxopleuron not surpassing the posterior border of the tergite of the ULBS (Fig. 8 B View Figure 8 ); with a dense pore-field area at the base and a single medio-distal spine. Coxopleural process sub-cylindrical and distinctly elongated, reaching up to the first 1 / 4 of the UL prefemoral length. The complete surface is covered by a loose pore-field with some small setae (Fig. 8 C View Figure 8 ) and a total of 9–14 usually asymmetrically disposed spines; 4–6 of them in an apical / subapical position; 3–6 in a lateral position, and 1–3 in a dorsal position.

Leg 1 with two distal tarsal spurs on tarsus 1, one lateral anterior and one ventral; legs 1–18 or 19 (mode 19, Table 3 View Table 3 ) with only one ventral tarsal spur. Tibial spurs absent. Legs 1, 2, or 3 with or without isolated setae. Legs 3 or 4–20 with scarce setae.

UL moderately long and slender with ratios of lengths of prefemur and femur = 1.15, femur and tibia = 1.25, tibia and tarsus 2 = 1.80; tarsus 1 and tarsus 2 = 1.20 (Fig. 8 C View Figure 8 ). Prefemora flattened dorsally, sometimes with a visible sinusoid transverse sulcus on the ventro-distal side (Fig. 8 A, B View Figure 8 ). Spines are variable in number (total: 17–26) and size, usually arranged in five frequently asymmetrical, duplicate, and non-ordered rows, with a formula: VL: 3-6, V: 2-6, VM: 2-6, M: 3-8 and DM: 2-4. VM and M spine rows usually converging proximally; between them a flattened surface is present, regularly rounded proximally and without spines. Prefemoral process inconspicuously prominent, sometimes scarcely setose, ending with two, or rarely three, spines (Figs 8 A – C View Figure 8 ). Setae on prefemur and femur almost absent, tibia distally scarce setose and tarsi 1 and 2 densely covered with short setae. UL / T 21 length ratio ≈ 4.39 [reduced because of the retraction of the articles caused by the preservation in ethanol; ~ 5.15].

Genitalia retracted in the whole type series.

Genitalia description.

(Based on S. viridipes and S. chlorotes “ topotypical ” material; Fig. 9 A – D View Figure 9 ).

Genitalia well developed, reaching the apical part of coxopleural process when extended. Sternite and tergite of genital segment 1 (TGS and SGS I) convex and distally round, with a proximal median suture – distally attenuated – forming the vertex of a poorly angulated keel (Fig. 9 A, B View Figure 9 ). In males (Fig. 9 A View Figure 9 ) tergite of genital segment 2 (SGS II) small and horseshoe-shaped, with a poorly visible longitudinal suture. Gonopods short and small. Penis present, with fee endpoint, ventally serrated. TGS, SGS I, SGS II, lamina adanalis, gonopods and penis carrying scatted small setae, the remaining part of the genital structures glabrous. Sexual dimorphism or secondary sexual characteristics indistinct (Figs 9 C, D View Figure 9 ); UL tibia and tarsi weakly and inconstantly more hirsute in females, with gender differences frequently indistinguishable.

Species variability.

Scolopendra oraniensis has been observed to be somewhat variable in some few morphological features (Figs 3 View Figure 3 – 9 B View Figure 9 ; Table 3 View Table 3 , Suppl. material 1: files 1, 3): number of antennal articles (17–20; mode 18–19), number of hirsute basal antennal articles (5–5 ½), number of teeth on tooth plates and on forcipular trochanteroprefemoral processes (respectively 3 + 3 vs 4 + 4; mode 4 + 4 and 3 vs 2; mode 3), beginning of complete margination of tergites (on TT 17, 19, or 20; mode 17), tarsal spurs on leg 1 (0-2; mode 2), single tarsal spurs on legs (2–18 or 19; mode 2–19), coxopleural process morphology and UL prefemur number of spines (respectively 9–14 and 18–32), visibility of UL prefemoral ventro-distal horizontal suture, coxopleural and prefemoral process lengths or number of setae on the UL tarsi.

Additionally, the colouration has proven to be variable sympatrically (Figs 1 D – I View Figure 1 , 3 View Figure 3 – 9 View Figure 9 ). The cephalic plate and tergites can be monochromatic pale yellow to dark green / brown, sometimes reddish, sometimes with a darker / lighter longitudinal stripe. The forcipules can be yellowish to reddish, while the legs and antennae can be pale green, yellowish, bluish, reddish, or bicoloured, with occasional metallic reflections (Figs 1 D – I View Figure 1 , 3 View Figure 3 , 9 View Figure 9 ).

These morphological and colouration characteristics, although tending towards a certain geographic distribution, often turn out to be variable within those populations (Table 3 View Table 3 , Suppl. material 1: files 1, 3). Therefore, the separation of the species by their old names are clearly unjustified, since all the features can be explained by the known intraspecific variability of the taxon ( Iorio and Geoffroy 2006; García-Ruiz 2018), which is also shared with many other species in the genus ( Zalesskaja and Schileyko 1992; Siriwut et al. 2016; Doménech et al. 2018; Dyachkov and Nedoev 2021; Tsukamoto et al. 2021).

Differential diagnosis.

Morphologically, S. oraniensis is related to five other species of the S. canidens group distributed around the Mediterranean Sea and Middle Asia ( Würmli 1980; Simaiakis and Mylonas 2008). Scolopendra clavipes (Middle Asia) can easily be distinguished from S. oraniensis by the clavate morphology of the UL, while the two subspecies of S. dalmatica C. L. Koch, 1847 (northeastern Mediterranean) can be differentiated by their larger size (up to 80 mm), the incomplete median suture of T 21, and the four spines of the UL prefemoral process. However, the morphologically closest relatives to S. oraniensis are S. canidens (southeastern and eastern Mediterranean) and S. cretica Lucas, 1853 (eastern Mediterranean, probably endemic to Crete, Greece). These two latter species can be unequivocally differentiated from S. oraniensis by the number of glabrous articles in the antennae (10–12 vs 5–5 ½, respectively), the type of transition between the glabrous / hirsute articles (gradual vs abrupt), and the number of spines in the prefemoral process (generally 3 vs 2 or 3). Between S. canidens and S. cretica , the only visible difference is the presence of brush-like setae in tarsi 1 and 2 of the UL in the S. cretica females ( Würmli 1980; Lewis 2010; Dyachkov ( ASU) pers. comm. 2022; Huesca pers. comm. 2018).

In these last two species closest to S. oraniensis , comparative analyses such as antennae / cephalic plates and T 21 / UL length ratios and their genitalia descriptions have not been performed yet.

Nomenclatural considerations.

To verify the actual identities of S. viridipes and S. chlorotes , establishing the S. oraniensis specimens Lucas (1846) on which he based the type series was necessary, to have reference material with which to unambiguously compare new material ( ICZN 1999: Preamble, Art. 13, Recomm. 13 A). The S. oraniensis lectotype designation was found to be not nomenclaturally required ( ICZN 1999: 11; point 6 in introduction; Art. 72.1. 1; 74.7). However, neotypes designations for S. viridipes and S. chlorotes were mandatory to clarify their type localities and taxonomic situations in the absence of the original types ( ICZN 1999: Art. 75, 76). Finally, the identities of S. viridipes , S. chlorotes , and S. oraniensis have been solved, and they are all conspecific (Figs 3 View Figure 3 – 8 View Figure 8 ; Table 3 View Table 3 ) leaving the name S. oraniensis Lucas, 1846 as nomen protectum with which to unambiguously refer to “ all ” of these species ( ICZN 1999: Art. 23.3 and 23.9. 2).

At a nomenclatural level, the specific epithet of S. oraniensis obviously conformed to the reference of the type locality ( Gervais 1847). However, that noun is composed by the feminine (or masculine) suffix “ - ensis ” (coming from) and the prefix (a toponym) “ Orani ”, in the place of “ Oran ”. Coincidentally, “ Orani ” is the name of two other localities located in Italy and the Philippines. This can lead to etymological confusion, especially for the Italian Orani, on Sardinia, a region where S. oraniensis also lives ( Würmli 1980; Bonato et al. 2017 a). Therefore, it is thought to be an incorrect original spelling ( ICZN 1999: Art. 32.4) and according to the author’s intention to honour Oran, Algeria, rather than Orani, Italy, the proper name for S. oraniensis should be amended as “ S. oraniensis ”. However, ICZN (1999: Art. 32.5. 1) clearly states that this supposition should not be adhered to since, in the original publication, “ The […] use of an inappropriate connecting vowel is not to be considered inadvertent errors ”. Therefore, despite being confusing or misspelled, this name must not be corrected as it is valid in its original spelling; S. oraniensis .

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

ASU

Arizona State University

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Chilopoda

Order

Scolopendromorpha

Family

Scolopendridae

SubFamily

Scolopendrinae

Tribe

Scolopendrini

Genus

Scolopendra

Loc

Scolopendra oraniensis Lucas, 1846

Doménech, Carles 2024
2024
Loc

S. oraniensis

Würmli M 1980: 348 - 350
1980
Loc

S. canidens lusitanica

Verhoeff KW 1931: 309
1931
Loc

S. canidens oraniensis

Attems C 1930: 19
1930
Loc

Scolopendra viridipes

Scolopendra viridipes Dufour, 1820
Loc

S. oraniensis

S. oraniensis Lucas, 1846
Loc

S. chlorotes

S. chlorotes L. Koch in Rosenhauer, 1856
Loc

S. mediterranea

S. mediterranea Verhoeff, 1893: 318 .
Loc

S. mediterranea lusitanica

S. mediterranea lusitanica Verhoeff, 1893: 318 .
Loc

S. clavipes

S. clavipes Silvestri, 1897: 7 (sic.).
Loc

S. oraniensis africana

S. oraniensis africana Attems, 1902: 556 .
Loc

Rhadinoscytalis canidens oraniensis

Rhadinoscytalis canidens oraniensis : Attems 1926: 246.