Omobrachyiulus ponticus Vagalinski, 2021
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1058.68628 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:65493235-3DDB-4E1B-8848-EAB69F2C20FD |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7019454 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F4E33FA-A9FF-445F-B33A-27BC59971AB5 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:5F4E33FA-A9FF-445F-B33A-27BC59971AB5 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Omobrachyiulus ponticus Vagalinski |
status |
sp. nov. |
Omobrachyiulus ponticus Vagalinski sp. nov.
Figs 41 View Figure 41 , 42 View Figure 42 , 43 View Figure 43
Material examined
(ZMUM). Holotype: ♂ (in head, collum to ring 3, ring 4 to ring 6, and rest of body; leg pair 1, penis, right leg 3, gonopods, left flange of pleurotergum 7, and a mid-body leg dissected) (ZMUM), Georgia, AR Abkhazia, Pitsunda-Myussera Nature Reserve, Myussera part, 20-130 m, mixed deciduous forest ( Castanea , Alnus , etc.), litter, under bark and stones, 8-10.IV.1983, SIG leg . Paratypes: 2 ♀♀ (one unbroken, the other in head to ring 3 and rest of body, right vulva dissected), same collecting data as of the holotype.
Diagnosis.
A species of Omobrachyiulus most similar to O. sevangensis (Lohmander, 1936) comb. nov., O. kvavadzei sp. nov., and O. trochiloides sp. nov.; sharing with O. Omobrachyiulus sevangensis and O. trochiloides sp. nov. the presence of a lamellar ridge-like anterior process of the opisthomere. Differs from the former species by the presence of a distinct, rounded, apicolateral part of the mesomeroidal lobe of the opisthomere, as well as by the solenomere considerably outreaching both anterior process and apical outgrowth of the basoposterior process, and from the latter species by the much more obscure, poorly differentiated basoposterior process ending in an unciform, rather than a fine rod-like, apical outgrowth. Resembling O. kvavadzei sp. nov. mostly by the promere having a distomesal lobe and by the mesomeroidal lobe of the opisthomere bearing an apicolateral part, but differing in other gonopod characters included in the tabular key to the Omobrachyiulus sevangensis group (Table 2 View Table 2 ).
Name.
After the Greek name of the Black Sea, Pontos Euxeinos, to emphasise the type locality of the new species at the eastern coast of that sea. Adjective.
Description.
Measurements: holotype ♂ in S VII, 35+1+T, L = 10 mm, H = 0.9 mm; paratype ♀♀ in S VII-VIII, 34-35+2+T, L = 11.5-12 mm, H = 1.2-1.35 mm.
Colouration (Fig. 41A View Figure 41 ): Head and collum with the usual colour pattern; body gradually lighter from dorsal to ventral side; prozonae grey, dorsally with a transverse dark brown stripe near pro-metazonal suture; metazonae light brown-beige; dorsum with a continuous whitish axial line.
External structures: Eye patches in adults consisting of 20-23 relatively large, clearly convex ommatidia arranged in mostly easily recognisable vertical rows. Vertigial, supralabral, and labral setae: two, four, and 17, respectively. Antennae ca. 1.4 × as long as head in males and 1.1-1.15 × in females; antennomere 2> 5> 4 ≥ 3> 6. Gnathochilarium with a conspicuously large promentum separating lamellae linguales> halfway, the latter with three or four setae in a longitudinal row; stipites in males parabasally each with a longitudinal row of several setae, non-setose in females. Collum smooth, with a single deep groove running along entire lateral margin.
Body rings somewhat vaulted. Prozonae with scattered, very short and shallow, longitudinal grooves. Metazonae rather deeply striated, n Schub = 6 or 7; metazonal setae relatively short, ca. 2/5 of (in more anterior rings), to equal to (in more posterior rings), metazonal length, arranged in very dense whorls. Ozopores placed right in pro-metazonal suture in more anterior rings, and tightly behind suture in more posterior ones; sutures not being sinuous in front of ozopores. Tarsus of mid-body legs 1.3 × as long as tibia and 3.8 × as long as apical claw.
Telson (Fig. 41B View Figure 41 ): Epiproct very long (considerably surpassing the longest paraproctal setae in males, somewhat less pronounced in females), straight, distally bent ventrad, ending with a pointed hyaline tip; with a few setae. Hypoproct in males narrowly trapezoidal, tridentate, the teeth blunt, protruding behind rear contour of paraprocts; the same being narrowly rounded in females. Paraprocts rather sparsely setose, without distinct row of shorter setae along caudal margins.
Male sexual characters: Mandibular stipites rather weakly expanded, forming a rounded ventro-anterior corner. Leg pair 1 (Fig. 42A View Figure 42 ) considerably converging (turned against one another) hooks with slender tibial outgrowths. Leg pair 2 and following pairs with crested adhesive pads, both tibial and postfemoral ones gradually reduced towards telson, but still visible after mid-body; femora of pairs 3-7 with an oval groove in the centre of a bulge. Pleurotergum 7 ventrally forming broadly rounded lobes (Fig. 42B View Figure 42 ) originating from the zone around pro-metazonal suture, protruding mesoventrad behind gonopods. Penis (42C) very small, subquadrate, without apical lobes and with very short, rounded, terminal lamellae directed distolaterad.
Gonopods (Fig. 43 View Figure 43 ): Promere (Fig. 43B, p View Figure 43 in Fig. 43A View Figure 43 ) slightly exceeded in height by solenomere, slender, with nearly symmetrical mesal and lateral margins joining in a narrow, blunt apex; median ridge short and strongly pronounced; a well-developed distomesal lobe. Opisthomere slender; basoposterior process weakly pronounced, ending in a tapering apical outgrowth turned slightly anteriad; anterior process shaped as a micro-serrate lamellar ridge with a freely protruding, tapering, apical part; mesomeroidal lobe with a moderately pronounced basal part, flattened distally and ending in an apicolateral part being very similar in shape to that in O. kvavadzei sp. nov.; solenomere deeply divided into two fine, slender, parallel branches: an anterior and a posterior one, the latter being slightly longer than the former; spiniform filaments along flagellum channel either absent or too small and slanting to be detected by light microscopy.
Female sexual characters: Leg pairs 1 and 2 somewhat shorter, first also thicker, than following legs. Vulva (Fig. 42D, E View Figure 42 ) rather slender, similarly shaped to that of O. kvavadzei sp. nov., the main difference being the less strongly slanting apex of bursa, and the smaller, apically positioned opening in O. ponticus sp. nov.; both bursa and operculum moderately densely covered with long setae. Receptaculum seminis consisting of a short finger-shaped central tube, and a long, spirally twisted, posterior tube ending in an ovoid posterior ampulla with a minute pocket at bottom.
General distribution.
SWGC.
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.
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Brachyiulini |
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