Tasmaniosoma orientale, Mesibov, 2010

Mesibov, Robert, 2010, The millipede genus Tasmaniosoma Verhoeff, 1936 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Dalodesmidae) from Tasmania, Australia, with descriptions of 18 new species, ZooKeys 41 (4), pp. 31-80 : 71-72

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.41.420

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FC5CFE57-05F9-4685-BC02-BB82AB9E4894

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3788478

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/783D6984-EE76-4BC7-86A8-8C9B883E5C30

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:783D6984-EE76-4BC7-86A8-8C9B883E5C30

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tasmaniosoma orientale
status

sp. nov.

Tasmaniosoma orientale View in CoL sp. n.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:783D6984-EE76-4BC7-86A8-8C9B883E5C30

Fig. 21; map Fig. 26 View Figure 26

Holotype. Male, Australia, Tasmania, Elephant Pass , 41°38'26"S 148°14'32"E ( FP 034892) ± 25 m, 340 m, 20 August 2009, R. Mesibov, QVM 23 View Materials :51551. GoogleMaps

Paratypes. 1 male, Tinmine Creek , Tas, 41°41'55"S 148°11'41"E ( EP 993828) ± 250 m, 530 m, 11 June 1988, R. Mesibov, QVM 23 View Materials :45991 GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same details but 41°42'08"S 148°12'38"E ( FP 006824) ± 250 m, 450 m, 22 June 1988, QVM 23 View Materials :46000 GoogleMaps ; 1 female, same details, QVM 23 View Materials :46001 ; 1 female, same details but 41°41'33"S 148°10'36"E ( EP 978835) ± 250 m, 550 m, 29 June 1988, QVM 23 View Materials :46008 GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same details but 41°41'59"S 148°11'15"E ( EP 987827) ± 250 m, 500 m, 30 June 1988, QVM 23 View Materials :51550 GoogleMaps .

Other material examined. 37 males and 38 females from 43 other sites (see Appendix).

Diagnosis. Metatergites without tubercles; ring 6 sternite with discrete setal brushes on anterior margin; gonopod telopodite with stout, rod-like setae in longitudinal tract on posteromedial surface and solenomere divided into apically bifid distal branch and distally curved, acuminate basal branch.

Description. Male/female approximate measurements: length 16/ 16 mm, ring 12 paranota width 1.8/ 1.8 mm. Male as for T. armatum in live colour and most non-gonopod details, but long-preserved specimens completely decoloured, overall widths tergite 6>5>4>3>(2,head)>collum, ring 12 paranota 1.4 × as wide as prozonite. Ring 6 sternite as for T. armatum , but with very short, thin sternal tab by leg 6, not bearing setae.

Gonopod telopodite (Fig. 21) similar to that of T. armatum (see Fig. 7A View Figure 7 ), but process 1 simply acute (but see Remarks) rather than Y-shaped; process 2 undivided, curving medially, apically expanded and flattened with dentate margin; distal margin of laminate process not extended posteriorly, instead curving smoothly to posterior extension, the latter shorter and straighter than in T. armatum ; solenomere divided into distal branch with bifid tip carrying prostatic groove, and basal branch directed posteriorly but curving distally, with pointed tip; process 3 an anteroposteriorly flattened, quadrate tab, the margin free distally apart from central attachment; process 4 as in T. armatum ; laterally with group of 5–6 setae, rather than three.

Female with posterior margin of epigynum raised in centre as irregularly edged triangle.

Figure 2 View Figure 2 |. Tasmaniosoma orientale sp. n. A Posterolateral view of gonopods in situ, voucher male ex QVM 23:46018 B medial and C posterolateral views of left gonopod telopodite of paratype male ex QVM 23:51550. Setation not shown in A and C; dashed line marks course of prostatic groove. Processes labelled as in Fig. 7A View Figure 7 . Scale bars = 0.2 mm.

Distribution. Common and sometimes locally abundant in dry and wet eucalypt forest over ca 1500 km 2 in the northern part of the east coast and Eastern Tiers of Tasmania, from near sea level to at least 1000 m elevation ( Fig. 26 View Figure 26 ). Not yet found north of Beaumaris or south of Bicheno on the coast, or west of St Pauls Dome in the Fingal Valley. Sympatric with T. barbatulum sp. n. and T. fragile sp. n.; co-occurs with the latter. T. orientale may be parapatric with T. armatum in the west and south of its range, and with T. cacofonix sp. n. in the north; further sampling is needed to better define the range boundaries of these three species.

Etymology. Latin orientalis, “eastern”, for the eastern Tasmanian distribution of this species.

Remarks. The lateral process on the gonopod telopodite (process 1) is simply acute in the holotype and the specimen illustrated in Figs 21B and 21C. In some East Coast males the process is apically forked, as in the right telopodite in Fig. 21A. In the west of the T. orientale range, the lateral process is wider and Y-shaped, as in T. armatum .

Female T. orientale are readily distinguished from those of sympatric, similarly sized T. fragile sp. n. by the presence of large tubercles on T. fragile tergites.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

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