Rowlandesmus Shear & Marek, 2021

Shear, William A. & Marek, Paul E., 2021, Three new genera and eighteen new species of miniature polydesmid millipedes from the northwestern United States (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Polydesmidae), Zootaxa 4975 (1), pp. 81-126 : 111

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4975.1.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DB7C9028-3EDF-454F-88D0-336624AD1DC4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4805031

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B18797-FFF7-9D17-4BA5-05ADD8E52300

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rowlandesmus Shear & Marek
status

gen. nov.

Rowlandesmus Shear & Marek , new genus

Type species: Rowlandesmus millicoma Shear & Marek , new species.

Species included: Rowlandesmus millicoma n. sp. and R. dentogonopus, n. sp.

Diagnosis. In their somatic characters, the two species of this genus are similar in nonsexual traits to the others described here, except that the metzonital tubercles carrying setae are generally lower and the surface of the metazonites of the midbody rings nearly smooth. The distinction lies in the gonopods Figs 88–90 View FIGURES 85–90 , 93, 94 View FIGURES 91–95 , 131, 132 View FIGURES 127–132 ), in which the acropodite is sharply bent and reflexed in its distal third to half. Just distal or just proximal to this "kink" in the gonopod (k, Fig. 88 View FIGURES 85–90 ) is a short process. The pulvillus is basal to the “kink” and in R. millicoma , much expanded.

Etymology. The genus is named for our late and much respected colleague, Rowland M. Shelley (1942–2018), one of the most productive millipede taxonomists of 20th and 21st centuries. He initiated the modern study of the small polydesmids of western North America with careful redescriptions of known genera and species and the description of Retrorsia Shelley, 2003 .

Distribution. Douglas and Coos Cos., Oregon.

Notes. We are placing both of these species in Rowlandesmus due to the similarity of the gonopods, with a sharp bend or “kink” in the acropodite causing the distal third to be reflexed at a right or lesser angle in relation to the basal part. Nevertheless there are some differences, and subsequent species discoveries may result in the two species being separated.

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