Pseudopolydesmus canadensis, CANADENSIS (NEWPORT, 1844)

Sierwald, Petra, Hennen, Derek A, Zahnle, Xavier J, Ware, Stephanie & Marek, Paul E, 2019, Taxonomic synthesis of the eastern North American millipede genus Pseudopolydesmus (Diplopoda: Polydesmida: Polydesmidae), utilizing high-detail ultraviolet fluorescence imaging, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 187 (1), pp. 117-142 : 127-131

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlz020

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5718975

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E1C602-FFCE-FFF4-FC8A-FADB42913E52

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Pseudopolydesmus canadensis
status

 

PSEUDOPOLYDESMUS CANADENSIS ( NEWPORT, 1844) View in CoL

( FIGS 7 View Figure 7 , 13–14 View Figure 13 View Figure 14 )

Polydesmus canadensis Newport, 1844: 265 View in CoL , immature ♀ HT (BMNH, non vidi). – Gervais, 1847: 106. – de Saussure & Humbert, 1870: 52.

Pseudopolydesmus canadensis View in CoL – [ Withrow, 1988: 89, figs 55, 61, 70–73, 76, 109, 114, 122–126, map 6, tables 9–11.] – Hoffman, 1999: 443 (= Po. glaucescens ; Po. nitidus ; Po. branneri View in CoL ; Po. echinogon ; Po. conlatus ; D. sylvicolens View in CoL ; D.christianus View in CoL ; D. catskillus View in CoL ; D.phanus View in CoL ; D. gausodicrorhachus View in CoL ). – Shelley, 2000: 246.

Polydesmus glaucescens C. L. Koch, 1847: 133 View in CoL , types unknown. – Koch, 1863a: 59, pl. 26: fig. 51.

Pseudopolydesmus glaucescens – Attems, 1940: 141, uncertain placement.

Polydesmus nitidus Bollman, 1887a: 45 View in CoL , ♂ / ♀ ST (not located at USNM, non vidi).

Dixidesmus nitidus – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 67.

Polydesmus branneri Bollman, 1887b: 620 View in CoL , ♂ HT (USNM, vidi). – Loomis, 1943: 405, fig. 16, pl. 1: fig. 4.

Dixidesmus branneri View in CoL – Loomis & Hoffman, 1948: 54 (= Polydesmus conlatus View in CoL ; Dixidesmus christianus View in CoL ). – Hoffman, 1950: 223. – Causey, 1952: 7. – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 65.

Pseudopolydesmus branneri View in CoL – Hoffman, 1974: 346, fig. 3. – Shelley, 1988: 1651, figs 27, 31 (= Dixidesmus catskillus View in CoL ; D. gausodicrorhacus [sic]).

Polydesmus echinogon Chamberlin, 1942b: 10 View in CoL , fig. 33, ♂ / ♀ ST (USNM, vidi).

Dixidesmus echinogon – Chamberlin, 1943c: 18. – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 66.

Polydesmus conlatus Chamberlin, 1943b: 36 View in CoL , fig. 5, ♂ HT (FMNH INS977, vidi). – Sierwald et al., 2005: 40.

Dixidesmus conlatus – Chamberlin, 1943c: 18.

Dixidesmus sylvicolens Chamberlin, 1943c: 20 View in CoL , figs 37, 38, ♂ / ♀ ST (USNM, vidi). – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 67.

Dixidesmus christianus Chamberlin, 1946: 140 View in CoL , fig. 4, ♂ HT (USNM, vidi). – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 66.

Dixidesmus catskillus Chamberlin, 1947: 24 View in CoL , fig. 2, ♂ HT (ANSP, non vidi). – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 66.

Dixidesmus phanus Chamberlin, 1951: 27 View in CoL , fig. 1, ♂ HT (USNM, vidi). – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 67.

Dixidesmus gausodicrorhachus Johnson, 1954: 1 View in CoL , fig. 1, ♂ HT (USNM, vidi). – Chamberlin & Hoffman, 1958: 66.

Diagnosis

Size: Usually large, with length ranging from 11.8 to 28.6 mm ( Withrow, 1988: 199) and an average body length of 22.2 mm (N = 162; Withrow, 1988: 94). Comparable in size or slightly larger than Ps. erasus and Ps. serratus . Often larger than Ps. collinus . Usually larger than Ps. pinetorum .

Paranota and tergal sculpture ( Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ): Corners of paranota forming a roughly rhomboid quadrilateral, with ALC posterior to AMC and lateral to PLC. Edges meeting at ALC and PMC forming right angles, with posterior edge shorter than in Ps. collinus . Leading and distal margins very rounded, denticles weak to obliterated. Angle of curve along distal margin and lateral portion of leading margin uniform from PLC past ALC. Trailing margin moderately concave, less so than Ps. serratus . Anterior, median and posterior blister rows subequal in thickness. Anterior blister row narrowing only slightly at lateral ends. Individual MBs and PBs subequal in area. Central paranotal blisters large, occupying more than two-thirds of paranotal breadth, as wide as long. Lateral blisters anteriorly widening laterad.

e2 + e3 large, joined at base into elongate stalk ( Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ), sometimes connected by a lamina; e4 small ( Fig. 14A View Figure 14 ). Process m1 small, medial of pulvillus; m2, m3 and m4 large, subtriangular, equidistant from each other; m3 offset laterad from m2 and m4 ( Fig. 14B View Figure 14 ).

Type notes

Polydesmus canadensis (immature ♀ HT, BMNH, non vidi): Type presumed extant. Collected from Albany River , Hudson Bay , ON, Canada .

Polydesmus glaucescens: Location of types, if extant, unknown. Koch (1847) described the type locality only as ‘Nordamerika’.

Polydesmus nitidus (15 ♂ / ♀ ST, non vidi): Location of type material unknown (not located at USNM). Bollman (1887a) described 15 specimens from Pensacola, Escambia Co., FL, USA.

Polydesmus branneri (♂ HT, USNM, vidi): From Mossy Creek (now Jefferson City), Jefferson Co., TN, USA . Vial contains one male and one dissected gonopod, tip of gonopod damaged.

Polydesmus echinogon (three ♂ and nine ♀ ST, USNM, vidi): Chamberlin (1942b) described four specimens from Shawanese , Harveys Lake , Luzerne Co., PA, USA, collected 23 September 1905 by F. C. Paulmier . We found two type lots, both labelled ‘Types’ by Chamberlin and Gonopod ( Figs 7 View Figure 7 , 14 View Figure 14 ): Gonocoxa ventral lobe with single gonocoxal plate. Telopodite shallowly curved except at thickened section basal to pulvillus, with subterminal kink followed by straight terminal section. Pulvillus medium-sized, midway between base and terminus of acropodite. Process e1 elongate and kinked; processes with older labels erroneously identifying the specimens as Ps. serratus . Type lot 1 (probably the four specimens described by Chamberlin): contains one male with a single gonopod in situ, one intact female, and two small vials; first small vial labelled ‘MALE HT’ by Withrow, contains one male with a single gonopod in situ and two dissected gonopods (one damaged); second vial labelled ‘Lectoallotype’ by Withrow, contains one fragmented female. Type lot 2: contains five intact females, fragments of two females, one male with a single gonopod in situ, one genitalia vial with a single gonopod. We found two Ps. serratus males with gonopods in situ in Type lot 2 and separated them into a third vial.

Polydesmus conlatus (♂ HT and two ♀ PT, FMNH, vidi; ♂ / ♀ PT, USNM, vidi; additional ♂ / ♀ PT, non vidi): Chamberlin (1943b) nominated ♂ HT and described several male and female specimens from Gatlinburg, Sevier Co., TN, USA, collected 13–19 June 1942 by H. Dybas , and one male and one female from Thomasville, Thomas Co., GA, USA, collected 2 April 1940 by F. Field . The FMNH type lot is from the Gatlinburg locality: contains ♂ HT with gonopods in situ and two ♀ PT, images are available online at https://collections-zoology.fieldmuseum.org/ catalogue/956102, last accessed 25/3/2019 ( FMNH INS 977). At USNM, we found an additional type lot from Greenbrier Cove, Sevier Co., TN, USA: labelled ‘Paratype’, contains at least one female, several males, one dissected gonopod in genitalia vial and one small vial labelled ‘Lectoallotype’; the small vial contains one female with one dislodged vulva. The location of the one ♂ and one ♀ PT from GA is unknown.

Dixidesmus sylvicolens (♂ / ♀ ST, USNM, vidi): Chamberlin (1943c) described ‘many specimens’ from 7 miles north of Sylvania, Screven Co., GA, USA, collected by W. Ivie, 12 April 1943 . We found one type lot: labelled ‘ branneri ’ by Withrow, contains several specimens including males with gonopods.

Dixidesmus christianus (♂ HT, three ♂ PT and five immature PT, USNM, vidi): Chamberlin (1946) nominated ♂ HT and described three ♀ and five immature PT, all from Pass Christian, Harrison Co., MS, USA, collected 15 February 1946 by J. Rapp and W. Rapp . We found one type lot: labelled ‘ branneri ’ by Withrow, contains two intact males, one male with gonopods missing, five immature specimens and one small vial; small vial labelled ‘HT’, contains fragmented male with one gonopod missing. The three ♂ PT we found might represent the three ♀ PT described by Chamberlin.

Dixidesmus catskillus (♂ HT, ANSP, non vidi): From Catskill, Greene Co., NY, USA, collected by Knight .

Dixidesmus phanus (♂ HT and four PT, USNM, vidi): From Suwanee River , FL, USA, without further locality, collected 15 April 1950 by D.E. Beck . We found two type lots. Type lot 1: labelled ‘Male HT’ and labelled ‘ branneri ’ by Withrow, contains one male with gonopods. Type lot 2: contains several female specimens, one with vulvae everted.

Dixidesmus gausodicrorhachus (♂ HT, one ♂ and two ♀ PT, USNM, vidi): From west side of Garnet Lake , Mackinaw Co., MI, USA, collected 31 July 1949 . There are two type lots. Type lot 1: contains ♂ PT with gonopods in situ and one ♀ PT with vulvae everted, nominated by Johnson (1954) as the allotype. Type lot 2: contains ♂ HT with single gonopod and one ♀ PT.

Distribution

Northern Wisconsin east through southeastern Ontario and southern Quebec to the Atlantic Coast, south through the Appalachian Mountains to the Gulf Coast as far west as southern Mississippi.

Additional specimens examined

FMNH INS 1421, 1455 , 1461 , 1465 , 1552 , 1569 , 3574 , 6934 *, 7632 , 7699 , 14219 , 3120683 * .

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

FMNH

Field Museum of Natural History

ANSP

Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Polydesmida

Family

Polydesmidae

Genus

Pseudopolydesmus

Loc

Pseudopolydesmus canadensis

Sierwald, Petra, Hennen, Derek A, Zahnle, Xavier J, Ware, Stephanie & Marek, Paul E 2019
2019
Loc

Pseudopolydesmus canadensis

Shelley RM 2000: 246
Hoffman RL 1999: 443
Withrow RP 1988: 89
1988
Loc

Pseudopolydesmus branneri

Shelley RM 1988: 1651
Hoffman RL 1974: 346
1974
Loc

Dixidesmus nitidus

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 67
1958
Loc

Dixidesmus gausodicrorhachus

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 66
Johnson BM 1954: 1
1954
Loc

Dixidesmus phanus

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 67
Chamberlin RV 1951: 27
1951
Loc

Dixidesmus branneri

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 65
Causey NB 1952: 7
Hoffman RL 1950: 223
Loomis HF & Hoffman RL 1948: 54
1948
Loc

Dixidesmus catskillus

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 66
Chamberlin RV 1947: 24
1947
Loc

Dixidesmus christianus

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 66
Chamberlin RV 1946: 140
1946
Loc

Dixidesmus echinogon

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 66
Chamberlin RV 1943: 18
1943
Loc

Polydesmus conlatus

Sierwald P & Bond JE & Gurda GT 2005: 40
Chamberlin RV 1943: 36
1943
Loc

Dixidesmus conlatus

Chamberlin RV 1943: 18
1943
Loc

Dixidesmus sylvicolens

Chamberlin RV & Hoffman RL 1958: 67
Chamberlin RV 1943: 20
1943
Loc

Polydesmus echinogon

Chamberlin RV 1942: 10
1942
Loc

Pseudopolydesmus glaucescens

Attems CMT 1940: 141
1940
Loc

Polydesmus nitidus

Bollman CH 1887: 45
1887
Loc

Polydesmus branneri

Loomis HF 1943: 405
Bollman CH 1887: 620
1887
Loc

Polydesmus glaucescens C. L. Koch, 1847: 133

Koch CL 1863: 59
Koch CL 1847: 133
1847
Loc

Polydesmus canadensis

de Saussure HLF & Humbert A 1870: 52
Gervais P 1847: 106
Newport G 1844: 265
1844
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