Miniaria Shear & Marek, 2023

Shear, William A. & Marek, Paul E., 2023, The millipede family Striariidae Bollman, 1893. VIII. Three new genera and four new species of minute millipedes from Oregon and Washington, USA (Diplopoda, Chordeumatida, Striarioidea), Zootaxa 5264 (3), pp. 323-340 : 325

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:286F4C82-D3A7-455B-8174-354BFBF5D28F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7841981

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CC6F87FE-FFF3-6047-0AB8-FF57FB88BC0E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Miniaria Shear & Marek
status

gen. nov.

Miniaria Shear & Marek , new genus

Type species: Miniaria ramifera Shear & Marek , new species

Diagnosis. A genus of Striariinae consisting of two species, distinct from other small striariids in the form of the male labrum, which is convex distally and with sharp lateral corners, but lacking curved processes (lab, Figs 1 View FIGURES 1–4 , 12 View FIGURES 9–14 ). Additional distinguishing characters of the males: first legpair ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–4 ) lacks needle setae; flasks of coxae 3 very short, with subterminal processes; fourth legpair largest but with short, wide podomeres (L4, Fig. 4 View FIGURES 1–4 ); gonopod colpocoxites strongly reduced ( Figs 9 View FIGURES 9–14 , 19 View FIGURES 15–19 ); ninth legpair with coxal pores and curved coxal processes (cxp, Figs 10 View FIGURES 9–14 , 25 View FIGURES 24–30 ).

Etymology. The genus name is feminine in gender and is an arbitrary combination of letters.

Description. Small species of Striariinae with 28 postcephalic rings. Length 3–4 mm, width about 0.25–0.30 mm. Color white, with single black ommatidium on each side of head. Antennae relatively short, robust, clavate. Head, except for labrum, covered with fine setae and small tubercles ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1–4 ). Collum ornamented by closely set small tubercles, coalescing into vague crests in posterior fifth of collum length. Metazonites with twelve subequal crests ( Figs 13, 14 View FIGURES 9–14 ); metazonital setae long, prominent, with longitudinal grooves and feathered tips ( Figs 15 View FIGURES 15–19 ). Telson with three lobes only shallowly separated, not prominent; spinnerets directed posteriad (sp, Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15–19 ). Legs with specialized flattened setae with median ridges and long, filamentous extensions ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 5–8 ).

The following secondary sexual characters occur in males. Head frontally flattened with slight swellings below antennal sockets. Labrum flat and smooth, slightly concave, distal corners distinctly angular, not rounded (lab, Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1–4 ). Mandibular stipes with serrate anteriodistal margin, prominent distal tooth (m, Fig 1 View FIGURES 1–4 ). First legpair ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–4 ) enlarged, femora curved, lacking needle setae, distal podomeres with few long, flattened setae ventrally. Second legpair larger than first; openings of vas deferentia separate, subtended by long, flattened, ribbon-like setae (vd, Figs 3 View FIGURES 1–4 , 5 View FIGURES 5–8 ). Third legpair robust, coxal flasks short, with subterminal process ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 5–8 ); tarsi with special sensory array including comb setae and recessed pore plate ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 5–8 ; see Discussion section below for further details). Fourth legpair the largest; prefemora and femora nearly as wide as long (L4, Figs 4 View FIGURES 1–4 , 8 View FIGURES 5–8 ). Fifth, sixth and seventh legpairs enlarged; seventh coxae unmodified. Tenth coxae with glands, not modified or enlarged (cx10, Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9–14 ).

Gonopods ( Figs 9, 11 View FIGURES 9–14 , 19–24 View FIGURES 15–19 View FIGURES 20–23 View FIGURES 24–30 , 39–44, 46–53 View FIGURES 39–46 View FIGURES 47–54 ), separate from prominent, transverse sternum, coxae large, with two or three setae. Anterior angiocoxites curved, with fimbriate posterior margin distally. Posterior angiocoxites smaller than anterior ones, fimbriate, sheathing single flagellum or flagellocoxite. Colpocoxites membranous-fimbriate, much reduced. Ninth legs ( Figs 10 View FIGURES 9–14 , 25 View FIGURES 24–30 , 45 View FIGURES 39–46 ), variably free or partially fused to sternum; coxae and telopodites fused, coxae with prominent anterior lobe bearing gland pore, also with strongly curved single process; telopodites strongly flattened, setose, with ornament of pointed tubercles (as on other legs).

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