Trigenotyla parca Causey
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.157036 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6273584 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F7710943-FF9E-3D13-9878-14E9FDDDFA2D |
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Plazi |
scientific name |
Trigenotyla parca Causey |
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Trigenotyla parca Causey View in CoL
Figs. 9–12 View FIGURES 9 – 11 View FIGURES 12 – 15
Trigenotyla parca Causey 1951:118 View in CoL , figs. 1–5; Shear 1972:280. figs. 527, 528.
Types: Male holotype, 5 male and 5 female paratypes from Blue Spring, Carrol Co., Arkansas, collected 29 October 1949 (FSCA). Causey (1951) stated the types would be deposited in the collection of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, but there is no record they ever arrived there. Hoffman (1999) suggests, with a question mark, the Illinois Natural History Survey, where other specimens described in the same paper wound up, but the material is not to be found there, either. The Florida State Collection of Arthropods received Causey’s personal collection after her death. There I found specimens with the appropriate data labelled as paratypes, but unfortunately at some point the vial had been filled with water, not alcohol, and the specimens had rotted to bits. Another vial was labelled by Causey as “Trigentalum glesum Causey, male holotype, female paratype ” and with the same collection data as given above. These specimens are undoubtedly the types of Trigenotyla parca View in CoL . However, the gonopods of the male are missing, and while Causey’s collection included a box of microscope slides on which trichopetalid genitalia had been permanently mounted, a slide of T. parca View in CoL was not among them.
Diagnosis: Distinct in the needlelike ectal coxite from T. seminole and T. vaga , where this structure is laminate and toothed; the latter two species also lack ensiform gonopod setae. In T. blacki , the ectal coxite is entirely missing.
Etymology: parca is a Latin adjective meaning (in this sense) “small.” A more common meaning is “frugal, thrifty.”
Male from Blue Spring: Length, 6.7 mm, width 1.0 mm. Color brown, mottled darker especially along dorsal midline. Segmental setae on midbody segments equal to segment width, segmental shoulders prominent, paranotalike. Fifteen to 17 ocelli in four irregular rows forming triangular eyepatch. Pregonopodal legs slightly crassate; femora of sixth legs enlarged, with distal ventral swelling.
Gonopods ( Figs. 9 View FIGURES 9 – 11 , 12 View FIGURES 12 – 15 ) with prominent sternal swellings; coxae (cx, Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9 – 11 ) fused in midline, bearing two groups of prominent strongly ensiform setae ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9 – 11 ); lateral setal group of 16–22 arranged along lateral margins of coxae, distally raised on strong lobe at lateral distal margin. mesal group of 3 setae near midline. Anterior coxites (aac, Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9 – 11 ) curved, acute, posterior edges irregularly serrate; ectal coxites (pac, Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9 – 11 ) thin, needlelike; fimbriate branch relatively large ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 12 – 15 ). Ninth legpair ( Fig. 11 View FIGURES 9 – 11 ) with Lshaped coxae bearing vestigial glands; telopodite of single article (prefemur) arises near midpoint on ectal side. Legpairs 10, 11 with coxal glands, otherwise unmodified.
Female from Blue Spring: 6.4 mm long, 0.9 mm wide, nonsexual characters as in male.
Distribution: Material examined: ARKANSAS: Madison Co.: Combs, no collector or date, male (FSCA). Newton Co.: Bat Cave, T15N, R23W, sec. 15, 8 June 1977, no collector, female (FSCA); Len House Cave, Buffalo National River, 15 July 1977, no collector, males, females (FSCA). Washington Co.: Granny Dean Cave, 10 mi S Fayetteville, 9 June 1969, S.& J. Peck, male (WAS); Devils Den State Park, 13 July 1949, M. W. Sanderson, L. Stannard, male (INHS).
Causey (1951) states that the species has been collected at “several places” in Washington Co., but I have seen no specimens aside from the records listed above. I predict that T. parca will be found generally throughout Arkansas north of the Canadian River, and probably also in adjoining Oklahoma and Missouri.
Notes: While it is likely that all the records are from caves, in two cases specific caves are not mentioned in the data. But trichopetalids are not likely to be captured outside caves in summer. The pigmentation and welldeveloped eyes suggest that T. parca is troglophilic, not troglobitic.
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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Trigenotyla parca Causey
Shear, William A. 2003 |
Trigenotyla parca
Shear 1972: 280 |