Tartarothyas setosa, Orginal, 2021

Orginal, Harry Smit, 2021, The water mites of Western Australia (Acari: Hydrachnidia), with the description of 13 new species, Acarologia 61 (4), pp. 928-966 : 932-934

publication ID

2107-7207

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039187B3-5E0F-FFB5-378E-7F45ACDEF855

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tartarothyas setosa
status

sp. nov.

Tartarothyas setosa n. sp.

Zoobank: BF13B3A0-6F5F-4543-A3DD-4B902D5D12D3 ( Figures 4 A-D)

= 50 µm.

Material examined — Holotype female, Three Springs Tumulus , ca. 31 km WSW of Three Springs, site TST 013, Western Australia, Australia, 29°35′19″ S 115°26′43″ E, 29 GoogleMaps

Sept. 2010, leg. A. Pinder (mounted, T 140382 WAM).

Other material (all in a poor condition). 3/0, Three Springs Tumulus, ca. 31 km WSW of Three Springs, site TST 013, Western Australia, Australia, 29°35′19″ S 115°26′43″ E, 29 Sept. 2010, leg. A. Pinder ( T 140381, T 140383, T 140384, WAM); 1/0, Three Springs Tumulus,

ca. 31 km WSW of Three Springs, site TST 013, interstitial, Western Australia, Australia, 29°35′19″ S 115°26′43″ E, 30 Sept. 2010, leg. A. Pinder ( T 140380, WAM).

Diagnosis — I- and II-leg-6 with numerous relatively long dorsal setae, ventrally with a group of long setae.

Description — Female: Idiosoma 624 long and 413 wide, ventrally 680 long. Due to fixation in ethanol, mounting was difficult, and not all details can be seen. Cx-III laterally with three long setae, Cx-IV without medial margin ( Figure 4A). Genital field with three pairs of acetabula, genital flab 124 long. Near posterior margin of genital flab 204 relatively long setae. Length of P1-5: 26, 50, 37, 74, 36 ( Figure 4B). P2 medially with two pinnate setae. Length of I-leg-4-6: 76, 95, 136. I-leg-6 (and also II-leg-6) dorsally with relatively long setae in anterior half, ventrally with a group of long setae; I-leg-4 with three stout setae near anterior margin ( Figure 4C). Length of IV-leg-4-6: 118, 118, 94. Fourth leg segments relatively slender ( Figure 4D)

Male: Unknown.

Etymology — Named for the setose first and second legs.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

WAM

Western Australian Museum

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