Retrorsioides 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 : 103

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.4805017

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B18797-FFFF-9D1F-4BA5-0788D9B025B9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Retrorsioides Shear & Marek
status

gen. nov.

Retrorsioides Shear & Marek , new genus

Type species: Retrorsioides castellum , n. sp.

Species included: Retrorsioides castellum , n. sp., R. linnensis , n. sp., R. kittitas , n. sp., R. bammerti , n. sp., and R. arboramagna , n. sp.

Diagnosis. Clearly related to Retrorsia , species of this genus are distinct in the gonopod having a prominent, anteriodorsally directed process at about the level of the pulvillus (absent in Retrorsia species ), and in having a pulvillar process rather than a pulvillar notch (present in Retrorsia species ).

Etymology. The name of the genus is based on the similarity of the included species to species of Retrorsia .

Distribution. Washington, Oregon and northern California.

Notes. Retrorsioides species encompass a wide distribution, from Humboldt Co. in northern California north to Thurston Co., Washington. The general appearance of the species is much like that of Retrorsia species , and the other polydesmids described herein. In addition to the accessory sensory area on the sixth antennal segment, there may also be a small cluster of sensilla near the distal end of the seventh segment. There may be up to 24 setae in the anterior marginal row on the collum, and alveolate cuticle, while present on the anterior part of the collum, is not seen on the dorsa of any of the anterior metazonites. However, the epiprocts of all the species have alveolate cuticle posteriorly. Males have crassate legs and typical (for this group of genera) sphaerotrichomes on the anterior tarsi. In two of the species, the pygidium or epiproct is swollen and curved ventrally, as it is in Snoqualmia species. The gonopod prefemora may be bulbous or small and flattened. The gonopod acropodites are shorter and stouter than in Retrorsia species and are not apically recurved, nor are they distally divided. Instead, a long, acute process arises at about the level of the pulvillus, which is not associated with a semicircular notch, but with a short pulvillar process.

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