Willowsia, Shoebotham, 1917

Pan, Zhixiang & Zhang, Feng, 2016, Contribution to the Willowsia species having body scales of the long basal rib type: four new species and a redescription of W. qui (Collembola: Entomobryidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 245, pp. 1-25 : 19-23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2016.245

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E42F1AE2-B8E6-43C8-896C-75A87814642A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3854742

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BECF3D-D81C-F87D-D80D-FD9BFC522D5C

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Willowsia
status

 

Willowsia qui Zhang, Chen & Deharveng, 2011

Figs 13–15 View Fig View Fig View Fig ; Table 3

Diagnosis

Very narrow lateral stripes on Th. II–Abd. I and transverse bands on postero-lateral margin of Abd. II–III; cephalic mac S 0 absent but S 0 ' present; 7 clypeal chaetae; Th. II with 2 medio-medial, 3 mediolateral, and 12–13 posterior mac; chaeta a1 as mic on Th. III; Abd. I with 4 mac; Abd. III with 2 central mac; Abd. IV with 6 central mac.

Material examined

CHINA: holotype and paratype on slides, Zhejiang Province, Taishun County, Wuyanling National Forest Park, Shuangkengkou, 27.617° N, 119.767° E, altitude 600 m, 4 Aug. 2005, J.X. Chen team leg. (sample # C9279); 2 ³³, 1 ♀, on slides, Jiangxi Province, Nanchang, Shangfengjing Village, under leaf litter of bamboo, 28.792° N, 115.808° E, altitude 118 m, 11 Aug. 2012, Z.X. Pan and Q.P. Ren leg. (slide # 4383_1–3, sample # 4383); 1 ♀ on slide, Anhui Province, Yi County, Xidi Village, under leaves, 29.905° N, 117.992° E, altitude 223 m, 18 Nov. 2012, F. Zhang, Z.-X. Pan and Z.-H. Li leg. (slide # HC13_1, sample # HC13); 1 ♀ on slide, Anhui Province, Tangkou Town, Fuxi Village, bamboo forest, 30.08° N, 118.148° E, altitude 689 m, 15 Jul. 2015, F. Zhang leg. (slide # 15AH10, sample # 15AH_ monkey).

Description

Body length up to 1.8 mm.

Ground colour pale in alcohol. Ant. I̅II with distal patches and III–IV dark. A transverse band between eye patches. Narrow stripes present on lateral margin of Th. II–Abd. I. Narrow transverse bands on posterior margin of Abd. II–III. Small patches posteriorly on Abd. IV–VI ( Fig. 13A View Fig ). Scales pointed, heavily striate with basal ribs longer than distal ones, and only present dorsally on head and terga. Some chaetae of the row along the posterior margin of each tergum transformed into scales and larger than other scales ( Fig. 13B View Fig ).

Based on 5 measured specimens, antenna 2.48–2.54 times as long as cephalic diagonal. Antennal segment ratio as I: II: III: IV = 1: 1.69–2.12: 1.69–2.00: 2.65–3.15. Smooth spiny mic at base of antennae: 3 dorsal and 2 ventral on Ant. I; 1 internal, 1 external and 1 ventral on Ant. II.

Labral intrusion slightly curved. Seven clypeal chaetae ciliate and arranged in two rows ( Fig. 14B View Fig ). Dorsal cephalic chaetotaxy with 4 antennal (An), 4 median (M) and 7 sutural (S) mac; mac S 0 ' present; mac S 0 and S 1 absent; mac Ps 2 rarely absent ( Fig. 14C View Fig ). Tip of lateral process of labial palp slightly beyond apex of labial papilla. Labial chaeta R/M = 0.65–0.76. Cephalic groove with 7(6) ciliate chaetae on each side.

Metatrochanteral organ with 10̅14 smooth spine-like chaetae; 8̅ 11 in L-shaped arms and 2̅3 between arms ( Fig. 14D View Fig ). Ungual basal paired inner teeth with tip reaching 52% from base, median one at 75% and distal one at 88%. Tenent hairs slightly longer than unguis ( Fig. 14E View Fig ). Abd. IV 3.47–3.70 times as long as Abd. III along dorsal midline. Ventral tube anteriorly with 12–15 ciliate chaetae, 5–7 of them larger than others ( Fig. 14F View Fig ); posteriorly with 6–8 smooth chaetae; each lateral flap with 11 chaetae ( Fig. 14G View Fig ). Manubrium dorsally with 6+6 thick chaetae, 3 large and 3 (1 in distal plaque) median in size ( Fig. 14H View Fig ); ventrally with 8(7)+8(7) distal chaetae ( Fig. 14I View Fig ). Manubrial plaque with 2 pseudopores and 4 ciliate chaetae ( Fig. 14H View Fig ). Distal smooth part 1.60̅1.81 times as long as mucro.

Th. II with 2(3) (m1, m2) medio-medial, 3 (m4, m4i, m4p) medio-lateral and 12–13 posterior mac; mac m2i present in one specimen; m5 and p4–6 as mac; mac p2a often absent. Th. III with 14 mac; a1 as mic; m6e as mesochaeta ( Fig. 15A View Fig ). Abd. I with 4 (m2̅4, m4p) mac. Abd. II with 3 (a2, m3, m3e) central and 1 (m5) lateral mac. Abd. III with 2 (a2, m3) central and 3 (am6, pm6, p6) lateral mac; a3 as mac in one specimen. Abd. IV with 6 central mac, about 12 lateral mac and at least 9 sens; A5 as mesochaeta ( Fig. 15B View Fig ).

Ecology

Found in litter, debris and rotten logs of evergreen broad-leaved forest.

DNA barcodes

KU833221 View Materials , KU833226 View Materials .

Remarks

We found a paratype, which was actually W. japonica (Folsom, 1897) and incorrectly designated as W. qui by the original authors, resulting in some mistakes in the original description. Based on the types and fresh material, W. qui differs from W. japonica in narrower stripes on lateral margin of thorax and posterior margin of Abd. II–III, broad body scales, short distal smooth part of dens, and chaetotaxy of Th. II and Abd. I and IV ( Table 3). Mesochaeta A5 is as long as macrochaetae, but thinner, with small socket and pointed tip. The K2P genetic distance (0.184 –0.192) of the COI (one sequence of W. japonica from GenBank: KM978378 View Materials ) also indicates two independent species.

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