Tetracanthella doftana, Fiera, Cristina, Konikiewicz, Marta & Skarżyński, Dariusz, 2013

Fiera, Cristina, Konikiewicz, Marta & Skarżyński, Dariusz, 2013, Tetracanthella doftana sp. nov. (Collembola, Isotomidae) from Romania, with a key to Carpathian Tetracanthella Schött, 1891, Zootaxa 3691 (4), pp. 467-472 : 468

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3691.4.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EBB19A8B-058E-48A2-8BC7-5F50E1A9E1AC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5668506

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/76328793-FFD5-C522-FF71-FF20B3EFF813

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tetracanthella doftana
status

sp. nov.

Tetracanthella doftana sp. nov.

Figs 2–4, 6–8 View FIGURES 1 – 2 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T

Type material. Holotype female on slide, Romanian Subcarpathians, Doftana Valley, near to a cliff from Brebu gorges, Prahova district, (45°12'31.1''N; 25°44'23.5''E), 537m a. s. l., soil and mosses, 11. v. 2009, leg. C. Fiera. Paratypes: 3 females, 3 males, 5 juv. on slides, Romanian Subcarpathians, Doftana Valley, near to a cliff from Brebu gorges, Prahova district, (45°12'31.1''N; 25°44'23.5''E), 537m a. s. l., soil and mosses, 11. v. 2009, vii. 2008, 26. iv. 2010, 27. iv. 2010, 4.viii. 2010, leg. C. Fiera. Holotype and 10 paratypes deposited in the collection of the Institute of Biology, Romanian Academy, Bucharest, Romania, 1 paratype deposited in the collection of the Department of Evolutionary Biology and Ecology, University of Wrocław, Poland.

Etymology. The new species is named after Doftana River in Romania.

Description. Habitus typical of the genus Tetracantella. Body length (without antennae) 0.9mm. Color of dorsal and ventral side of the body bluish-gray, including antennae. Dorsal integument reticulate with unequal polygons, some of them large and elongated (largest ones on abdominal tergum IV 20 times larger than diameter of mesochaeta socket, Fig. 8 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Smooth fields absent.

Dorsal chaetotaxy as in Figs 2–3 View FIGURES 1 – 2 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T . Head with 2 + 2 macrochaetae (ratio: lateral macrochaeta/macrochaeta in eye field = 1.4–1.7), chaeta ap present, 5 pp-chaetae between axial line and mesochaeta p3. ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Macrochaetotaxy of thoracic tergum II–abdominal tergum III 2, 2/2, 2, 2 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 2 ). Ratio: dorsal macrochaeta/chaeta p1 on thoracic tergum II–abdominal tergum III = 1.1–1.5, 1.1–1.5/1.2–1.9,1.2–1.7,1.5–2.0, ratio: lateral macrochaeta/chaeta p1 on thoracic tergum II–abdominal tergum III = 2.6–3.1,2.1–3.1/2.0–2.6,2.0–2.6,1.9–2.3. Number of chaetae along median line of thoracic tergum II–abdominal tergum IV: 12, 8/4, 4, 4, 6 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 2 ). Abdominal tergum V with chaetae a1 behind macrochaetae ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 2 ). Number of sensilla on thoracic tergum II–abdominal tergum V: 3, 3/ 2, 2, 2, 2, 4 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 2 ). Median sensilla situated behind macrochaetae. Number of microsensilla on thoracic tergum II–abdominal tergum III: 1, 1/ 1, 1, 1 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 2 ). Ventral chaetae on thorax absent. Ventral tube with 3 + 3 laterodistal and 2 + 2 posterior chaetae. Furca long with bidentate mucro ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Dens about 1.7–1.9 times as long as inner edge of claw III, with 1 ventral (anterior) and 3 dorsal (posterior) chaetae. Anterior furcal subcoxa with 4–5, posterior with 3–4 chaetae ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Manubrium with 7–9 + 7–9 dorsal chaetae ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Retinaculum with 3 + 3 teeth and without chaeta ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Anal spines almost straight, fine and yellow on distinctly reticulated papilla ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 2 ).

Antennae equal or somewhat shorter than head. Two protruding apical lobes and numerous slender thin sensilla on dorsal side of antennal segment IV present. Apex of antenna without apical bulb, males without sensillum s’ on antennal segment III.

Ocelli 8 + 8, G and H distinctly smaller than others ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Postantennal organ narrow and elliptical, with median constriction, about 2.2–2.5 times longer than the diameter of ocellus A ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ).

Prelabral/labral chaetotaxy as 4/5, 5, 4. Labium with 4 basomedial and 5 basolateral chaetae, labial palp with 3 proximal chaetae. Labial papillae A-E with 1, 3, 0, 3, 5 guard chaetae respectively. Papilla E with small spine-like lateral process (l. p.). Papilla H (main hypostomal seta H in Fjellberg 1999) with 2 chaetae and small spine-like process. Mandibles typical of the genus. Maxilla with 6 lamellae. Maxillary outer lobe with 2 sublobal hairs ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ).

Claw without inner tooth. Empodium about 0.5 times as long as inner edge of claw III ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Tibiotarsi dorsally with 1, 2, 2 slightly clavate distal chaetae ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ). Tibiotarsi I and II with 21–22 chaetae each, III with 22– 25 chaetae. Stick-like chaetae x in males absent.

Remarks. T. doftana sp. nov. belongs to T. pilosa group and shares numerous characters (bidentate mucro, dens with 1 ventral and 3 dorsal chaetae, retinaculum with 3 + 3 teeth and without chaeta, macrochaetotaxy 2/2, 2/ 2, 2, 2 and empodium about 0.5 times as long as inner edge of claw III) with T. andalusiaca Deharveng, 1987 , described from Southern Spain (Cadiz, Sierra de Grazalema). They differ mainly by the number of sublobal hairs ( T. doftana sp. nov. – 2, T. andalusiaca – 1, Fig. 5 View FIGURES 3 – 8. T ) and size of macrochaetae especially on thoracic terga II–III ( T. doftana sp. nov. – Mdl/p1 = 1.4, T. andalusiaca – Mdl/p1 = 2, Figs 1–2 View FIGURES 1 – 2 ). Moreover, they are remote geographically and this is important differential feature as the genus is characterized by a high degree of endemism (Deharveng 1987, Potapov 2001).

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