Allothereua maculata (Newport, 1844)

Dunlop, Jason A., Friederichs, Anja & Langermann, Jasmin, 2017, A catalogue of the scutigeromorph centipedes in the Museum fuer Naturkunde, Berlin, Zoosystematics and Evolution 93 (2), pp. 281-295 : 288

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zse.93.12882

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:76CB39EE-6E92-4B79-BEA2-920982308F2A

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B5033E02-4828-FF07-FBE5-64818E5B9149

treatment provided by

Zoosystematics and Evolution by Pensoft

scientific name

Allothereua maculata (Newport, 1844)
status

 

Allothereua maculata (Newport, 1844) View in CoL

Material.

3 specimens; ZMB 3835; “Adelaide” [Australia]; leg. Zietz (or Hintz?). 1 specimen; ZMB 5140; "136 Harvey" [Western Australia]; leg. Süd-West Australien Expedition (Michaelsen & Hartmeyer); det. Carl von Attems; 27.VII.1905. 1 specimen; ZMB 5140; “Mundijong” [Western Australia]; leg. Süd-West Australien Expedition (Michaelsen & Hartmeyer); det. Carl von Attems; 21.IX.1905. 1 specimen; ZMB 5140; “Bridgetown” [Western Australia]; leg. Süd-West Australien Expedition (Michaelsen & Hartmeyer); det. Carl von Attems; 30/31.VII.1905. 1 specimen; ZMB 5140; “Brancaster” [Western Australia]; leg. John M. Whistler; det. Carl von Attems; 14.III.1910. 1 specimen; ZMB 5140; "S.W. Australien"; leg. Süd-West Australien Expedition (Michaelsen & Hartmeyer); 1905. 1 specimen; unnumbered; “Collie” [Western Australia]; leg. Süd-West Australien Expedition (Michaelsen & Hartmeyer); det. Carl von Attems; 26.VIII.1905.

Remarks.

The collector of ZMB 3835 could either be an A. H. Zietz who was ca. 1892-1908 Assistant Director of the South Australian Museum, Adelaide, or a Eugene Hintz who collected beetles and other arthropods for the Berlin museum. Much of the material of this species stems from a 1905 expedition to southwest Australia by Wilhelm Michaelsen (1860-1937) and Robert Hartmeyer (1874-1923). The latter was from 1900 an assistant (later from 1908 curator) in Berlin for marine groups like bryozoans and echinoderms.