Polyxenus lagurus (Linnaeus, 1758)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4772.2.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A8BA1B31-0239-4C3D-B886-15C39BC3EBC9 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3818660 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C62A8794-E711-FFCA-FF77-19C3FEC89E4F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2020-05-08 05:24:33, last updated 2023-08-13 04:11:08) |
scientific name |
Polyxenus lagurus (Linnaeus, 1758) |
status |
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Polyxenus lagurus (Linnaeus, 1758) View in CoL View at ENA
Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 , Map Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 .
Polyxenus lagurus View in CoL — Attems, 1904: 46 (R); Verhoeff, 1943: 241 (L, R); Golovatch, 1990: 362 (L, R), 2008: 108 (L, R); Chornyi
and Golovatch, 1993: 33 (R, D); Golovatch et al., 2017: 110 (L, R); Kokhia and Golovatch, 2018: 38 (L, R). Polyxenus Lagurus (sic!)— Lignau, 1905: 198 (L). Polyxenus lagurus var. caucasicus Lignau, 1924: 191 , 197 (D), syn. n. Polyxenus lagurus, var. caucasica (sic!, nomen nudum) — Sokolow, 1918: 1 (R). Polyxenus lagurus caucasicus— Lohmander, 1936: 166, 178 (L) (referred to as a subspecies); Kobakhidze, 1965: 390 (L, R);
Lokšina and Golovatch, 1979: 381 (L, R); Talikadze, 1984: 143 (L, R). Polyxenus lagurus lagurus— Lokšina and Golovatch, 1979: 381 (L, R);
Material examined: Crimea, 1 adult male, Bakhchisaray District, Mangup Plateau , under stones, ~ 500 m a.s.l., N44°35’38”, E33°47’42”, 8. V GoogleMaps .2017, leg. K. and O. Makarov ( ZMUM) .
Russia, 1 imm. stadium IV (6 pl), Krasnodar Province, Anapa District, nr. Bolshoy Utrish, Abrau Peninsula , under stones, N44°45’34”, E37°23’23”, 26.III.2001, leg. I. Semenyuk ( ZMUM) GoogleMaps . 3 imm. (stadia I, V and VI), Krasnodar Province, on road 2 km N of Dagomys, Quercus forest, litter, Berlese extraction, N43°40’11”, E39°37’18”, 2.VI.2013, leg. M. Potapov ( ZMUM) GoogleMaps .
Rediagnosis: Similar to Propolyxenus argentifer in most characters but distinguished by the arrangement and shape of tergal trichomes which are arranged in two evenly spaced transverse rows of barbate trichomes with small rosettes laterally ( Fig. 5E View FIGURE 5 ). Dorso-medial fan of barbate trichomes numbering fewer than 38 in total, in two distinct halves with medial gap. Number of thin basiconic sensilla on 6 th antennal article in adults always greater than three ( Fig. 5B View FIGURE 5 ).
Remarks: Polyxenus lagurus has previously been identified from the Crimea ( Attems 1904) and from Gagra, Abkhazia (Issev 1911a), so it is not surprising to have identified it from the Crimean and Caucasian regions in this study. However, it is surprising that so few specimens were found. Polyxenus lagurus is the most widespread species of the Polyxenida having been identified throughout Europe including Great Britain, and Scandinavia and east to Israel ( Kime & Enghoff 2011). It has also spread to North America ( Condé 1996) and even to Australia ( Short and Vahtera 2017). There are both bisexual and parthenogenetic populations ( Enghoff 1978). The Crimean population is bisexual with the single specimen collected being male.
Lignau (1924) suggested that the specimens found at Gagra, Abkhazia were distinct from those from Europe and indicated this with the name P. lagurus var. caucasicus . Differences in size and shapes of trichomes are given as the argument for distinctness from European P. lagurus , based on comparison with figures in Humbert (1893) and Reincke (1910). However, because no magnification values or scale bar were available for the author’s figures, it is hard to ascertain the validity of the argument about size differences. The characters described for P. lagurus var. caucasicus differ little to those from the P. lagurus from Crimea in this study, so there seems insufficient evidence for maintaining a variety or subspecies status for the specimens described by Lignau. The one difference in Lignau’s description was that the medial posterior tergal trichomes had rows of 18–20 serrations along their length in contrast to 11–13 in P. lagurus from Crimea and elsewhere ( Brolemann 1935). COI sequencing (together with measurements on a photograph) of a Polyxenus specimen from Crimea suggests the presence of a second smaller Polyxenus species in Crimea.
Attems, C. G. (1904) Myriopoden. In: Romer, F. & Schaudinn, F. (Eds.), Fauna Arctica, 3, pp. 1 - 54.
Brolemann, H. W. (1935) Myriapodes Diplopodes (Chilognathes I). Faune de France, 29, 1 - 369.
Chornyi, N. G. & Golovatch, S. I. (1993) [Millipedes (Diplopoda) of the plain territories of Ukraine]. Kiev University, Kiev, 54 pp. [in Russian, English abstract]
Conde, B. (1996) Une approche des Diplopoda Penicillata de l'Amerique du Nord. In: Geoffroy, J. - J., Mauries, J. - P. & Nguyen Duy-Jacquemin, M. (Eds.), Acta Myriapodologica. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, New Series, 169, pp. 127 - 135.
Enghoff, H. (1978) Parthenogenesis and spanadry in millipeds. Abhandlungen und Verhandlungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins in Hamburg, Neue Folge, 21 / 22, 73 - 85.
Golovatch, S. I. (1990) On the distribution and faunogenesis of Crimean millipedes (Diplopoda). In: Minelli, A. (Ed.), Proceedings of the 7 th International Congress of Myriapodology. E. J. Brill, Leiden, New York, pp. 361 - 366.
Golovatch, S. I., Turbanov, I. S. & VandenSpiegel, D. (2017) Contributions to the cave millipede fauna of the Crimean Peninsula (Diplopoda), with the description of a new species. Arthropoda Selecta, 26 (2), 103 - 111. https: // doi. org / 10.15298 / arthsel. 26.2.02
Humbert, A. (1893) Myriapodes des environs de Geneve. Memoires de la Societe de Physiques et d'Histoire naturelle de Geneve, 32 (1), 1 - 93.
Kime, R. D., Enghoff, H. (2011) Atlas of European millipedes (Class Diplopoda). Vol. 1. Orders Polyxenida, Glomerida, Platydesmida, Siphonocryptida, Polyzoniida, Callipodida, Polydesmida. Fauna Europaea Evertebrata. No. 3. Pensoft Publishers, Sofia-Moscow, 282 pp.
Kobakhidze, D. N. (1965) [A list of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of SSR Georgia]. Fragmenta faunistica, 11 (21), 389 - 398. [in Russian, with title also in Polish and German] https: // doi. org / 10.3161 / 00159301 FF 1965.11. 21.389
Kokhia, M. S. & Golovatch, S. I. (2018) A checklist of the millipedes of Georgia, Caucasus (Diplopoda). ZooKeys, 741, 35 - 48. https: // doi. org / 10.3897 / zookeys. 741.20042
Lignau, N. G. (1905) [Myriapods of the Crimea. (Preliminary communication)]. Memoires de la Societe Imperiale des Naturalistes de la Nouvelle-Russie [Zapiski Imperatorskogo Novorossiyskogo obshchestva estestvoispytateley. Odessa], 25 (1), 197 - 199. [in Russian]
Lignau, N. G. (1924) [Novye predstaviteli roda Polyxenus]. Les nouveaux representants du genre Polyxenus. Journal of Research Chairs in Odessa [Zhurnal nauchno-issledovatel'skikh kafedr v Odesse], 1 (10 - 11), 190 - 199. [in Russian and French].
Lohmander, H. (1936) Uber die Diplopoden des Kaukasusgebietes. Goteborgs Kungl. Vetenskaps- och Vitterhets-Samhalles Handlingar, Series 5 B, 5 (1), 1 - 196.
Loksina, I. E. & Golovatch, S. I. (1979) Diplopoda of the USSR fauna. Pedobiologia, 19, 381 - 389.
Reincke, G. (1910) Beitrage zur Kenntnis von Polyxenus. Jenaische Zeitschrift fur Naturwissenschaften, 46 (39), 845 - 896.
Short, M. & Vahtera, V. (2017) Phylogenetic relationships of millipedes in the subclass Penicillata (Diplopoda) with a key to the genera. Journal of Natural History, 51 (41 - 42), 2443 - 2461. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222933.2017.1380241
Sokolow, I. I. (1918) [Studies on spermatogenesis in the Diplopoda. I. Spermatogenesis in Polyxenus]. Zoologicheskii vestnik [Russian Journal of Zoology, Petrograd], 3, 1 - 166. [in Russian].
Talikadze, D. A. (1984) [On the millipede fauna (Diplopoda) of the Colchidan Province of the Caucasus]. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 63 (1), 124 - 145. [in Russian, a summary in English]
Verhoeff, K. W. (1943) Uber Diplopoden aus der Turkei. III. Zoologischer Anzeiger, 143 (9 / 10), 216 - 242.
FIGURE 1. Map to show localities of all specimens identified in this study. Map created using SimpleMappr, http://www.simplemappr.net, (Shorthouse 2010). Legend: Stars = Propolyxenus argentifer (Verhoeff, 1921) comb. n.; purple star = Verhoeff types; red star = identified in this study; orange = formerly identified as P. trivittatus (Verhoeff, 1921); green inverted triangle = Polyxenus lagurus (Linnaeus, 1758); green circle = Polyxenus lankaranensis sp. n.; white circle = Polyxenus sp.; yellow star = Propolyxenus aegeus Silvestri, 1948.
FIGURE 5. Scanning electron micrographs of Polyxenus lagurus (Linnaeus, 1758), stadium VI (immature), Krasnodar Province, Russia, A. Dorsal view; B. Distal section of left antennal showing pattern of sensilla on article VI and VII; C. Left side of head showing ommatidia and trichobothria; D. Collum; E. Portion of 4th tergite showing pattern of trichome insertions. Scale bars: A = 500 µm; B. = 20 µm; C, D and E = 100 µm.
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
ZMUM |
Zoological Museum, University of Amoy |
VI |
Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute |
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Polyxenus lagurus (Linnaeus, 1758)
Short, Megan, Vahtera, Varpu, Wesener, Thomas & Golovatch, Sergei I. 2020 |
Polyxenus lagurus
Golovatch, S. I. 1990: 362 |
Verhoeff, K. W. 1943: 241 |
Attems, C. G. 1904: 46 |
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