Chaleponcus gracilior, Enghoff, 2014

Enghoff, Henrik, 2014, A mountain of millipedes I: An endemic species-group of the genus Chaleponcus Attems, 1914, from the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania (Diplopoda, Spirostreptida, Odontopygidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 100, pp. 1-75 : 58-60

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2014.100

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B3E6C489-6D96-4AF5-A33D-EE8329A9321B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3861213

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/85282955-A517-4E67-8848-F2C3C880DEC6

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:85282955-A517-4E67-8848-F2C3C880DEC6

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Chaleponcus gracilior
status

sp. nov.

Chaleponcus gracilior View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:85282955-A517-4E67-8848-F2C3C880DEC6

Figs 4 View Fig , 9 View Fig , 28 View Fig

Diagnosis

Slender, but with more podous rings than other small species. Easily recognizable by the subrectangular cucullus profile, by the conspicuous ‘inflated’ distal telomeral process and by the unique ‘string-ofbeads’-like appearance of the limbus. Gonopod coxa ( Fig. 9 View Fig ) without a lateral process; metaplical shelfspine short.

Etymology

The name is a Latin adjective meaning “more slender” and refers to the small body diameter in relation to the number of body rings.

Material studied (total: 84 ♂♂)

Holotype

TANZANIA: ♂, Iringa Region, Iringa District, Udzungwa Mts, New Dabaga / Ulangambi FR, 08°05’ 37.9” S, 35°54’ 05.6” E, fallow/cultivation, 1900–1920 m asl, plot FP, casual, 26–28 Nov. 2000, Frontier Tanzania leg. ( ZMUC).

GoogleMaps

Paratypes

All from TANZANIA, Iringa Region, Iringa District, Udzungwa Mts, New Dabaga/Ulangambi FR, all collected by Frontier Tanzania, all in ZMUC: 1 ♂, 08°05’ 34.5” S, 35°55’ 31.5” E, montane, 1800–1900 m asl, plot 16, casual, 15–16 Nov. 2000; 1 ♂, 08°06’ 47.4” S, 35°56’ 50.4” E, montane, 1800–1955 m asl, plot MS – plot A, 29 Oct. 2000; 2 ♂♂, 08°03’ 39.9” S, 35°54’ 05.6” E, fallow/previously disturbed, 1900 m asl, plot FF, sample 2 of 3, 28 Nov. 2000; 18 ♂♂, 08°05’ 37.9” S, 35°54’ 05.6” E, fallow/ cultivation, 1900–1920 m asl, plot FP, casual, 26–28 Nov. 2000; 3 ♂♂, 08°00’ 26.5” S, 35°56’ 06.1” E, scrub/thicket/bush, 1908 m asl, plot Kinyonga, 19 Oct. 2000; 3 ♂♂, 08°00’ 26.6” S, 35°56’ 06.1” E, montane forest, 1910 m asl, plot Kinyonga, casual, 24 Oct. 2000; 2 ♂♂, 08°03’ 39.9” S, 35°54’ 05.6” E, fallow/previously disturbed, 1915 m asl, plot FF, casual, 27 Nov. 2000; 1 ♂, 08°00’ 26.6” S, 35°56’ 06.1” E, scrub/thicket/bush, 1915 m asl, plot Kinyonga, 18 Oct. 2000; 1 ♂, 08°03’ 43.6” S, 35°53’ 54.2” E, plantation, 1980 m asl, plot pine, sample 1 of 3, 13 Oct. 2000.

Referred non-type material

TANZANIA: 47 ♂♂, Iringa Region, Iringa District, West Kilombero Scarp FR, 07°45’ 34.2” S, 36°26’ 37.4” E, (open) woodland, 1510 m asl, plot Acacia, casual, 5–8 Dec. 2000, Frontier Tanzania UMPS leg. (ZMUC); 1 ♂, Udzungwa Mts, 1500 m, Kiranzi-Kitungulu FR, 08°09’S, 35°05’E, forest, Jan. 1996, M. Andersen, P. Gravlund, A. Jakobsen leg. (ZMUC); 3 ♂♂, Iringa Region, Iringa District, Kalimbazi Mtn, 2000–2100 m asl, 10 km S of Mazombe, forest floor, Jan Kielland leg. (VMNH).

Type locality

TANZANIA: Iringa Region, Iringa District, New Dabaga/Ulangambi FR, 08°05’ 37.9” S, 35°54’ 05.6” E, fallow/cultivation, 1900–1920 m asl.

Description (male)

DIAMETER. 1.5–1.8 mm, 45–49 podous rings.

COLOUR. After 12 years in alcohol faded, uniform pale brown, no traces of a dorsal stripe.

ANAL VALVES. Each with a long dorsal spine, no ventral spines; marginal rim barely raised, setiferous tubercles inconspicuous.

LIMBUS ( Fig. 4F View Fig ). Lobes spatulate, about as long as wide, separated by stretches of straight margin ca. same length as width of lobe; body ring surface between lobes forming shallow concavity behind straight margin; lobes deeply striate on external surface. The unique limbus gives the body ring posterior margins a characteristic ‘string-of-beads’-like appearance, visible even on undissected specimens.

TARSAL SETATION. Normal.

GONOPOD COXA ( Figs 9 View Fig , 28 View Fig ). About 4 × as long as wide. Lateral margin almost straight, slightly indented at level of proplical lobe (prl) and metaplical shelf (ms), forming a ca. 100° angle with straight apical margin; cucullus (cu) subrectangular. Metaplical flange (mf) ending in a rather sharp 90° angle, no process; metaplical mesal margin shallowly concave up to level of arculus, then abruptly turning mesad at right angles at base of metaplical shelf (ms), then turning apicad at right angles, margin from then on shallowly concave, meeting apical margin under a ca. 80° angle. Metaplical shelf (ms) regularly rounded, projecting posteriad as well as mesad. Metaplical shelf-spine (mss) originating from anteriormesal end of ms, short, directed apicad, slightly and simply curved.

GONOPOD TELOPODITE ( Fig. 28 View Fig ). Solenomere with a small proximal side branch (pb) originating on distal surface and consisting of a tiny spine-like part and a larger, irregularly lamellate one. Telomere distally with three branches:

• an anterior, irregularly triangular, twisted lamella (al) with undulate edges,

• a large, smooth, pointed, slightly curved distal process (dp) with an ‘inflated’ appearance,

• an irregularly shaped posterior lamella (pl).

Distribution and habitat

Known from four areas in the Udzungwa Mts: New Dabaga/Ulangambi FR, West Kilombero Scarp FR, Kiranzi-Kitungulu FR and Kalimbazi Mtn. Altitudinal range: 1500–2100 m asl. Habitat: montane forest, fallow/previously disturbed/cultivation, scrub/thicket/bush, plantation, (open) woodland. This species seems much more euryoecious than any other species in the C. dabagaensis group.

Coexisting species

In line with its comparatively wide distribution, C. gracilior sp. nov. co-occurs with many other species of the C. dabagaensis group. Thus, C. dabagaensis was found in the same sample as C. gracilior sp. nov. in Kiranzi-Kitungulu FR, and C. dabagaensis , C. krai sp. nov., C. malleolus sp. nov., C. mwabvui sp. nov., C. netus sp. nov., C. termini sp. nov. and C. vilici sp. nov. were found in the same samples as C. gracilior sp. nov. in New Dabaga/Ulangambi FR. In addition, C. krai sp. nov. also occurs on Kalimbazi Mtn, C. nectarinia sp. nov., C. teres sp. nov., and C. vandenspiegeli sp. nov. also occur in New Dabaga/ Ulangambi FR., and C. basiliscus sp. nov., C. circumvallatus sp. nov., C. ibis sp. nov., C. netus sp. nov., and C. tintin sp. nov. also occur in West Kilombero FR.

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

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