Solaenodolichopus vittatus ( Verhoeff, 1924 )

Mesibov, Robert, 2014, The millipede genus Solaenodolichopus Verhoeff, 1924 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Paradoxosomatidae). 1. New genus diagnosis and redescriptions of named species, European Journal of Taxonomy 83, pp. 1-36 : 25-29

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2014.83

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:049F326B-9460-4038-BB21-9DA36F79812F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3851832

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8B242A14-8B63-4F27-891A-B9A4FDF0914E

treatment provided by

Tatiana

scientific name

Solaenodolichopus vittatus ( Verhoeff, 1924 )
status

 

Solaenodolichopus vittatus ( Verhoeff, 1924) View in CoL

Figs 1C–E View Fig , 2 View Fig E, 10B–G View Fig

Antichiropus (Solänodolichopus) vittatus Verhoeff, 1924: 22 View in CoL (first description); pl. 1, figs 5, 9, 10. Antichiropus (Solänodolichopus) vittatus dorsalis Verhoeff, 1924: 21 , 22 (first description); pl. 1, fig. 6 [New synonymy.]

Solaenodolichopus vittatus View in CoL – Verhoeff 1928: 94 (genus misspelled Solanodolichopus ; new combination for teres View in CoL , vittatus vittatus View in CoL and vittatus View in CoL dorsalis, referred to by Verhoeff as ‘the three forms previously described by me’). — Jeekel 2000: 40. — Nguyen & Sierwald, 2013: 1160.

Aulacoporus vittatus View in CoL – Attems 1937: 261 (new combination), 263 (Verhoeff’s description reworded); fig. 328 (p. 263; same as fig. 6 for S. vittatus dorsalis in Verhoeff 1924 ). — Jeekel 1968: 18, 29; 1981: 49.

Aulacoporus vittatus dorsalis – Verhoeff 1928: 94 (genus misspelled Solanodolichopus ; new combination for teres View in CoL , vittatus vittatus View in CoL and vittatus View in CoL dorsalis, referred to by Verhoeff as ‘the three forms previously described by me’). — Attems 1937: 261 (new combination), 264 (Verhoeff’s description reworded). — Jeekel 1968: 18, 29; 1981: 49.

Solaenodolichopus vittatus dorsalis View in CoL – Jeekel 2000: 40. — Nguyen & Sierwald 2013: 1160.

Material examined

S. vittatus lectotype (here designated)

Slide mount with original Verhoeff label, containing male legpair 1, right gonopod, left gonocoxa, left gonopod telopodite and 1 leg 9, NHRS KAS1000000004 ; and the rest of the male body in alcohol with original Verhoeff label, missing legpair 1, body broken between rings 3 and 4, rings 6 and 7, and rings 8 and 9, NHRS KAS1000000006 ; Mt Tambourine [ Tamborine Mountain ], QLD [27°58’ S, 153°11 ‘E, ± 5 km], E. Mjöberg, Oct. 1912 (see taxonomic notes, below). The lectotype is the one male specimen examined by Verhoeff, i.e. the body parts on the slide mount plus the body parts in alcohol.

GoogleMaps

S. vittatus paralectotype

Female, details as for lectotype, body broken between rings 3 and 4 and rings 5 and 6, in alcohol, NHRS KAS1000000006.

S. vittatus dorsalis holotype GoogleMaps

Slide mount with original Verhoeff label, containing male legpair 1, both gonopod telopodites, 1 gonocoxa and both legs 9; and the rest of the male body in alcohol with original Verhoeff label, broken into head+collum and rings 3, 4+5, 6+7, 8, 9+10, 11-13 and 14-telson, missing legpair 1 and legs and gonopods from ring 7, aperture damaged; Glen Lamington   GoogleMaps [ Lamington Glen   GoogleMaps ], QLD [28°15’ S, 153°01’ E, ± 5 km], E. Mjöberg, Nov. 1912 (see taxonomic notes, below). The holotype by monotypy is the one male specimen examined by Verhoeff, i.e. the body parts on the slide mount plus the body parts in alcohol, both in NHRS and registered as KAS1000000003 .

Other material

QUEENSLAND: 2 ♂♂, Lamington National Park (‘National Park’) [28°14’ S, 153°08’ E, ± 5 km], Dec. 1919, H. Hacker, QM S74826 View Materials ; 1 ♂, Tamborine Mountain (‘Mt Tamborine’) [27°58’ S, 153°11’ E, ± 5 km], Oct. 1924, A. Musgrave and G. Geissmann, QM S74827; 1 ♂, same locality but 18 Mar. 1955, M.B. Wilson, in grass, QM S74764; 1 ♂, 1 ♀, same locality but 26 Mar. 1955, S.B. Gunn, QM S74829 View Materials ; 3 ♂♂, West Burleigh [28°07’ S, 153°26’ E, ± 2 km], 12 Feb. 1953, QM personnel, QM S74828 View Materials ; 1 ♂, Warrie National Park [28°13’ S, 153°16’ E, ± 2 km], 2 Jul. 1971, K.R. McDonald, rainforest, under logs, ‘S30’ on metal tag, QM S74830 View Materials ; 1 ♂, Bahrs Scrub, 27°44’59” S, 153°10’36” E [± 500 m], 200 m a.s.l., pitfall, 29 Jan.–23 May 1981, G. Monteith, GM 1078/2, QM S74765; 1 ♂, Moreton Island, 27°11’ S, 153°24’ E [± 10 km], 26 Apr. 1982, W. Houston, pitfall,, yellow patch, EIS, QM S5941; 1 ♂, Blue Lagoon, Moreton Island, 27°05’35” S, 153°26’27” E [± 2 km], 21 Sep. 1982, W. Houston, EIS, pitfall, QM S5946; 1 ♂, Springbrook - N end, 28°09’47” S, 153°15’42” E [± 500 m], 540 m a.s.l., pitfalls, 15 May–30 Aug. 1997, G. Monteith, rainforest, sample 5015, QM S74836 View Materials ; 1 ♂, Perrys Knob, 27°36’11” S, 152°36’17” E [± 500 m], 200 m a.s.l., pitfall, 15 Sep–11 Nov. 1998, G. Monteith, D. Cook and G. Thompson, vine scrub, sample 7295, QM S74843 View Materials ; 1 ♂, same details but pitfall, 11 Nov. 1998 – 13 Jan. 1999, sample 7564, QM S74855 View Materials ; 1 ♂, Enoggera Reservoir site 4, 27°26’47” S, 152°55’23” E [± 100 m], 110 m a.s.l., pitfall, 7 Aug.–16 Oct. 1999, G. Monteith and J. Holt, rainforest, sample 7854, QM S74871 View Materials ; 1 ♂, 1 ♀, 3 km SE of Kalbar, 27°57’46” S, 152°38’47” E [± 100 m], 120 m a.s.l., pitfall, 2 Dec. 2000 – 7 May 2001, C. Burwell, sample 10160, brigalow scrub, QM S74766 View Materials ; 1 ♂, Karawatha Forest - site 6, 27°37’33” S, 153°5’24” E [± 100 m], 60 m a.s.l., 30 Apr. 2003, S. Wright and E. Volschenk, eucalypt woodland, sample 51168, QM S74767 View Materials ; 1 ♂, Gold Creek Reservoir site 2, 27°28’05” S, 152°52’20” E [± 100 m], 160 m a.s.l., 4 Nov. 2003, C. Burwell, dry rainforest, sifted litter berlesate, sample 51723, QM S74873 View Materials ; 2 ♂♂, Gold Creek Reservoir site 1, 27°27’53” S, 152°52’32” E [± 100 m], 140 m a.s.l., pitfall, 2–30 Jan. 2004, Queensland Museum personnel, spotted gum open forest, sample 51819, QM S74875 View Materials ; 1 ♂, 2 ♀♀, same details but 30 Jan.–1 Mar. 2004, sample 51939, QM S74876 View Materials ; 2 ♂♂, Welsby Street, New Farm [27°27’58” S, 153°02’56” E, ± 500 m], 1 Nov. 2010, M. Shaw, pitfall, QM S95213 View Materials .

Description

As for the genus. Maximum male/female midbody width ca. 3.8 (mean of 24 males, range 2.9-4.7 mm)/4.8 mm (paralectotype female). Colour in alcohol: “Body reddish yellow with two broad, blackish, lateral longitudinal bands on the dorsum, separated by wide, reddish yellow median (band). Medial [longitudinal] stripe washed-out reddish, ventral flanks reddish-yellow” ( vittatus, Verhoeff 1924: 20 , my translation); “Trunk black, with brown legs and wide yellow reddish dorsal median band, significantly narrower than in vittatus . Ventral flanks black” ( vittatus dorsalis, Verhoeff 1924: 21, my translation); colour in types faded and patchy, dorsalis medial longitudinal band ca. 1/3 ring width, vittatus ca. 2/3 ring width; colour and pattern variable in other specimens ( Fig. 4 View Fig C–I), but always with lighter colouring dorsally and darkest colouring on upper sides.

Male with transverse furrows shallow, narrow, sometimes indistinct. No longitudinal furrows laterally on diplosegments. Sternal lamella ( Fig. 2E View Fig ) with sides more or less straight, corners broadly rounded, distal margin a flat inverted V. Scopulae on legs 1 to 29, i.e., not present on last podous ring. Leg bases on rings 6 and 8 separated more widely than on other rings, sternites a little depressed. Anterior margin of aperture with rounded-triangular, medial extension and shorter, gently convex extension on either side (as shown in Fig. 3B View Fig for S. rubriventris ).

Gonopods usually as for S. pruvoti ( Fig. 10A View Fig ), but with femorite in some males thinner ( Fig. 10B View Fig ), and in other males shorter and bent medially near apex, and with medial femorite process larger, reaching to ca. 1/3-1/2 of solenomere length ( Fig. 10D View Fig ); intermediate forms occur ( Fig. 10C View Fig ).

Female with leg 2 coxa extended posteroventrally as apically rounded process (as shown for S. pruvoti in Fig. 5 View Fig C–D).

Distribution

Forest and non-forest habitats in the Brisbane region, from Moreton Island ca. 130 km south to the Border Ranges, and inland ca. 80 km from the sea (map Fig. 12 View Fig ). Overlaps in range with S. pruvoti and S. rubriventris .

Taxonomic notes

The subspecies S. vittatus dorsalis was erected for a single male only differing from S. vittatus vittatus in size, colour of ventral flanks and width of the medial dorsal band. These three characters vary substantially in the 24 non-type males I have examined and do not appear to be correlated. I therefore regard the subspecies dorsalis as a synonym of the nominate subspecies vittatus . The gonopod telopodites of the types are virtually identical ( Fig. 10E–G View Fig ).

S. vittatus varies more across its range than other Solaenodolichopus (described and undescribed), in gonopod form as well as in size and colour pattern. It might better be called ‘the S. vittatus group’, and intensive sampling and genetic analysis across its range would be a worthwhile systematics project.

It is particularly interesting that the gonopods in S. pruvoti and some S. vittatus populations are indistinguishable, and that no colour pattern intermediates have so far been found. When redescribing S. pruvoti as S. annulatus, Verhoeff wrote: “Stands close to vittatus Verh. (contribution 3, figs 9 and 10) but is distinguished by different patterning and some special features of the gonopods: the rudiment of the tibiotarsus [rounded process on basal side of U-shaped indentation] is smaller in vittatus and not curved, the parsolenomere [apical tab] very similar but more transversely curved, the medial displacement of the solenomere is barely detectable, overall the solenomere is less curved and less clavate, the end in vittatus rounded” ( Verhoeff 1941: 12, my translation). These small differences are largely contained within the variation seen in both S. pruvoti and S. vittatus . Until new diagnostic features are identified, S. vittatus and S. pruvoti are only separable on colour pattern.

Both Verhoeff and Mjöberg spelled the type locality of S. vittatus ‘Mt Tambourine’, which in the early 20th century referred to both a village and to the small basalt plateau on which the village was located; the modern name for the plateau is Tamborine Mountain. Verhoeff (1924) did not give a collection date for the S. vittatus types. Mjöberg’s unpublished field diaries show that he collected at ‘Mt Tambourine’ in the last two weeks of October 1912 (Å. Ferrier, in litt., 16 Dec. 2013; see also Ferrier 2006). The lectotype slide of S. vittatus was labelled ‘lectotype’ by P.M. Johns in 1967, but Johns did not publish this lectotypification.

Verhoeff’s one specimen of S. vittatus dorsalis was from ‘Glen Lamington’. Lamington Glen was a locality and rainfall recording station on the Lamington Plateau in the first half of the 20th century, and Mjöberg’s unpublished field diaries show that he collected on the ‘Lamington Plateau’ in mid-November 1912 (Å. Ferrier, in litt., 16 Dec. 2013; see also Ferrier 2006). The holotype slide was labelled ‘holotype’ by P.M. Johns in 1967.

General notes

See general notes for S. teres (above).

NHRS

Sweden, Stockholm, Naturhistoriska riksmuseet

NHRS

Swedish Museum of Natural History, Entomology Collections

QM

Queensland Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Polydesmida

Family

Paradoxosomatidae

Genus

Solaenodolichopus

Loc

Solaenodolichopus vittatus ( Verhoeff, 1924 )

Mesibov, Robert 2014
2014
Loc

Solaenodolichopus vittatus dorsalis

Nguyen A. D. & Sierwald P. 2013: 1160
Jeekel C. A. W. 2000: 40
2000
Loc

Aulacoporus vittatus

Jeekel C. A. W. 1968: 18
Attems C. 1937: 261
1937
Loc

Solaenodolichopus vittatus

Nguyen A. D. & Sierwald P. 2013: 1160
Jeekel C. A. W. 2000: 40
Verhoeff K. W. 1928: 94
1928
Loc

Aulacoporus vittatus dorsalis

Jeekel C. A. W. 1968: 18
Attems C. 1937: 261
Verhoeff K. W. 1928: 94
1928
Loc

Antichiropus (Solänodolichopus) vittatus

Verhoeff K. W. 1924: 22
Verhoeff K. W. 1924: 21
1924
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