CHELODESMIDAE Cook, 1895

Bouzan, Rodrigo S., Iniesta, Luiz Felipe M., de Souza, Claudio A. R., Zampaulo, Robson A. & Brescovit, Antonio D., 2020, Taxonomic review of the Amazonian millipede genus Parastenonia Hoffman, 1977 and description of a new species from iron-ore caves (Polydesmida: Chelodesmidae), Journal of Natural History 53 (45 - 46), pp. 2781-2799 : 2782-2784

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2020.1749956

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CCBEED10-DCB4-48C9-A71D-CED3462DD72A

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F37787B8-1A09-C456-FE35-FB6D9FF0FE21

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scientific name

CHELODESMIDAE Cook, 1895
status

 

Family CHELODESMIDAE Cook, 1895 View in CoL

Subfamily CHELODESMINAE Cook, 1895 View in CoL

Tribe Priodesmini Hoffman, 1977 View in CoL

Genus Parastenonia Hoffman, 1977

Parastenonia Hoffman, 1977: 449 – 459 View in CoL . Type species: Priodesmus aurae Schubart, 1947 View in CoL [= Priodesmus parae Cook 1895 View in CoL ], by original designation. Hoffman 1980: 152; Shelley et al. 2000: 120.

Diagnosis

Males of Parastenonia differ from those of other chelodesmid genera by the combination of the following characters: metaterga granular and crossed by a transversal sulcus ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 (d)), as in Cypraeogona , Cayenniola , Cearodesmus and Brasiloschubartia , from which however this genus differs in the shape of the gonopod; lateral edge of paranota trilobed by the presence of two deep sinuses ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 (a,b)), as in Priodesmus and Stenonia , (see Attems 1938, figs 68 – 69; Jeekel 1963, figs 30 – 32) however without modifications on the walking legs; gonocoxae large, with a dorsal field of setae; a long slender acuminate process on acropodite and an elongated prefemoral process ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 (a,b)).

Redescription

General measurements. Body length between 32.30 mm (female of P. parae ) and 22.60 mm (male of P. carajas sp. nov.).

Colouration (in 70% ethanol). Variable among species, ranging from reddish brown to ochre.

Head. With scattered tubercles, some of which bearing setae ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 (a – f)); shape of the incisura lateralis suboval. Antenna elongated, about 1.5x the width of midbody ring ( Figure 3 View Figure 3 (a – d)).

Body rings. Integument with small tubercles, without setae ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 (a,b,d,e)). A transversal groove on the metazonite. Collum with the anterior border arched and posterior border straight. Spiracles oval. Sternites without modifications. Ozopores on trunk rings: 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15 – 19 (the standard polydesmid pore formula), located at the tip of the intermediate paranotum; and surrounded by peritremata. Paranota: prominent and long, wide, covering part of the legs, without setae on the edges. Paranota divided laterally into three lobes: -pro; -meso and -meta ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 (a,b)). Telson: triangular, wide and with tubercles ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 (e)). Epiproct with five pairs of macrosetae projecting through the tubercles on the dorsal side and two pairs in the apical region; paraproct with two macrosetae on each valve; hypoproct with two macrosetae.

Legs. Granulated; scattered setae along the entire surface ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 (c)).

Male sexual characters. Gonopore located on the coxae of the legs of the third body ring, coxae rounded, with a large apical pore ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 (a)). Gonopod aperture large, rectangular-shaped; posterior edge slightly folded ( Figures 8 View Figure 8 (a – b) and 9(b)). Gonopods: coxae (Cx; Figures 6 View Figure 6 (a) and 9(c,d)) equivalent to about half the length of the telopodite, without spiniform process, with several setae on dorsal side; coxae dorsally prominent in ectal view. Cannula (C; Figure 9 View Figure 9 (e)) robust and hook-shaped. Spermatic groove: runs along the mesal side of the acropodite in the entire length (SG; Figure 6 View Figure 6 (b)). Telopodite elongated, divided into two parts: the prefemoral region ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 (d)) and the femoral region ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 (d)). Prefemoral process ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 (d)): branch long with stretch marks ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 (f)). Acropodite long divided into two parts, the larger central branch is the solenomere carrying the spermatic groove with a thin elongated branch, rising proximally from the femoral region ( Figure 9 View Figure 9 (d)).

Female sexual characters. Cyphopods elongated, situated directly behind the second pair of legs on the third body ring; composed of valves and operculum, all densely setose; two valves joined by a membrane and operculum apically, appressed against both larger

valves ( Figures 6 View Figure 6 (c – f) and 10(a – e)). A small projection of the valves with S-shaped curvature in the intermediate membrane ( Figures 6 View Figure 6 (c,d) and 10(a)).

Included species

Two species: Parastenonia parae ( Cook, 1895) and P. carajas sp. nov.

Distribution

Known only from Amazon rainforest in the state of Pará, Brazil ( Figure 11 View Figure 11 ).

Attems CG. 1938. Myriapoda 3. Polydesmoidea II. Fam. Leptodesmidae, Platyrhachidae, Oxydesmidae, Gomphodesmidae. Das Tierreich. 69: 1 - 487.

Cook OF. 1895. Priodesmus, a new genus of Diplopoda from Surinam. Proc US Natl Mus. 18: 53 - 57. doi: 10.5479 / si. 00963801.18 - 1037.53.

Hoffman RL. 1980. Classification of the Diplopoda. Geneva: Museum d ' Histoire Naturelle; p. 237.

Jeekel CAW. 1963. Diplopoda of Guiana (1 - 5). Stud Fauna Suriname Other Guyanas. 4: 1 - 157.

Schubart O. 1947. Os Dipl 7 bartzoj. 12086 elodesmid millipedAntenor Leitnor tzCarvalho aos rios Araguaia e Amazonas em 1939 e 1940. Boletim do Museu Nacional do Rio de Janeiro, Zoologia. 82: 1 - 74.

Shelley RM, Sierwald P, Kiser SB, Golovatch SI. 2000. Nomenclator generum et familiarum Diplopodorum II. A list of the genus and family-group names in the Class Diplopoda from 1958 through 1999. Pensoft Publishers, Sofia, Bulgaria; p. 167.

Gallery Image

Figure 2. Parastenonia carajas sp. nov. male (IBSP 4997): (a) Head; (b) SEM of head (incisura lateralis in detail); (c) Labrum; (d) Detail of the occipital region; (e) Tubercles bearing-setae (setae in detail); (f) Small tubercles without setae. Scale bars: (a) 400 µm; (b) 500 µm; (c) 400 µm; (d) 300 µm; (e) 100 µm; (f) 100 µm.

Gallery Image

Figure 3. Parastenonia carajas sp. nov. male (IBSP 4997), SEM of the antennae: (a) Antenna; (b) Detail of the fifth antennomere and the basiconic sensilla; (c) Basiconic sensilla in detail; (d) Apical sensory cones. Scale bars: (a) 500 µm; (b) 200 µm; (c) 40 µm; (d) 50 µm.

Gallery Image

Figure 4. Parastenonia carajas sp. nov. male (IBSP 4997), SEM of the body rings and legs: (a) Midbody paranota with ozopore; (b) Midbody paranota without ozopore; (c) Midbody leg; (d) Midbody rings; (e) Telson. Scale bars: (a) 400 µm; (b) 400 µm; (c) 500 µm; (d) 1 mm; (e) 400 µm.

Gallery Image

Figure 6. Parastenonia parae male (MNRJ 11825) and female (MZUSP 1082), microscope and stereoscope images of the gonopod and cyphopods: (a) Gonopod in mesal view; (b) Distal portion of the gonopod; (c) Cyphopod in ectal view;(d) Detail of the junction between the internal and external valva; (e) Cyphopod in posterior view;(f) Cyphopod in anterior view.Scale bars: (a) 500 µm;(b) 250 µm;(c) 500 µm;(d) 250 µm; (e) 500 µm; (f) 500 µm.

Gallery Image

Figure 8. Parastenonia carajas sp. nov. male holotype (IBSP 1914), gonopods: (a) Ventral portion with the gonopod aperture; (b) Gonopod aperture in detail; (c) Gonopod in ectal view; (d) Gonopod in mesal view. Scale bars: (a) 1000 mm; (b) 500 µm; (c) 500 µm; (d) 500 µm.

Gallery Image

Figure 9. Parastenonia carajas sp. nov. male (IBSP 4997), SEM of the aperture and of the gonopod: (a) Apical pore; (b) Gonopod aperture in detail; (c) Gonopod in ectal view; (d) onopod in mesal view; (e) Cannula; (f) Tip of the acropodite in detail. Scale bars: (a) 400 µm; (b) 500 µm; (c) 500 µm; (d) 500 µm; (e) 300 µm; (f) 100 µm.

Gallery Image

Figure 11. Distribution map of Parastenonia parae and P. carajas sp. nov.: (a) South America; (b) Northern of Brazil. Pará state highlighted in grey; (c) Iron-ore outcrop in the Pará state; (d) Satellite image of the iron-ore outcrop where the caves were sampled.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Polydesmida

Family

Chelodesmidae