A new species of the genus Lucasioides Kwon, 1993 (Isopoda, Oniscidea, Agnaridae) from Siberia, Russia
Author
Gongalsky, Konstantin B.
A. N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky Prospekt 33, 119071 Moscow, Russia. M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gory, 1, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Author
Nefediev, Pavel S.
Altai State University, Prospekt Lenina 61, 656049 Barnaul, Russia. & Biological Institute, Tomsk State University, Prospekt Lenina, 36, 634050 Tomsk, Russia & Tigirek State Nature Reserve, Nikitina Street 111, 656049 Barnaul, Russia
Author
Turbanov, Ilya S.
I. D. Papanin Institute for Biology of Inland Waters, Russian Academy of Sciences, Borok, 109, 152742 Yaroslavl Region, Russia. turba 13 @ mail. ru; http: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 9441 - 2791 & Cherepovets State University, Prospekt Lunacharskogo 5, 162600 Cherepovets, Vologda Region, Russia
turba13@mail.ru
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-01-06
4903
1
140
150
journal article
9053
10.11646/zootaxa.4903.1.9
9f39fd59-f596-492d-968c-6f5f253e765a
1175-5326
4422838
234DA01B-28DA-4D17-8A3C-F5BCFB263802
Lucasioides altaicus
sp. nov.
Figs 1–7
Mongoloniscus
sp. (pro parte)—
Gongalsky
et al
. 2017: 26
.
Material examined:
Holotype
, ³ (
ZMMU
, Mc-1420),
Russia
, southwestern Siberia,
Altai Krai
, Charyshskoye Dis-trict, near Komendantka,
Altai State
University (ASU) Field Station “Goluboi Utios”,
51°21ʹ38.0ʺN
,
83°38ʹ02.7ʺE
,
630 m
a.s.l., N slope, plot 2,
Betula pendula
,
Populus tremula
,
Pinus sylvestris
,
Spiraea chamaedrifolia
,
Bergenia crassifolia
, hand sampling,
13 July 2016
, leg.
V
.Yu. Slatina, Kh.Kh. Nedoev, S.
T
. Niyazov.
Paratypes
: 1 ³ (
ZMMU
, Mc-1421); 1 ³,
1 ♀
(KG),
Russia
, southwestern Siberia,
Altai Krai
, Charyshskoye District, near Komendantka, ASU Field Station “Goluboi Utios”,
51°21ʹ44.3ʺN
,
83°37ʹ42.6ʺE
,
620 m
a.s.l., N slope, plot 1,
B. pendula
,
P. tremula
,
P. sylvestris
,
S. chamaedrifolia
,
B. crassifolia
, soil sampling, sample 4 (
0–10 cm
),
12 July 2018
, leg.
V
.Yu. Slatina, Kh.Kh. Nedoev; 3 ³³,
5 ♀♀
(
ZMMU
, Mc-1422);
1 ♀
(
ZMMU
, Mc-1424), 1 ³ (KG), 4 ³³ (ASU), location, date, and collectors same as
holotype
; 1 ³,
1 ♀
(
ZMMU
, Mc-1423),
Russia
, southwestern Siberia,
Altai Krai
, Charyshskoye District, near Komendantka, ASU Field Station “Goluboi Utios”,
51°21ʹ20.3ʺN
,
83°37ʹ37.0ʺE
,
S. chamaedrifolia
,
Caragana arborescens
,
Lonicera tatarica
on southern slope,
480 m
a.s.l., soil sampling, sample 1 (
0–10 cm
),
6 September 2018
, leg. Kh.Kh. Nedoev.
Diagnosis.
Male exopod of pleopod 1 with concave tip and lower lobe is longer than the upper one; telson is elongated and shows sharp tip.
Description.
Maximum body length: male 8.0 mm (
holotype
7.2 mm
), female
6.7 mm
.
Body
dark grey-brown, with two rows of light grey-brown spots in medial part of coxal plates of pereonal segments 2–7 (
Fig. 1A
). Body relatively elongated, pleon forming no continuous margin with pereon (
Fig. 1A
). Dorsal surface of tergites smooth. Posterior edges of coxal plates of pereonites 1–3 straight, those of pereonites 4–7 curved (
Fig. 2A
).
Head
covered with scattered, sharp, triangular, dorsal setae (
Fig. 1B
).
Noduli laterales
on pereonites 1–4 located at approximately same distance to edge of coxal plates (
Figs 2A
,
3
). Cephalic lobes poorly developed. Distal edge of median lobe rounded (
Figs 1B
,
2B
). Telson with an elongated distal part, distal corner forming a triangle (
Figs 2C
,
3A
).
Antennula
with three articles (
Fig. 2D
); first article wide and long; second article 0.5 times as long as first; third article narrow as almost as long as first article, bearing tuft of setae at apex.
Antenna
of medium length, reaching pereonite 3; flagellum with two articles, proximal article slightly shorter than distal one (
Figs 1C
,
2E
). Aesthetascs absent from apical articles of antenna.
FIGURE 1.
Lucasioides altaicus
sp. nov.
, A—male paratype, dorsal view; female paratype: B—head; C—antenna.
Left mandible
(
Fig. 4A
) with molar process carrying two teeth and
lacinia mobilis
with straight edge. Lobe covered by setae with three plumose penicils followed by row of 18–20 penicils located basal to
lacinia
. Right mandible smaller than left mandible, molar process with thee teeth and
lacinia mobilis
with two teeth and hairy bilobate lobe with row of 18–20 penicils (
Fig. 4B
).
Maxillula
(
Fig. 4C
) medial corner of inner endite with two strong hirsute setae.Apical edge of outer endite bearing nine spines divided into two groups; five medial spines slender and with split tips, and four lateral spines stouter and with simple tips. Tip of endite covered with brush of dense setae.
Maxilla
with bilobate edge, medial half of apical edge of inner lobe with brush of short dense setae (
Fig. 4D
). Inner margin with a subapical tubercle. Maxilliped with outer corner of endite with two acute tips and large spine near inner corner (
Fig. 4E
). Basal article of endopod with large spine.
Pereopods
(
Figs 2
F–H, 5). Ventral edge of male pereopod 7 carpus slightly curved.
Uropods
(
Fig. 1A
,
2C
) colored as dorsal surface of body. Exopods elongated, with widest part at 1/3 proximal distance (
Figs 2C
,
3A
).
Male
. Shape of genital papilla typical of the genus. All exopods at lateral margin with lungs. Exopod of
pleopod 1
(
Figs 6A
,
7B
) with long hind lobe bearing deep hollow and 9–10 setae at apex; inner margin slightly concave and devoid of setae. Endopod of pleopod 1 with a dorsal furrow and row of spines (
Figs 6B
,
7C, D
).
Pleopod 2
exopod triangular, with concave outer margin bearing 12 setae (
Figs 6C
,
7A
); endopod much longer than exopod, narrow and parallel-sided (
Figs 6D
,
7A
).
Pleopods 3–4
exopods (
Fig. 6
E–G) trapezoidal, slightly decreasing in size from 3 to 4.
Pleopod 5
exopod triangular.
Etymology.
The specific epithet refers to the
locus typicus
(the
Altai
Mountains).
FIGURE 2.
Lucasioides altaicus
sp. nov.
, female paratype: A—pereion edge; B—head; C—telson; D—antennula; E—antenna; F—pereopod 1; G—pereopod 6; H—pereopod 7.
Distribution and habitat.
The species has been collected in the lowlands of
Altai
Mountains in the environs of Charyshskoye Village. The area supports a steppe habitat with
S. chamaedrifolia
,
C. arborescens
and
L. tatarica
bushes and scattered
P. sylvestris
,
B. pendula
and
P. tremula
stands with
S. chamaedrifolia
and
B. crassifolia
, growing on the southern and northern rocky slopes of a mountain, respectively. The above is the first record of the genus
Lucasioides
Kwon, 1993
from
Russia
, showing its presently northwestern range limit.
Remarks.
The new species is assigned to
Lucasioides
since it has five pairs of pleopodal lungs; the flagellum of antenna consisting of two articles, and the position of the
noduli laterales
distinctive for the genus. This species seems to be particularly close to
Desertoniscus mongolicus
due to the similar shape of most body parts. Yet the taxonomic position of
D. mongolicus
within
Desertoniscus
needs to be revised. In the original description,
Borutzky (1978)
noted that
D. mongolicus
occupies a position intermediate between the genera
Desertoniscus
and
Mongoloniscus
, but in fact both
D. mongolicus
and
L. altaicus
sp. nov.
also bear characteristics of both
Protracheoniscus
and
Lucasioides
(e.g., the position of the
noduli laterales
). However, these two species differ in the shape of the male exopod of pleopod 1:
D. mongolicus
has a longer upper lobe at the tip, while in
L. altaicus
sp. nov.
the lower lobe is longer;
D. mongolicus
has antenna reaching only the posterior edge of tergite I, while they are longer in
L. altaicus
sp. nov.
and reaching the posterior edge of tergite II. Within the genus
Lucasioides
, there are no species which could be mixed up with the new species. The morphologically closest species are
L. isseli
(
Arcangeli, 1927
)
from
China
,
L. sinuosus
(Nunomura, 1987)
from
Korea
and
Japan
,
L. toyamaensis
Nunomura 2008
,
L. sagarai
Nunomura 2008
, and
L. yokahatai
Nunomura 2010
from
Japan
(
Nunomura 2008
,
2010
). The new species readily differs from all by the sharp and elongated telson, and in the shape of the exopod of pleopod 1. A molecular analysis is needed for the complex of those small species of
Agnaridae
, and a complete taxonomic revision of these sister genera is needed.
FIGURE 3.
Lucasioides altaicus
sp. nov.
, female paratype: A—pereionites 6, 7, pleon and telson; B—nodulis lateralis on pereonite 7; C—pereionites 1–3; D—nodulis lateralis on pereonite 2.
Phylogenetic analysis.
A total of 11 nucleotide sequences were used to assess both species and intraspecific variation (
Fig. 8
): two of them were obtained from
L. altaicus
sp. nov.
, and further nine revealed earlier from
Protracheoniscus politus
(C. Koch, 1841)
from
Budapest
,
Hungary
,
P. pokarzhevskii
Gongalsky et Turbanov, 2018
,
P. kryszanovskii
Borutzky, 1957
,
P. nogaicus
Demianowicz, 1932
,
P. major
(Dollfus, 1903)
and
Desertoniscus zaitsevi
Gongalsky, 2017
from the Republic of
Kalmykia
,
Russia
(
Gongalsky
et al
. 2018
). The loci of the
COI
mtDNA of
Hemilepistus klugii
(Brandt, 1833)
and
H. schirasi
Lincoln, 1970
from
Iran
(
Dimitriou
et al
. 2018
) were used as outgroup taxa.
FIGURE 4.
Lucasioides altaicus
sp. nov.
, female paratype: A—left mandible; B—right mandible; C—maxillula; D—maxilla; E—maxilliped.
An analysis of the average values of pairwise sequence divergences (
p
-distances) of partial
COI
mtDNA (
Table 2
) shows that the intraspecific difference of two
loci
of
L. altaicus
sp. nov.
is 0%, which indicates their complete identity. Within the considered species,
p
-distances range from 15.7% between
L. altaicus
sp. nov.
and
P. kryszanovskii
up to 24.9% between
P. politus
and
P. major
. Similar genetic distances correspond to possible variations within the
COI
mtDNA gene for woodlice (
Dimitriou
et al
. 2018
).
It seems noteworthy that
D. zaitsevi
falls within the
p
-distances range for the genus
Protracheoniscus
, whose average values of pairwise sequence divergences reach 18.0% with
P. major
and 23.4% with
P. nogaicus
.
Protracheoniscus
appears to be paraphyletic (
Fig. 8
). However, this aspect and the question of the validity of the genera
Desertoniscus
Verhoeff, 1930
and
Lucasioides
Kwon, 1993
is to be left outside present paper, requiring a special study based on a more representative material.