The millipede genus Lissodesmus Chamberlin, 1920 (Diplopoda: Polydesmida: Dalodesmidae) from Tasmania and Victoria, with descriptions of a new genus and 24 new species
Author
Mesibov, Robert
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2005
2005-12-31
62
2
103
146
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-62-issue-2-2005/pages-103-146/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2005.62.4
1447-2554
8064747
Lissodesmus perporosus
Jeekel, 1984
Figures 1
,
10
,
62
,
63
,
69
per, 70per, 71per, 72 (map)
Lissodesmus perporosus
Jeekel, 1984: 98
.
Material examined.
Holotype
(not seen).
Male
,
Australia
,
Tasmania
.
Hellyer Gorge
,
32 km
SSW of Somerset
,
25.xi.1980
,
C.A.W. Jeekel
and
A. Jeekel-Rijvers. The
type is said to be deposited in
TM
(
Jeekel, 1984: 86
), but has not yet been received there.
Paratypes
.
6 males
,
13 females
, 3 stadium
7 males
, 2 stadium
7 females
, details as for
holotype
; male,
12 km
SW of Derwent Bridge
,
26.xi.1980
,
C.A.W. Jeekel
and A.
Jeekel-Rijvers
;
2 males
,
4 females
,
Lake St Clair National Park
, near
Cynthia Bay
,
5 km
WNW of Derwent Bridge
,
26.xi.1980
,
C.A.W. Jeekel
and
A. Jeekel-Rijvers. These
specimens are listed as
paratypes
by
Jeekel (1984: 98)
but their present locations are unknown and they have not been examined
.
Other material.
550 males
,
616 females
and
328 juveniles
from 333 localities (see “
Lissodesmus
supplement” for details).
Description
. Male c.
18 mm
long,
H
= 1.7 mm. In alcohol, under low magnification with near-white body colour and three transverse bands dorsally: reddish purple posteriorly on prozonites, red speckling anteriorly and light brown (mainly medially) posteriorly on metatergites. Antenna fairly short, stout (
Fig. 69
per).
Paranota
fairly wide,
R
= 1.5 (
Figs 10D
,
70
per), posterior corners not turned up (
Fig. 1
).
Pore formula 5, 7,
9–19 in
males and females.
Legs robust, tarsus about as long as femur, tibia with slight ventral distal swelling (
Fig. 71
per). Telopodite (
Figs 62
,
63
) reaching leg 5 when retracted. Solenomere arising at about one-third the telopodite height, directed posterodistally at a small angle (c. 30°) to telopodite axis, curving slightly laterally, terminating with toothed subapical collar at about one-third the prefemoral process height. Tibiotarsus somewhat larger than solenomere, directed at larger angle to telopodite axis, straight with tip bent anterodistally at a right angle. Femoral process arising just proximal to solenomere origin, blade-like, forked at about one-third its length; anterior branch directed distally, pointed, pressed close to prefemoral process, terminating at just over half the prefemoral process height (distal to solenomere tip); posterior branch about one-quarter as long as anterior branch and much narrower, directed posteriorly and curving slightly distally. Prefemoral process at origin about half the width of telopodite base, curving gradually posteriorly from about half the process height, the mesal edge distally with a few low, tooth-like projections. Small paired unci arising at about half the prefemoral process height (distal to solenomere tip) from middle of posterior surface and from mesal edge.
Distribution and habitat.
In cool temperate rainforest, wet eucalypt forest, blackwood/tea-tree swamp forest and subalpine woodland over at least 20 000 km
2
in
north-west
Tasmania
(
Fig. 72
), from sea level to at least
1150 m
. The
L. perporosus
range extends from the west coast near Pieman Head to the eastern edge of the Central Plateau and to Notley Gorge in the West Tamar region, and from the Bass Strait coast near the Black River mouth to Tarraleah in the upper Derwent Valley.
L. perporosus
is the most abundant dalodesmid over most of its range. It occurs in
Pinus radiata
plantations (
Bonham et al., 2002
;
Mesibov, 2005
) as well as native vegetation and has been found in caves at Bubs Hill and Mole Creek.
Remarks
. Size and coloration vary little in this species, and females and juveniles are easily recognised by the unusual pore formula. A single male
L. perporosus
from Trackham Creek near Waratah (
QVM
23:17460) has a normal pore formula. Another
114 specimens
from the same locality, including
28 males
, have the
perporosus
formula, indicating that this Trackham Creek male is unique and not representative of a pore-formula “race” within the species. Gonopod structure also varies very little in
L. perporosus
, the gonopods of males from sites
200 km
apart at Rebecca Creek and Dee Lagoon differing only slightly in size, number and position of teeth on the prefemoral process. The greatest deviation from the typical
perporosus
gonopod structure is found in the vicinity of Maggs Mountain in the upper Mersey River catchment. Males in this small area have additional tooth-like projections on the prefemoral process, and the tip of the process is thickened and bent over (
Fig. 63
).