Taxonomy of the Cryptopygus complex. III. The revision of South African species of Cryptopygus and Isotominella (Collembola, Isotomidae)
Author
Potapov, Mikhail B.
Senckenberg Museum of Natural History Goerlitz, Am Museum 1, 02826, Goerlitz, Germany & Moscow State Pedagogical University, Kibalchich str., 6, korp. 3, Moscow 129278, Russia
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6111-3354
mpnk-abroad@yandex.ru
Author
Janion-Scheepers, Charlene
University of Cape Town, Department of Biological Sciences, Rondebosch, 7701, South Africa & Iziko Museums of South Africa, 25 Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5942-7912
Author
Deharveng, Louis
Institut de Systematique, Evolution, Biodiversite ISYEB-UMR 7205 - CNRS, MNHN, UPMC, EPHE, Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Sorbonne Universites, 45 rue Buffon, F- 75005, Paris, France
text
ZooKeys
2020
945
99
127
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.945.51860
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.945.51860
1313-2970-945-99
CCD1B83E262441CDBD0AE1C57EDCA4DC
1E1F40C8FAD751509E70897F4DE56527
Cryptopygus abulbus
sp. nov.
Figures 3
, 5
, 15-22
Type material.
Holotype and eighteen paratypes: South Africa • Western Cape, Stellenbosch, Jonkershoek Nature Reserve;
33.986883S
,
18.955350E
; 30 July 2009; C. Janion-Scheepers leg.; litter trap (J2_32), Holotype and eight paratypes deposited on four slides at SAMC, four paratypes on two slides deposited at SMNG, four paratypes on two slides deposited at MSPU, two paratypes on one slide at MNHN.
Diagnosis.
Without globular retractile bulb on Ant. IV. Organite on Ant. IV chili-like. 6+6 ocelli. Maxillary palp simple. Two sublobal hairs. Anterior side of manubrium without chaetae. Tenaculum with two chaetae.
Description.
Body size 0.6-0.7 mm. Body with regular blue pigmentation, slender (Fig.
3
). Abd. V well separated from Abd. IV and fused with Abd. VI (Fig.
15
). Cuticle with orthogonal granulation. Ocelli 6+6 arranged as three in anterior and three in posterior group (Fig.
19
). PAO more than twice as long as ocellus, 0.6-0.7 as long as width of Ant. I and 0.8-1.1 mm as long as inner unguis length. Maxillary outer lobe with two sublobal hairs, one individual with one sublobal hair on one side was found. Maxillary palp simple. Labral formula as 2/5,5,4. Labium with five usual papillae (
A-E
, Fig.
16
) and labial formula as in
C. bulbus
sp. nov. Ventral side of head with 4+4 postlabial chaetae. Ant. I with eleven common chaetae, two ventral s-chaetae (s) and three small basal micro s-chaetae (bms), two dorsal and one ventral, Ant. II with three bms and one latero-distal s, Ant. III with one bms and five distal s (including one lateral). S-chaetae on Ant. IV weakly differentiated. Organite long, of chili-like shape, set apart from subapical micro s-chaeta (Figs
17
,
18
). Tip of antennae without retractile bulb.
Figures 15-22.
C. abulbus
sp. nov.
15
Abd. IV and fused Abd. V and V
16
labial palp
17, 18
apical part of Ant. IV, different views
19
ocelli and PAO
20
ventral tube, ventral view
21
furca, lateral view
22
furcal area, ventral view. Abbreviations: org organit, sms subapical ms-chaeta, ss s-chaeta.
Common chaetae slightly (under very high magnification) serrated at the posterior part of abdomen. S-formula as 4,3/2,2,2,3,5 (s), 1,0/1,0,0 (ms) (Figs
5
,
15
). Tergal s-chaetae much shorter than common chaetae and well distinguishable. Medial s-chaetae on Th. II-Abd. III situated in mid-tergal position. Macrochaetae smooth and short, 1,1/3,3,3 in number, medial ones on Abd. VI 1.6-2.0 times longer than dens and 2.8-4.1 times longer than mucro. Foil chaetae at the tip of abdomen absent. Axial chaetotaxy as 6-8,5/3,3,3,5-6. Th. I and II without chaetae, Th. III with 2+2 ventral chaetae.
Unguis without teeth. Empodial appendage 0.5-0.7 as in
C. bulbus
sp. nov. Tibiotarsi without additional chaetae on Leg I and II (21 chaetae), and with a few additional ones on Leg III, about 26 chaetae. Tibiotarsal tenent hairs clavate, 1,2,2 on Tibiotarsi 1,2,3. Ventral tube with 3+3 laterodistal and four posterior chaetae, anteriorly without chaetae (Fig.
20
). Tenaculum with 4+4 teeth and two chaetae. Anterior furcal subcoxa with 5-7, posterior one with three chaetae. Anterior side of manubrium without chaetae, posterior side with 4+4 laterobasal and 8-9 chaetae on main part, without lateral chaetae. Dens short, without crenulation, with one rigid and short anterior and three posterior chaetae (Figs
21
,
22
). Mucro bidentate. Ratio manubrium: dens: mucro = 3.3-3.8: 1.7-2.3: 1.
Etymology.
The name is derived from the absence of apical bulb on Ant. IV to stress the difference from
C. bulbus
sp. nov.
Distribution and ecology.
Currently known from indigenous vegetation in the Jonkershoek Nature Reserve, Stellenbosch.
Discussion.
Unlike
C. bulbus
sp. nov., the new species has no antennal bulb. Nevertheless, the two species form a rather well-defined group differing from almost all congeners by a simple maxillary palp, two sublobal hairs, chili-shaped organite on Ant. IV, and the absence of chaetae on the anterior side of the manubrium. Concerning the last character, only
C. nivicolus
(Salmon, 1965) and
C. sverdrupi
Lawrence, 1978 also lack this pair of chaetae, which is common to other species of the genus. Both mentioned species are inhabitants of Antarctic polar deserts and can hardly be conspecific to
C. abulbus
sp. nov. found in dry sites in a subtropical climate. These two Antarctic species are very dark and have two clavate tenent hairs (vs. one in
C. abulbus
sp. nov.) on tibiotarsi I. In addition,
C. nivicolus
has no mucro (vs. present in the new species) while
C. sverdrupi
has very small PAO (more than twice longer than ocellus in
C. abulbus
sp. nov.). Recently,
Gressitacantha terranova
Wise, 1967 was moved to
Cryptopygus
(Greenslade, 2015) adding another
Cryptopygus
species without anterior chaetae on the manubrium. The differences between
C. abulbus
sp. nov. and
C. terranovus
are more numerous than those from
C. nivicolus
and
C. sverdrupi
(in furca, arms of abdomen, length of macrochaetae, and others).