A revision of dragon millipedes IV: the new genus Spinaxytes, with the description of nine new species (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Paradoxosomatidae)
Author
Srisonchai, Ruttapon
Author
Enghoff, Henrik
Author
Likhitrakarn, Natdanai
Author
Panha, Somsak
text
ZooKeys
2018
797
19
69
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.797.29510
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.797.29510
1313-2970-797-19
A5403588F43D40FF81EE2009E49823B4
A5403588F43D40FF81EE2009E49823B4
Spinaxytes krabiensis Srisonchai, Enghoff & Panha
sp. n.
Figs 3; 4
H-J
; 5D; 15, 16, 17
Material examined.
Holotype. ♂, THAILAND, Krabi Province, Mueang Krabi District, Wat Tham Sue (Tiger Cave), valley behind Tiger Cave,
8°07'38"N
,
98°55'26"E
, ca. 87 m a.s.l., 9 Jul. 2017, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ-pxDGT00211). Paratypes. 5 ♂♂, 9 ♀♀, 1 juvenile, same data as for holotype (CUMZ-pxDGT00212); 1 ♂, 1 ♀, same data as for holotype (ZMUC00040252). Further specimens, not paratypes, all from THAILAND, Krabi Province. Ao Luek District: 2 ♂♂, 1 ♀, Than Bok Khorani,
8°23'28"N
,
98°44'07"E
, ca. 46 m a.s.l., 14 Jan. 2013, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 5 ♂♂, 1 ♀, Than Bok Khorani,
8°23'28"N
,
98°44'07"E
, ca. 46 m a.s.l., 23 Aug. 2014, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 12 ♂♂, 7 ♀♀, 1 juvenile, Than Bok Khorani,
8°23'28"N
,
98°44'07"E
, ca. 46 m a.s.l., 30 Aug. 2015, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 3 ♂♂, Than Bok Khorani,
8°23'28"N
,
98°44'07"E
, ca. 46 m a.s.l., Jan. 2016, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 1 ♂, 5 ♀♀, P.N. Mountain Resort,
8°24'09"N
,
98°44'18"E
, ca. 46 m a.s.l., 30 Aug. 2015, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 1 ♂, 1 broken ♂, Tham Sa Yuan Thong (Sa Yuan Thong Cave),
8°23'29"N
,
98°46'17"E
, ca. 7 m a.s.l., 9 Oct. 2006, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ). Muaeng Krabi District: 1 broken ♂, Wat Tham Sue (Tiger Cave), valley behind Tiger Cave,
8°07'38"N
,
98°55'26"E
, ca. 87 m a.s.l., 25 Oct. 2007, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 1 broken ♂, 1 ♀, Wat Tham Sue (Tiger Cave), valley behind Tiger Cave,
8°07'38"N
,
98°55'26"E
, ca. 87 m a.s.l., 7 Oct. 2009, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 1 ♂, Wat Tham Sue (Tiger Cave), valley behind Tiger Cave,
8°07'38"N
,
98°55'26"E
, ca. 87 m a.s.l., 24 Aug. 2014, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ); 1 ♀, Wat Tham Sue (Tiger Cave), valley behind Tiger Cave,
8°07'38"N
,
98°55'26"E
, ca. 87 m a.s.l., 30 Aug. 2015, P. Pimvichai, P. Prasankok and N. Natarat leg. (CUMZ); 2 ♂♂, 1 ♀, 1 broken ♀, Wat Tham Sue (Tiger Cave), valley behind Tiger Cave,
8°07'38"N
,
98°55'26"E
, ca. 87 m a.s.l., 25 Jul. 2017, ASRU members leg. (CUMZ).
Etymology.
The new species is named after the province where the type locality lies.
Diagnosis.
Male femora 6 and 7 humped distally. Similar in this respect to
S. macaca
sp. n., but differs by having: paraterga orange, longer; male femora 6 smaller; tip of lamina lateralis round, not protuding as digitiform; tip of lamina medialis terminating in two lobes.
Description.
SIZE. Length 28-31 mm (male), 30-33 mm (female); width of midbody metazona 1.8-2.0 mm (male), 2.2-2.5 mm (female). Width of rings 2 = 3 = 4 <collum <head = 5-16, thereafter body gradually tapering towards telson.
Colour (Figure 15
A-D
). Specimens in life with body black/brownish black; paraterga orange; head, antennae (except whitish distal part of antennomeres 7 and 8), collum, prozona and epiproct black; metaterga and surface below paraterga black/brownish black; sterna brown; legs brown/blackish brown; a few basal podomeres whitish brown.
Antennae (Figure 16M). Reaching to body ring 8 (male) and 6 (female) when stretched dorsally.
Collum (Figure 16A). With three transverse rows of setiferous tubercles/cones, 4+4 in anterior row, 1+1 in intermediate row and 2+2 in posterior row; with one conspicuous setiferous notch at lateral margin; paraterga spiniform, long, tip sharp, elevated at ca. 20°-30° in both male and female, directed caudolaterad.
Tegument. Quite shining; collum coarsely microgranulate; metaterga and surface below paraterga smooth.
Metaterga (Figure 16A, C, E). With two transverse rows of setiferous tubercles and setiferous cones/spines; metaterga 2-7 with 2+2 tubercles in anterior row and 2+2 spines in posterior row; 8-19 with 2+2 tubercles in anterior row and 2+2 cones in posterior row; lateral cones/spines of posterior row bigger and longer than mesal ones, gradually reduced in size and length on the following rings.
Paraterga (Figure 16
A-E
, H). Extremely long; directed dorsolaterad on body rings 2-16, elevated at ca. 45°-60° (male) 40°-50° (female), directed dorsocaudad on ring 17, directed increasingly caudad on body rings 18 and 19. Ozopore visible in subdorsal view.
Telson (Figure 16E, H, I). Epiproct long; tip subtruncate; lateral setiferous tubercles mostly inconspicuous (in some specimens conspicuous); apical tubercles inconspicuous. Hypoproct subtrapeziform; caudal margin round, with inconspicuous setiferous tubercles.
Sterna (Figs 4H; 16F, G). Sternal lobe between male coxae 4 bifurcate, long; tips sharp, in situ directed ventroanteriad; posterior surface bearing one pore.
Legs (Figs 4I, J; 16J). Male femora 6 a bit humped; male femora 7 strongly humped.
Gonopods (Figs 3, 5D, 17). Coxa subequal in length to femur. Prefemoral part ca. half as long as femur. Femur obviously enlarged distally. Postfemoral part narrow. Mesal sulcus and lateral sulcus wide. Solenophore bigger than postfemoral part: lamina lateralis small, compact, tip round: lamina medialis long; basally enlarged and slightly attenuated near the tip; tip a bit curved, terminating in two lobes. Solenomere curved and twisted, compressed in transverse section, tip directed lateroposteriad.
Distribution and habitat
(Figure 15E).
S. krabiensis
sp. n. inhabits Krabi Province. Considering its narrow distribution, we regard this species as endemic for the Thai fauna. It is syntopic with
Desmoxytes delfae
(Jeekel, 1964),
Desmoxytes cervina
and
Gigaxytes gigas
(Golovatch & Enghoff, 1994), which were collected from the same location (Than Bok Khorani and Wat Tham Sue (Tiger Cave)), but the new species was encountered living on rock walls or in small caves while the others were usually found on leaf litter or on tree branches.
Remarks.
We found variations in the lateral setiferous tubercles of the epiproct: conspicuous in some specimens, inconspicuous in others.
Figure 9. Photographs of live
Spinaxytes efefi
sp. n. and habitat A ♂ paratype, CUMZ-pxDGT00208 B ♀ paratype, CUMZ-pxDGT00208 C habitat.
Figure 10.
Spinaxytes efefi
sp. n., ♂ paratype, CUMZ-pxDGT00208 A, B anterior body part C, D body rings 9-11 E, H, I posteriormost body rings and telson F, G sternal lobe between coxae 4 J leg 6.