Scorpions of Sri Lanka (Scorpiones Buthidae, Chaerilidae, Scorpionidae) with description of four new species of the genera Charmus Karsch, 1879 and Reddyanus Vachon, 1972, stat n
Author
Kovařík, František
Author
Lowe, Graeme
Author
Ranawana, Kithsiri B.
Author
Hoferek, David
Author
Š, V. A.
text
Euscorpius
2016
2016-12-31
220
1
133
https://doi.org/10.18590/euscorpius.2016.vol2016.iss220.1
journal article
153629
10.18590/euscorpius.2016.vol2016.iss220.1
03196918-10d5-44d2-ab42-d38f88314c7b
1536-9307
7124466
DD0DF45D-F63A-4AA2-8EFF-03CF99E297EF
Isometrus maculatus
(
De Geer, 1778
)
(
Figs. 13
,
127–137
,
196
,
221–222
,
237–238
,
242, 252
,
403–404
,
555
,
557
,
559
)
Scorpio maculatus
De Geer, 1778: 346
.
Isometrus maculatus
:
Kraepelin, 1899: 66
.
Isometrus
(
Isometrus
)
maculatus
:
Vachon, 1972: 169– 180
, figs. 1–13, 15, 17, 19;
Fet & Lowe, 2000: 147
;
Lourenço & Huber, 2002: 266
;
Teruel & Kovařík, 2012: 88–91
, figs. 4, 27, 36–37, 46, 1 94–207, 566– 569;
Kovařík & Ojanguren, 2013: 182–184
, 347, 355–356, figs. 1251–1255, 1264, 1368–1375, 1376– 1383 (reference and synonymes list until 2013);
Veronika & al., 2013: 75
, figs. 1, 15–20, tab. 1.
Figures 142–145:
Isometrus thwaitesi
.
Figures 142, 144
. Male from locality 15CH, chelicerae, carapace and tergites I–III (142) and sternopectinal region and sternite III (144).
Figures 143, 145
. Female from locality 15CO, chelicerae, carapace and tergites I–III (143) and sternopectinal region and sternite III (145).
Figures 146–149:
Left hemispermatophore of
Isometrus thwaitesi
from locality 15CH. External (146), dorsal (147), internal (148) and ventral (149) views. Note: distal part of flagellum and basal part of trunk (foot) were damaged during dissection. Scale bar: 500 µm. Abbreviations:
bl
, basal lobe;
f
, flagellum;
ml
, median lobe;
mlc
, median lobe carina;
pr
, pars recta of flagellum;
prf,
pars reflecta of flagellum;
t
, trunk.
TYPE
LOCALITY AND
TYPE
REPOSITORY. “
Suriname
and
Pennsylvania
”;
NHRS
.
S RI LANKAN MATERIAL EXAMINED.
Sri Lanka
,
Northern Province
,
Mannar District
,
Madhu Road
,
08°48'26.3"N
080°10'26"E
,
90 m
a.s.l.
(
Locality
15
CH
,
Fig. 584
),
24. –25.IV.2015
,
1♂
1♀
,
FKCP
,
1♀
2juvs.,
UPSL
, leg. Kovařík et al.;
Northern Province
,
Mannar District
,
Marichchukkaddi
env, border of
Wilpattu National Park
,
08°33'32.3"N
079°56'51"E
,
7 m
a.s.l.
(Locality
15CI
,
Fig. 585
),
25. –26.IV.2015
,
1♂
1♀
(
Figs. 129–130
,
132, 134
,
196
,
222
,
238
,
404
)
1 juv.
,
FKCP
, leg.
Kovařík
et al.;
Southern Province
,
Matara District
,
Kekanadura village
,
05°58'28.2"N
080°36'20.5"E
,
40 m
a.s.l.
(Locality
15CP
,
Figs. 593–594
),
30.IV.2015
,
1♂
(
Figs. 127–128
,
131, 133
,
221
,
237
,
242, 252
,
403
, 555, 557, 5 59),
FKCP
, leg.
Kovařík
et al.;
Eastern Province
,
Ampara District
,
Lahugala-Kitulana National Park
,
06°52' 46"N
081°43'21.8"E
,
40 m
a.s.l.
(Locality
15CR
,
Fig. 596
),
3.–4.V.2015
, photos only, leg.
Kovařík
et al.
Figures 150–151:
Isometrus thwaitesi
from locality 15CF, male (150) and female (151).
Figures 152–155:
Lychas srilankensis
from locality 15CJ.
Figures 152–153
. Male in dorsal (152) and ventral (153) views.
Figures 154–155
. Female in dorsal (154) and ventral (155) views.
Figures 156–157:
Lychas srilankensis
, male from locality 15CO in dorsal (156) and ventral (157) views.
DIAGNOSIS. Total length
30–75 mm
. Females usually reach ca.
45 mm
. Manus of pedipalp very thin, in males its width equals that of patella and femur. Pedipalps and legs yellow, with spots. Manus of pedipalps yellow with several spots, fingers dark. Mesosomal segments lightcolored. First (basal) middle lamella of female pecten quadrangular. Posterior margin of sternite V straight (females) to very slightly convex medially (males). Subaculear tooth spinoid. Pectinal teeth number 15–20 (1
7–20 in
the examined
Sri Lanka
specimens).
COMMENTS ON DISTRIBUTION.
I. maculatus
has been regarded as cosmopolitan (see
Fet & Lowe, 2000: 149
) and records of this species are so numerous that a complete listing would be unreasonably long. A list of specimens which the first author examined until 2003 is published in
Kovařík (2003: 3)
. Additonal records are given in
Kovařík & Ojanguren (2013: 182–184)
. Records peaked in the earlier era of wooden sailing ships and harbors full of wooden barracks, both ideal niches for these scorpions. For that reason between 1758 and ca. 1940 this species was reported from many countries and large harbors including Hamburg in Europe. With the transition to modern building materials and modes of travel, reports of this species have greatly diminished, and in many places have ceased altogether. Apparently, relatively few of the old invasive populations were able to persist without being resupplied by a constant influx of new individuals via human transport. The distribution of
I. maculatus
in southeast Asia is not well documented, but it is possibly indigenous to
India
and/ or
Sri Lanka
because of the presence there of its most closely related species:
I. thurstoni
and
I. thwaitesi
.
Lourenço & Huber (2002: 266)
suggested that
Sri Lanka
was the original home of this species before cosmotropical dispersal by human activity, because
Sri Lanka
"is the only region in the world where
I
.
maculatus
is found in really wild conditions inland." This was pure speculation, unsupported by any data. Firstly, their assertion implies that the authors know all species of scorpions present in every "wild condition inland" everywhere else on the globe. Secondly, their logic is flawed because although certain exotic species may fail to penetrate endemic 'wild' ecosystems of host countries, this is by no means the rule. There are many counterexamples where invasive species have become established in endemic ecosystems and displaced native fauna or flora, causing major negative impacts. However, Veronika et. al. (2013: 75) cited this speculation as fact, claimimg that
I
.
maculatus
is an "Endemic species in
Sri Lanka
". A proper test of this hypothesis may require comparative DNA studies of widespread
I
.
maculatus
populations.