A revision of the minor species group in the millipede genus Nannaria Chamberlin, 1918 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Xystodesmidae)
Author
Means, Jackson C.
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7377-0696
Virginia Tech, Department of Entomology, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA
mjacks4@vt.edu
Author
Hennen, Derek A.
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7005-1151
Virginia Tech, Department of Entomology, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA
Author
Marek, Paul E.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7048-2514
Virginia Tech, Department of Entomology, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA
text
ZooKeys
2021
2021-04-13
1030
1
180
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1030.62544
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1030.62544
1313-2970-1030-1
875199397EEE5F7898EA1DB25DA62D25
Nannaria conservata Chamberlin, 1940
Fig. 109 Vernacular name: "The Duke Forest Twisted-Claw Millipede"
Nannaria conservata
Chamberlin 1940
: 56.
Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958
: 40.
Wray 1967
: 152.
Shelley 1974
: 111.
Shelley 1975
: 180, figs 1-6.
Shelley 1978
: 66, figs 67-69.
Hoffman 1999
: 366.
Shelley 2000
: 196.
Marek et al. 2014
: 36.
Means et al. 2021
: S69.
Material examined.
United States
-
North Carolina
•
1 ♂
;
Franklin County
, near
Moccasin Creek
,
1.5 miles
SW of Pilot
;
35.8625°N
, -
78.2683°W
;
2 May 1959
;
L. Hubricht
leg.; VMNH, NAN0336 •
7 ♂♂
♀♀
;
Person County
,
2 mi
SSE Surl
, off end of SR
1718 in
window wells,
Sheets
residence;
36.3157°N
, -
78.8887°W
;
3 Apr. 1999
;
A. & S. Braswell
,
R. Sheets
leg.; NCSM NAN0547 •
1 ♀
;
Wake
County
, pond near
William
B
Umstead State Park
;
35.8366°N
, -
78.7623°W
; elev.
118 m
;
17 Apr. 2016
; hand collected;
J. Means
leg.; VTEC
MPE02117
•
8 ♂♂
;
Wake
County
,
Raleigh
, 209
Lynwood Lane
;
35.8404°N
, -
78.6376°W
;
15 Mar. 1975
;
M. Cooper
leg.; VMNH NAN0337, 338 •
12 ♂♂
♀♀
;
same collection data as preceding;
29 Jan. 1975
;
M. Cooper
leg.; NCSM, NAN0549, 550, 552 •
2 ♂
;
Wake
County
,
Raleigh
, 1611
Oberlin Rd.
;
35.8036°N
, -
78.6582°W
;
23 Jan. 1990
;
D. Stephan
leg.; NCSM NAN0546 •
1 ♂
;
Wake
County
,
Raleigh
, jct.
Athens Dr.
&
Avent Ferry Rd.
;
35.7674°N
, -
78.7066°W
;
10 Mar. 1990
;
R. Shelley
leg.; NCSM NAN0550.
For
detailed collection data see
Suppl.
material 7
.
Diagnosis.
Adult males of
Nannaria conservata
are distinct from other
Nannaria
and the nearby
N. hardeni
sp. nov. based on the following combination of characters:
Gonopods
.
Gonopodal acropodite gently curving dorsomedially before apex, not medially as in
N. hardeni
sp. nov.; tip simple, blunt. Telepodite basal zone height <1/2 length of acropodite, not> 1/2 as in
N. hardeni
sp. nov. Prefemoral process acicular, reduced, not subequal to height of telopodite basal zone and crossing acropodite as in
N. hardeni
sp. nov. Prefemoral spine acicular and paralleling prefemoral process (Fig.
109B
, red arrow), not blunt and widely separated from prefemoral process as in
N. hardeni
sp. nov.
Color
.
In his redescription of
N. conservata
,
Shelley (1975)
describes its color as "olive-brown with a pink epiproct and paranota
..."
The single female individual collected for this revision conformed to
Shelley's
description, but was placed in 100% EtOH in the field not photographed alive.
Figure 109.
Nannaria conservata
♂ (VMNH, NAN0338) left gonopod
A
anterior view
B
medial view; red arrow indicates reduced prefemoral spine paralleling prefemoral process
C
posterior view. Scale bar: 0.5 mm.
Measurements.
♂ (VMNH, NAN0388): BL = 21.2, CW = 2.8, IW = 1.6, ISW = 0.8, B11W = 3.2, B11H = 2.3.
Variation.
There is no notable variation between individuals of
N. conservata
, with the exception of an abnormal male with three gonopods which
Shelley (1975)
illustrated and discussed.
Distribution.
Known only from a small area around Raleigh and Durham, North Carolina (North Carolina: Person, Orange, Wake and Franklin counties; Suppl. material 7; Fig.
128
). Distribution area: 1,820 km2; status: SRE.
Ecology.
As no fresh identifiable material was collected for this revision, the authors cannot comment on habitat preference. However,
Shelley (1975)
noted that specimens were never found in moist areas, and instead were discovered under pine litter and in sandy, dry soils. As
Shelley (1975)
noted, this is unusual for a majority of xystodesmid species.
Etymology.
Chamberlin (1940)
gives no etymology for
N. conservata
, but the specific name is seemingly a femininization of the Latin
conservo
, meaning conserve. This may be in reference to the conservation efforts which take place within its type locality, Duke Forest.
Note on clade membership.
The authors were unsuccessful at collecting specimens of
Nannaria conservata
for the present study, so DNA sequences, molecular phylogenetic relationship, and taxonomic affinities between
N. conservata
and the rest of the
Nannaria minor
species group remain unknown. A female specimen from Raleigh, Wake County, North Carolina was collected and sequenced, and was placed within the
Nannaria paupertas
clade. The only species of
Nannaria
known from Wake County is
N. conservata
. However, as
N. conservata
shares none of the gonopodal characters that unite the
Nannaria paupertas
clade, and in light of the possibility that the female from Wake County represents an undescribed species, the authors refrain from placing
N. conservata
within the
Nannaria paupertas
clade and leave the taxonomic affinity of
N. conservata
to be addressed in a future study.
Type locality.
United States, North Carolina, Durham County, Durham.
Notes.
In the original publication,
Chamberlin (1940
: 57) did not designate a type, but he describes only a male specimen which is therefore the holotype by monotypy. Chamberlin did not mention the collector of this specimen, but
Shelley (1975
: 180) reported that the type specimen was collected by N. B. Causey on November 12, 1939.