A taxonomic review of the southern African millipede genus, Bicoxidens Attems, 1928 (Diplopoda: Spirostreptida: Spirostreptidae), with the description of three new species and a tentative phylogeny
Author
Mwabvu, Tarombera
Author
Hamer, Michelle L.
Author
Slotow, Robert H.
text
Zootaxa
2007
1452
1
23
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.176282
fe89bad2-db11-4058-a77b-59dbc6714d89
1175-5326
176282
Brevitibius polyptychus
(
Kraus, 1958
)
comb. n.
Fig. 9
Bicoxidens
?
polyptychus
Kraus, 1958
Bicoxidens polyptychus
:
Krabbe, 1982
;
Mwabvu, 2000
Type
material (examined):
Holotype
:
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
: 1 ɗ, Parc Natinal. de L’Upemba, Katanga Province [
8º30'S
,
26º20'E
],
2.iv.1948
, G.F. de Witte (HT018.229);
Paratype
: 3 ɗ, Parc National. de L’Upemba, Katanga Province [
8º30'S
,
26º20'E
],
2.iv.1948
, G.F. de Witte (018.130)
Diagnosis
: Apical telocoxite with a long diagonal lateral process and a short median process (
Figs. 9
a, 9b). Post knee telopodite with torsion and a femoral spine (
Fig. 9
c).
Description:
Size
: Body length
155–168 mm
; minimum and maximum body width
8–10 mm
and
10–12 mm
; antenna length
8–10 mm
.
Number of body rings
: 70–72.
Colour
: Body, legs and antennae brown.
Collum
: With anterior lobe, with 7–9 complete folds (
Fig. 9
e).
Pre-femoral process of 1st pair of male legs
: Bean-shaped (
Fig. 9
d).
Sigilla
on body ring
: One row.
Gonopod
:
8–9 mm
long. Orally, apical telocoxite with a long diagonal lateral and a short median process (
Fig. 9
a). Aborally, lateral leaf without lobes or processes. Paracoxite arrow-head shaped (
Fig. 9
a); sternite reduced. Telopodite with femoral torsion and a black femoral spine distal to it (
Fig. 9
c).
Distribution: Katanga Province,
Democratic Republic of Congo
Remarks: Unlike
Bicoxidens
species, this species is large-bodied, the anal valve has one furrow on each side and the collum has an anterior lobe with seven folds. The telopodite is not L-shaped but has torsion; the paracoxite is arrowhead-shaped (not rounded as in
Bicoxidens
species).
It appears to be closely related to central African species most of which were previously assigned to
Spirostreptus
in
Krabbe (1982)
. A revision of these taxa needs to be undertaken in order to clarify the position of
polyptychus
in
Spirostreptida
.
However, we have tentatively assigned it to
Brevitibius
Attems, 1950
, based on the form of the telopodite. The femoral process is distal to the knee after which there is an abrupt narrowing and twisting of the telopodite around the femoral region, this is consistent with
Brevitibius
.