A contribution to the knowledge of the centipedes of Saint Barthélemy Island (French Antilles), with re-descriptions of Newportia heteropoda Chamberlin, 1918 and Cormocephalus impressus Porat, 1876 (Chilopoda: Scolopendromorpha)
Author
Schileyko, Аrkаdy А.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-06-20
4438
1
59
78
journal article
29853
10.11646/zootaxa.4438.1.2
b9e09984-ea64-4dcf-aa00-0a42ea8b6e90
1175-5326
1294191
541FF57C-B838-4F65-B246-AE7D84B9B938
Genus
Newportia
Gervais, 1847
Type-species.
Newportia longitarsis
(Newport, 1845)
(by monotypy).
Range.
Neotropics: from
Mexico
to
Paraguay
, including the Caribbean.
Remarks.
А pectinate pretarsus (or claw) of the second maxilla is one of the diagnostic synapomorphies of the family
Scolopocryptopidae
(
Edgecombe & Bonato 2011
); it has been described in detail based on SEM images by Koch
et al
(2010). Below I describe the morphological feature which may be studied using light microscopy only. This peculiarity concerns the clade that includes species of the subgenera
Newportia
s. str.
and
Tidops
Chamberlin, 1915
(in sense of Vahtera
et al
. 2013). In these species, the pretarsus of maxillae 2 consists of two welldistinguishable parts: a dark brown basal and a semi-transparent apical one (Fig. 2, fig. 25 in
Schileyko 2014
). The basal part is of the usual size differing strongly from the apical one which is much thinner and delicate; the ventral surface of the latter shows a transparent, but well-developed fringed comb (not recognisable in Fig. 2). Four studied specimens of
Newportia longitarsis virginensis
Lewis, 1989
have both these parts of equal length and the pretarsus proper is considerably longer than half of article 3 of maxillae 2 telopodite. In
N. ernsti
Pocock, 1891
(
No
7203, 7205), the apical, transparent part is much shorter—less than 1/3rd of pretarsus. А well-visible fringed comb on the ventral surface of the pretarsus is formed by a single row of transparent lamellae.
Tidops collaris
(
Kraepelin,1903
)
(
No
6656, 6658) demonstrates certain conditions very similar to
Newportia ernsti
(
No
7203, 7205) in that the apical, transparent part is well-developed, but very short compared to a chitinized basal part (
ca
20% general length of the pretarsus).
In the related subfamily
Scolopocryptopinae
, such a neat subdivision of the pretarsus of maxillae 2 is much less obvious. For example, in specimens of
Scolopocryptops melanostoma
Newport, 1845
from
Brazil
(
No
7173) and from West Papua (
No
7503), the pretarsus is not subdivided into two halves, but only its tip is thin and semi- transparent (see fig. 4 in
Schileyko & Stoev 2016
). In
Scolopendridae
, the pretarsus is enlarged and strongly chitinized throughout its length (see figs 14, 21, 34 in
Schileyko & Stoev 2016
). Based on SEM images,
Edgecombe & Koch (2008)
showed that the pretarsus of maxillae 2 is also unipartite in the family
Cryptopidae
; according to my observations it has
no
subdivision as described above. To summarize, this external peculiarity of maxillae 2 is characteristic of
Scolopocryptopidae
only, being much more strongly developed in Newportiinae as compared to
Scolopocryptopinae
.