A revision of the taxonomy and distribution of Archispirostreptus Silvestri 1895 (Diplopoda, Spirostreptida, Spirostreptidae), and description of a new spirostreptid genus with three new species
Author
Mwabvu, Tarombera
Author
Hamer, Michelle
Author
Slotow, Rob
Author
Barraclough, David
text
Zootaxa
2010
2567
1
49
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.197288
256e66c3-8f88-4aa5-89a8-a29aab35101f
1175-5326
197288
Archispirostreptus gigas
(
Peters 1855
)
Fig. 5
Spirostreptus gigas
Peters 1855
, p. 536, figs 1–2.
Archispirostreptus gigas
:
Silvestri 1895
;
Schubart 1951
;
Hoffman 1965
;
Krabbe & Enghoff 1978
;
Krabbe 1982
;
Hamer 1998
,
1999
Graphidostreptus gigas
:
Attems 1914
;
Attems 1928
Further synonymy in
Krabbe (1982)
Type
material
(not examined):
MOZAMBIQUE
: 1 3, Tete.The location of the
type
material is unknown.
Additional material examined:
KENYA
: 1 3, 2 Ƥ, Tsavo, Taita Discovery Center [
03° 25' S
,
38° 46'E
],
6.xii.2000
, Van den Spiegel D. (
MRAC
20254); 1 3, 1 Ƥ, Ngaia Forest [
0° 24' N
,
38° 02'E
],
3.xii.2002
, Van den Spiegel D. (
MRAC
20764).
Diagnosis:
Lateral metaplical process short and broad with a short terminal spine; lateral metaplical process at acute angle with apical metaplical process; lateral and medial edges of apical metaplical process convex proximally; lateral metaplical process darker proximally than distally; apical metaplical process darker laterally and proximally than medially or distally (
Figs 5a, 5b
).
FIGURE 4a, b.
Archispirostreptus dodsoni
(BMNH 1897.11.10.87).
a,
oral view of gonopods;
b,
aboral view of gonopods.
FIGURE 4c.
Archispirostreptus dodsoni
(BMNH 1897.11.10.87).
c,
oral view of prefemoral lobe of first pair of male legs.
Description:
Size
: Body length
178–260 mm
; maximum body width
15–19 mm
.
Number of body rings
: 62–70.
Colour
: Black.
Collum
: Rounded without anterior lobe (
Fig. 5c
), with 2–3 complete striae and an incomplete stria.
Pre-femoral process of 1st pair of male legs
: Proximally wide with laterally deflected apical extension (
Fig. 5c
).
Gonopod
: (
Figs 5a, 5b
) Sternum broad, short and apically rounded; apex of sternum not reaching level of paracoxite apex; paracoxite rounded and fused tightly to metaplica.
Proximal proplica with raised lateral and medial edges; apically proplicae rounded, overlapping lateral metaplical process proximally and with an apical medial lobe.
Proximal medial edges of oral fold of metaplicae raised.
Proximal half of opposite telocoxites touching medially, further apart distal to lateral metaplical process (
Figs 5a, 5b
).
Lateral metaplical processes short and broad, crescent-shaped and tapering distally, and may have a small terminal spine. Lateral metaplical process at acute angle with apical metaplical process.
Lateral and medial edges of apical metaplical process convex proximally; apical metaplical process broad and opaque proximally.
Aborally, medial edge of metaplicae raised (
Fig. 5b
).
Apex of antetorsal process extends past paracoxite apex.
Distribution:
Known from
Mozambique
,
South Africa
,
Zanzibar
,
Somalia
,
Tanzania
(
Krabbe 1982
) and
Kenya
.
Remarks:
The opposite telocoxites of the gonopods in
A. gigas
are separated at the level of the lateral metaplical processes as in
A. phillipsii
,
A. lugubris
,
A. syriacus
,
A. tumuliporus
,
A. smithii
and
A. dodsoni
. The convex shapes of the lateral and medial edges of the apical metaplical process of the gonopod are unique to
A
.
gigas
.
FIGURE 5a, b.
Archispirostreptus gigas
(MRAC 20764).
a,
oral view of gonopods;
b,
aboral view of gonopods.
FIGURE 5c, d.
Archispirostreptus gigas
(MRAC 20764).
c,
oral view of prefemoral lobe of first pair of male legs;
d,
lateral view of collum.
Considering where
A. gigas
has been collected and the distance between the localities, the currently known distribution may be a collecting artifact. The known distribution suggests that it is more widespread along the east coast of Africa than further inland.
The
type
is missing from the ZMH collection where it was said to be housed (
Krabbe 1982
); this was confirmed by museum curators.