The centipede fauna (Chilopoda) of the island of Cyprus, with one new lithobiomorph species
Author
Simaiakis, Stylianos Michail
Author
Zapparoli, Marzio
Author
Minelli, Alessandro
Author
Bonato, Lucio
text
Zootaxa
2013
3647
2
279
306
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3647.2.3
af04e66e-ba7a-4693-a29d-e22d476e9897
1175-5326
220527
261ED5D1-C200-413D-B189-B4E0C41744DB
Eupolybothrus
Verhoeff, 1907
Eupolybothrus
(
Eupolybothrus
)
litoralis
(L. Koch, 1867)
Lithobius fasciatus
,
graecus
Verh.
var.
fasciatograecus
mihi: Verhoeff 1901: 437, 450 (synonymy).
Polybothrus
(
Eulithobius
)
fasciatus
(Newport, 1844)
:
Turk
1952: 657 (misidentification).
Material examined:
90 3, 74 ƤƤ, 29 unsexed,
111 larvae
.
Sites:
2, 4, 7, 16, 27, 30, 31, 32, 42, 43, 44, 50, 52, 53, 54, 55, 57, 58, 71, 73, 74 (published), 90, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 103, 104, 106, 107, 109, 110, 111, 113, 114, 115, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 130, 133 (published), 134, 135, 137, 139, 141, 142, 144, 146, 150, 152, 153, 155, 157, 158, 162, 172 (
Fig. 2
).
General distribution.
Europe:
Albania
,
Bosnia and Herzegovina
,
Bulgaria
,
Croatia
,
Greece
(mainland, Crete, Cyclades,
Dodecanese
),
Montenegro
,
Romania
(?),
Slovenia
; West Asia:
Cyprus
, Near and Middle East (
Turk
1952; Zapparoli 1991, 1995, 2002; Kos 1992; Negrea & Matic 1996; Stoev 1997; Simaiakis
et al
. 2005).
Chorotype.
East Mediterranean.
Habitats.
Under
Eucalyptus
, maquis and phryganic formations with
Sarcopoterium spinosum
,
Ceratonia
and
Pistacia
, mixed forests with
Pinus
,
Quercus
and
Acer
, mixed
Pinus
forest, near ponds with
Eucalyptus
and
Acacia
, ravines with
Platanus
,
Juniperus
and
Pinus
, open fields with
Ceratonia
.
Altitudinal range:
5–1640 m
.
Remarks.
The records from
Cyprus
published under
Lithobius fasciatus graecus
var.
fasciatograecus
, by Verhoeff (1901) or under
Polybothrus
(
Eulithobius
)
fasciatus
by
Turk
(1952) are referred to this species according to Eason (1970, 1983) and Stoev
et al.
(2010). The generic reference to a "large"
Lithobius
from the top of Mountain Troodos and common in the island given by Sinclair (1895: 32, 33) may be assigned to this species. The subgeneric assignment follows Jeekel (1967), but see Stoev
et al
. (2010).
Eason (1970) suggested that two subspecies can be recognized in
E. litoralis
,
E. l.
litoralis
, confined to the Middle East,
Anatolia
and the Aegean Archipelago, without coxolateral spines (VaC) on the legs, and
E. l. graecus
, the Greek mainland, with one or two VaC at least on each of the 15th legs. In a later paper, Eason (1983) noticed the instability of this character in specimens both from north Eagean (Lemnos Is.) and mainland
Greece
(Thessalia), and rejected his previous idea suggesting instead that
L. l. graecus
should be considered merely as a variant without subspecific status.
All the specimens from
Cyprus
examined by us have no VaC spines, confirming the most frequent arrangement of the ventral plectrotaxy of the coxa in the eastern part of the range of this species (e.g., Verhoeff 1901; Eason 1970). Molecular studies in progress will clarify previous taxonomic interpretations and cryptic diversity within
E. litoralis
. Preliminary results show that South Anatolian and Crete populations are well separated from the remainder of the species hitherto referred to as
E. litoralis
, with genetic distances similar to those found between distinct species in the genus and suggesting the existence of cryptic species (Stoev
et al
. 2010; Porco
et al
. 2011).