Three new genera and eighteen new species of miniature polydesmid millipedes from the northwestern United States (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Polydesmidae)
Author
Shear, William A.
Professor Emeritus, Department of Biology, Hampden-Sydney College, Hampden-Sydney VA 23943; present address 1950 Price Drive, Farmville VA 23901.
Author
Marek, Paul E.
0000-0002-7048-2514
Associate Professor, Department of Entomology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24061. pmarek @ vt. edu; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 7048 - 2514
pmarek@vt.edu
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-05-24
4975
1
81
126
journal article
6194
10.11646/zootaxa.4975.1.3
529d48db-4299-4e2d-9aaf-6c4178c08b18
1175-5326
4804909
DB7C9028-3EDF-454F-88D0-336624AD1DC4
Genus
Retrorsia
Shelley, 2003
Retrorsia
Shelley, 2003:3
.
Type
species,
Retrorsia leonardi
Shelley, 2003
.
Species included:
Retrorsia leonardi
Shelley, 2003
;
Retrorsia benedictae
Shelley, 2003
;
Retrorsia richarti
,
n. sp.
;
Retrorsia simplicissima
,
n. sp.
and
Retrorsia gracilis
,
n. sp
.
Diagnosis.
The diagnosis provided by
Shelley (2003)
is actually a description and does not compare
Retrorsia
to other polydesmid genera. However, he implied that the retrorse branch of the terminal zone of the gonopod distinguished
Retrorsia
species
from all others. This branch is very obvious in the two species he described, but less so in the three new species described below. Nevertheless it is present and serves as a diagnostic character.
Distribution.
Northwestern
Oregon
and western
Washington
, in or west of the Cascade Ranges.
Notes.
Retrorsia
species
made up the first component of the diverse minute polydesmid fauna of the Pacific Northwest to be recently described. The general appearance of the two previously described species is typical of the tiny polydesmids, with large, setose heads, relatively small collums with scattered setae, and metazonites with toothed margins and with rows of setae on prominent sockets. Alveolate cuticle is confined to the head, epiproct and sometimes the anterior margin of the collum. The epiproct is short and not swollen. The gonopods are somewhat variable from species to species; the two described by
Shelley (2003)
,
R. leonardi
and
R. benedictae
,
have a prominent subterminal branch in the terminal zone, the lateral one of which Shelley termed the endomerite and the mesal one the tibiotarsus. In the terminology used here, the gonopod consists of a simple acropodite (
ac,
Fig 27
) bearing the pulvillus, and a terminal zone with two processes, one of which recurves anteriorly (
rp,
Fig. 28
) and is the source of the generic name. A further uniting character is a rounded notch just distal to the pulvillus, although this is not obvious in
R. leonardi
,
the
type
species of the genus. Shelley’s illustrations of the gonopods show the course of the seminal canal as lacking a loop and a seminal vesicle. Close examination reveals that a loop is indeed lacking, but that the seminal canal at the very least expands just before the pore (
Figs 121, 122
), so it can be argued that a vesicle is indeed present and perhaps has been reduced, or is in the process of developing. The three new species described below have simpler gonopods than the two described by
Shelley (2003)
and the retrorse process of the terminal zone is less distinct.
The detailed descriptions of the nonsexual characters of the two species named by
Shelley (2003)
can serve as well for the three additional species described here. The anterior setal row on the collum consists of 16–20 setae, varying according to species. The anterior metazonites have four rows of 14–18 setae set on stout, discrete tubercles; the number of rows increases to five midbody and may or may not decrease again to four at the posterior end.
Shelley (2003)
did not mention
Utadesmus
as possibly related to
Retrorsia
,
but there are similarities in the gonopods, especially in the division of the terminal zone into two processes.