An annotated checklist of the South African Acanthodrilidae (Oligochaeta: Acanthodrilidae: Acanthodrilinae, Benhamiinae)
Author
Plisko, Jadwiga Danuta
text
Zootaxa
2012
3458
4
58
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.282224
3c9db890-c1df-4340-8be1-8e5cd631aeed
1175-5326
282224
Chilota knysnanus
Michaelsen,
1913
—species dubia
Chilota knysnanus
Michaelsen,
1913
a
:
528
.
Chilota knysnanus
:
Michaelsen
1913
b
:
58
;
Reynolds & Cook
1976
:
114
.
Chilota sclateri
(
Beddard,
1897
:
342
)
[for the specimen redescribed as
Chilota knysnanus
]:
Michaelsen,
1913
a
:
528
. ??
Acanthodrilus sclateri
Beddard,
1897
:
342
[
partim
]:
Michaelsen
1913
a
:
528
. ??
Chilota sclateri
:
Michaelsen
1900
:
148
.
Acanthodrilus sclateri:
Reynolds & Cook
1976
:
169
.
Parachilota knysnanus
Michaelsen,
1913
:
Pickford
1937
:
258
.
Parachilota knysnanus
:
Pickford
1937
:
258
;
Reynolds & Cook
1976
:
114
.
Type
locality.
RSA
, WC: Knysna Forest.
Remarks
. In sample ‘
Type
355
SAMC’ there are fragments of a specimen from ‘
ex typis
A. sclateri
sp. inquir
.’ (
Pickford
1937
:
259
).
BMNH
1938.7
.
1.1009
contains fragments of Michaelsen’s material enriched by pieces from the specimen collected by Pickford (according to two labels inserted in the jar and notes drawn on the jar).
Pickford (
1937
:
259
)
examined fragments of
Chilota knysnanus
Michaelsen,
1913
(into which fragments of
Acanthodrilus sclateri
type
specimen had been included by Michaelsen) together with a semi-mature specimen collected by herself in the vicinity of the
type
locality of
Ch
. knysnanus
, and she re-assigned the studied material as
Parachilota knysnanus
Michaelsen,
1913
. Pickford described species characters observed on the semi-mature specimen collected by her in the vicinity of
knysnanus
type
locality. Considering that the characters described by
Pickford (
1937
:
259–262
; dimensions, shape of spermatheca and its diverticulum, penial setae ornamentation)
were taken from the new specimen or from fragments of the original and mixed material, the taxonomic status of
knysnanus
remains uncertain. Re-examination (possibly by other than conventional methods) of all existing
type
material, and examination, if possible, of some new material collected at the
type
locality, would be necessary to revalidate the species.