Fossil harvestmen (Arachnida, Opiliones) from Bitterfeld amber
Author
Dunlop, Jason
Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Author
Mitov, Plamen
University of Sofia, Sofia ,, Bulgaria
text
ZooKeys
2009
2009-07-29
16
347
375
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.16.224
2bb0a745-07bd-4df6-99e7-4d8a6b242aa5
1313–2970
576490
DB5973A9-8CF6-400B-87C4-7A4521BD3117
Mitostoma
gruberi
sp. n.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
F6F51FD0-9D10-4094-975F-3C202B48BDB9
Figs 3
,
9
Material
.
MfN
,
MB
.A. 1654. Bitterfeld amber. Probably from the site of the Goitsche Open Cast Mine near Bitterfeld,
Sachsen-Anhalt
,
Germany
; Palaeogene (Oligocene: Chattian).
Diagnosis
.
Fossil
Mitostoma
with a specific form of the apophysis on the first cheliceral segment and specific form of the palpal tarsal segment.
Etymology
.
In honour of Dr Jürgen Gruber (
Vienna
) in recognition of his extensive studies on harvestmen, and nemastomatids in particular.
Description
.
MB.A. 1654 comprises a well-preserved body and pedipalps in lateral view, with a number of slightly disarticulated leg femora. Body length,
1.5 mm
. Ocular tubercle distinct, eye diameter
0.20 mm
. Opisthosoma with hints of segmentation and slight tuberculation on the dorsal surface towards the posterior half of the body. Chelicerae largely obscured, but dorsal part of first segment appears inflated forming an apophysis whose form is close to that of the Italian endemic
Mitostoma orobicum
(
Caporiacco, 1949
)
(see
Tedeschi and Sciaky 1997
: fig. 11). Pedipalps long and slender, article lengths in mm: trochanter, 0.27; femur, 1.42; patella, 1.63; tibia, 0.80; tarsus, 0.48. Tarsus slightly swollen at its distal end. Pedipalps setose, many palpal setae, particularly towards the distal end, with rounded tips (i.e. clavate setae). Trochanters of legs oval, femora long and slender, but more distal parts of the legs equivocal. Femora with scattering of short, thorn-like spines and one femur (femur 4?) with at least three short pseudoannulations, beginning about
0.8 mm
along its length.
Remarks
.
This fossil can be assigned to
Mitostoma
, as opposed to
Nemastoma
C. L. Koch, 1836
, on the basis of the proportions of the pedipalp articles, while the cheliceral apophysis indicates a male specimen. Whether it is juvenile or adult is less clear, but strong parallels can be drawn with the widespread European species
M. chrysomelas
(
Hermann, 1804
)
if the fossil is juvenile, or with the Sardinian troglobitic endemic
M. patrizii
Roewer, 1953
if adult (cf.
Fig. 5
). Juveniles of the former and adults of the latter have small tubercles on the scutum – see especially
Roewer (1953
: fig. 1) and
Tedeschi and Sciaky (1997
: fig. 1) for
M. patrizii
– although the scutum of the fossil specimen is better developed than in comparable juveniles of
M. chrysomelas
(cf.
Fig. 4
).
Note that an existing fossil from Baltic amber has already been assigned to
Mitostoma
–
M. denticulatum
(
Koch & Berendt, 1854
)
– transferred here from
Nemastoma
by
Staręga (1976a)
; an interpretation followed by
Dunlop (2006)
. On reflection, this assignment to
Mitostoma
may be incorrect and the situation is not helped by the dorsal surface of the
holotype
being partially broken and the apparent loss of the type material of its putative junior synonym
N. succineum
Roewer, 1939
. In our revised opinion, the legs of
M. denticulatum
express lengths more consistent with modern
Carinostoma
Kratochvíl, 1958
or
Mediostoma
Kratochvíl, 1958
species. These (and other) nemastomatid genera with comparable dorsal ornament may be closer to the Baltic amber fossils. The status of
M. denticulatum
will be reassessed in a future study of Baltic amber harvestmen. Thus for the reasons outlined above we are confident that our new Bitterfeld species can be assigned to
Mitostoma
and is probably not conspecific with Koch and Berendt’s Baltic amber taxon.