A new strikingly coloured species of Siphonocryptus, sixth of its order (Diplopoda: Siphonocryptida)
Author
Enghoff, Henrik
text
Zootaxa
2010
2681
66
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.276480
60f6ab87-fde7-469e-bba9-5d5373aecbe0
1175-5326
276480
Siphonocryptus zigzag
,
new species
(
Figs. 1
,
3
)
Material studied.
Holotype
female,
MALAYSIA
, PAHANG,
Cameron
Highlands,”ORANGE
ASLI
vill.” env. Gunung Perdah [Mt.], 4°
29.2N
, 101°
22.1E
,
1575 m
, sifting leaf litter in shallow ravine,
2–14.v.2009
, Petr Baňař leg. (Natural History Museum of
Denmark
, Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen,
ZMUC
00101324).
Diagnosis.
A species of
Siphonocryptus
with a dorsal colour pattern including two triangular lateral areas each covering 7 pleurotergites.
Description.
Female
holotype
with 32 pleurotergites, body length
4.3 mm
, max. width
2.6 mm
. Dorsal colour pattern distinctive: ground colour pale yellowish, almost transparent along margins of body. Tergites 2–4 entirely dark brown. A mid-dorsal longitudinal band, running uninterrupted from tergite 5 to penultuimate tergum (both included) and covering ca. 1/6 of the body width, also dark brown. Lateral parts of tergites 14–31 medium brown. On most of these tergites the darkened areas extend to ca. halfway between lateral margin and middle of tergites, leaving a pale band ca. as broad as mid-dorsal dark band. On tergites 19–20, and again on tergites 26–27, however, the darkened areas become gradually narrower, resulting in a distinct-zig-zag boundary between dark and light (
Fig. 1
). On tergites 28–31, the darkened lateral areas extend almost to the median dark brown band, leaving only a narrow light parasagittal stripe. The last, large tergite 32 has narrow darkened lateral margins but is otherwise pale.
In all other respects similar to the other species in the genus.
Notes.
Siphoncryptus
zigzag
differs from its two known congeners by its remarkable colour pattern. For comparison, the colour pattern of
S. compactus
is illustrated in
Fig. 2
. The colour pattern of
S. zigzag
will be further discussed in a forthcoming paper on comparable colour patterns in millipedes (Enghoff in prep.). In
Fig. 3
, the pleurotergite numbers and maximal body diameter of known specimens of
Siphonocryptus
are shown, based on the new species and data from
Enghoff & Golovatch (1995)
. Although the number of specimens is small, it looks as if
S. zigzag
is more similar to
S. latior
in body shape (very broad) than to
S. compactus
. The two former species have both been found in peninsular
Malaysia
, their
type
(and only known) localities lying ca.
125 km
apart.