The arachnid order Schizomida in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest: a new species of Rowlandius and new records of Stenochrus portoricensis (Schizomida: Hubbardiidae)
Author
Santos, Adalberto J.
Author
Dias, Sidclay C.
Author
Brescovit, Antonio D.
Author
Santos, Pollyanna P.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1850
53
60
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.183403
f0d742e4-fc4f-4e26-b905-f44aaabdc9a4
1175-5326
183403
Rowlandius linsduarteae
sp. nov.
Figures 1–6
,
9
Rowlandius
new species
.
Santos & Pinto-da-Rocha 2008
: fig. 15.
FIGURES 1–6.
Rowlandius linsduarteae
sp. nov.
1, male flagellum (holotype), dorsal view; 2, ditto, ventral view; 3, ditto, lateral view; 4, male pedipalp, retrolateral view; 5, female chelicerae (paratype, IBSP 004), retrolateral view (setae from basal segment omitted); 6, female internal genitalia (paratype, IBSP 004), dorsal view. GT, guard tooth; LL, lateral lobes of spermathecae; ML, median lobes of spermathecae; SE, serrula. Scale bars: 1–3, 6, 0.1 mm; 4, 0.2 mm; 5, 0.05 mm.
Type
material.
Holotype
male from Área de Proteção Permanente
Mata
do Buraquinho (
07°06'S
34°52'W
), João Pessoa, state of Paraíba,
Brazil
,
14–22.X.2003
, S.C. Dias coll., deposited in
IBSP
0 0 2.
Paratypes
, two females from the same locality and date, deposited in
IBSP
0 0 3 and
IBSP
0 0 4.
Etymology
. The specific name honours the arachnologist Paula Frassinete Lins Duarte in recognition of her dedication to environmental conservation in northeastern
Brazil
, including her contribution to the establishment of the
Mata
do Buraquinho as a Forest Reserve.
Diagnosis
. The male of
Rowlandius linsduarteae
can be distinguished from all other species of the genus by the combination of a pedipalp not elongated, without a ventral projection on trochanter (
Fig. 4
); the dorsoposterior process of opisthosomal segment XII small and subtriangular and the flagellum subquadrate, with dorsal projections located at the middle (
Fig. 1
) and with one ventral terminal spine (
Figs. 2–3
). Females resemble
R. sul
Cokendolpher & Reddell, 2000
by the presence of stalked lateral lobes and conical median lobes of spermathecae (
Cokendolpher & Reddell 2000: fig. 6
). They can be differentiated by the absence of porous sculpturing on the spermathecal lobes and the irregular shape and convoluted inner space of terminal bulbs of lateral lobes in
R. linsduarteae
(
Fig. 6
).
Description
. Male (
holotype
). Anterior half of propeltidium, chelicerae, pedipalpi and leg I red brown. Rest of prosoma and remaining legs greenish brown. Venter of prosoma yellow. Opisthosoma dark brown, including flagellum. Propeltidium long, with two setae on anterior process and a median and a posterior pair of setae. Eye spot inconspicuous, elongate. Metapeltidium divided by a thin line. Anterior sternum with 12 setae. Opisthosomal tergites I–IX with a dorsal pair of setae each. Tergites X–XI narrow, with a lateral pair of setae. Tergite XII with a dorsal and two lateral pairs of setae. Segments XI-XII telescoped. Posterodorsal apophysis wide, subtriangular. Flagellum deeply excavated between dorsal projections, slightly elevated anteriorly (
Fig. 3
). Cheliceral basal segment with apical margin covered by long, white setae and with a serrated projection with one large apical tooth, a basal smaller one and several denticles in between. Distal segment straight and gently curved apically, with well developed serrula and guard tooth. Pedipalpal trochanter rounded, not projected anteriorly (
Fig. 4
). Leg tarsal segments proportion 2:1:2. Femur IV robust, anterior margin produced dorsally, approximately two times longer than high. Pedipalp measurements: trochanter 0.25/ femur 0.4/ patella 0.45/ tibia 0.35/ telotarsus 0.2/ total 1.65. Leg measurements: I trochanter 0.25/ femur 0.75/ patella 1.0/ tibia 0.7/ basitarsus 0.2/ telotarsus 0.4/ total 3.3; II 0.15/ 0.55/ 0.3/ 0.35/ 0.3/ 0.3/ 1.95; III 0.15/ 0.5/ 0.15/ 0.2/ 0.25/ 0.3/ 1.25; IV 0.2/0.8/ 0.4/ 0.55/ 0.5/ 0.35/ 2.8. Total length 2.9. Propeltidium 0.95 long, 0.45 wide. Prosoma 1.25 long. Opisthosoma 1.65 long (flagellum excluded).
Female (
paratype
IBSP 003). Color, shape, chelicerae (
Fig. 5
) and spination as in male. Pedipalp not sexually dimorphic. Pedipalp measurements: trochanter 0.3/ femur 0.3/ patella 0.4/ tibia 0.35/ telotarsus 0.2/ total 1.55. Leg measurements: I trochanter 0.25/ femur 0.8/ patella 0.95/ tibia 0.6/ basitarsus 0.2/ telotarsus 0.35/ total 3.15; II 0.15/ 0.5/ 0.35/ 0.4/ 0.35/ 0.3/ 2.05; III 0.15/ 0.55/ 0.25/ 0.25/ 0.3/ 0.3/ 1.8; IV 0.25/ 0.8/ 0.35/ 0.5/ 0.4/ 0.3/ 2.6. Total length 3.35. Propeltidium 0.95 long, 0.5 wide. Prosoma 1.4 long. Opisthosoma 1.95 long (flagellum excluded). Flagellum with four segments. Internal genitalia without gonopod. Median lobes of spermathecae small and membranous. Lateral lobes with a long, curved stalk (
Fig. 6
).
Distribution
. Known only from
type
locality (
Fig. 9
).
Natural history
. All the specimens examined were collected with pitfall traps in a secondary forest with dense undergrowth foliage.
Remarks
. The genus
Rowlandius
Reddell & Cokendolpher, 2005
currently includes 50 species (
Harvey 2008
), almost all of them restricted to the West Indies, mainly
Cuba
and Hispaniola (
Reddell & Cokendolpher 1995
,
Harvey 2003
,
Armas 2004
). The only species previously known from South
America
is
R. sul
, described based on a female from eastern Brazilian Amazonia (
Cokendolpher & Reddell 2000, see
Fig. 9
). This species is possibly closely related to
R. linsduarteae
, judging by the structure of the female genitalia. Both species share the absence of a gonopod, the lateral lobes of spermathecae with long and curved stalks and the median lobes small and conical. Compared to other species of the genus and of other genera of
Hubbardiidae
(
Rowland & Reddell 1978
,
1979
,
1981
,
Reddell & Cokendolpher 1995
,
Armas 2004
), these characters are apparently derived and thus are potentially synapomorphic for
R. linsduarteae
and
R. sul
.
The biota of the northern portions of the Atlantic Forest is markedly different from the southern areas (
Silva et al. 2004
,
Santos et al. 2007
) and has been considered as closer to the Amazonian biota, from which it was separated by semi-arid and savanna-like vegetation biomes (
Hueck 1972, see
Fig. 9
). Using a Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity,
Santos et al. (2007)
indicate that the arboreal flora of forest enclaves of the northeastern
Brazil
is closely related to the Amazonian forest sites. These results suggest an ancestral northern connection between the two large Brazilian forest areas, followed by vicariance promoted by isolation by xeric vegetation. There are no similar studies for the fauna of northeastern Atlantic Forest, which have not been included in biogeographic analysis of South American lowland forests (e.g.
Ron 2000
, Pinto-da-Rocha
et al.
2005). However, a phylogeographic analysis of didelphid marsupials also supports an ancestral connection between eastern Amazon and the northeastern Brazilian Atlantic Forest (
Patton & Costa 2003
). Additional evidence comes from a recent revision of the Neotropical harvestmen family
Stygnidae
, in which
Protimesius evelinae
(H. Soares & B. Soares, 1978)
is reported from Amazonian forest areas in the states of Pará and Maranhão and in an Atlantic Forest locality in the northeastern state of Paraíba (Pinto-da-Rocha 1997). This hypothesis is reinforced by the current study, although the evidence from the schizomid is based on the premise that
R. linsduarteae
and
R. sul
are sister-groups (as argued above), which could be tested in the future with a cladistic analysis of the genus. This proposition will also depend on an improvement of the knowledge of the schizomid fauna of Atlantic Forest, since more undescribed species can still be found.
As mentioned above, a schizomid specimen has been previously reported from a northeastern Atlantic Forest locality (see “
Hubbardiidae
(?)” in
Fig. 9
). This specimen was collected with a pitfall trap in the Parque Estadual de Dois Irmãos, Recife, state of Pernambuco (
7o55’S
34o52’W
) and deposited in the Museu Nacional do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil
(
Peres
et al.
2006
). However, the specimen was severely damaged, preventing any further identification besides family-level (A. Giupponi, personal communication). This specimen could be a member of
R. linsduarteae
, considering the proximity between Recife and João Pessoa (
Fig. 9
) and the fact that both are part of the same center of endemism, composed of several forest enclaves in northeastern
Brazil
(
Tabarelli
et al.
2006
). New collections on Parque Estadual de Dois Irmãos will be necessary to clarify the identity of that schizomid specimen.