Revision of the Southeast Asian millipede genus Orthomorpha Bollman, 1893, with the proposal of a new genus (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Paradoxosomatidae)
Author
Likhitrakarn, Natdanai
Author
Golovatch, Sergei I.
Author
Panha, Somsak
text
ZooKeys
2011
131
1
161
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.131.1921
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.131.1921
1313-2970-131-1
Orthomorpha beaumontii (Le Guillou, 1841)
Figs 13
Polydesmus Beaumontii
Le Guillou 1841
: 279 (D).
Polydesmus Beaumontii
-
Gervais 1847
: 101 (D).
Polydesmus (Parademus) Beaumontii
-
De Saussure 1859
: 326 (D); Humbert &
De Saussure 1860
: 670 (D).
Orthomorpha beaumonti
-
Bollman 1893
: 196 (M, R).
Orthomorpha hydrobiologica spinala
Attems 1932
: 39 (D), syn. n.
Orthomorpha spinala
-
Jeekel 1968
: 45 (M);
Hoffman 1973
: 362 (M);
1977
: 700 (M);
Golovatch 1998
: 42 (D).
Orthomorpha beaumontii
-
Jeekel 1963
: 269 (D);
1968
: 45 (M);
Golovatch 1997b
: 79 (D);
1998
: 42 (D).
Prionopeltis
sp. (
Beaumontii
) (sic!) -
Attems 1898
: 357 (D, R) [Non],
Prionopeltis Beaumontii
Attems (sic!) -
Attems 1914
: 207 (M) [nec],
Pratinus beaumontii
(Att.) -
Attems 1937
: 122 (M) [nec].
Material examined.
Syntypes of
Orthomorpha hydrobiologica spinala
: 4 ♂, 1 ♀ (
NHMW-
3510), Indonesia, "Karimon Djawa Inseln" (= Pulau Karimunjawa Island, north of Java), V.1926, leg. Dammerman; 1 ♀ of
Orthomorpha hydrobiologica spinala
(
NHMW-
8001), Indonesia, Java, Tjibodas, no date, leg. W. S. S. van Benthem-Jutting, det. C. Attems.
Redescription.
Length 33-38 mm (♂), 36-38 mm (♀), width of midbody pro- and metazona 2.7-2.8 and 4.0-4.2 mm (♂), 3.1-3.3 and 4.3-4.4 mm (♀), respe
ctively
. Coloration of alcohol material upon long-term preservation rather uniformly brown with contrasting pale yellowish paraterga, venter and legs light yellow-brown (Fig. 2).
Head usual, clypeolabral region sparsely setose, surface of vertex smooth; epicranial suture distinct. Antennae moderately long (Fig. 2A & B), reaching behind midway of body segment 3 (♂) or beyond segment 2 (♀). Head in width <collum <segments 3 and 4 <segment 2 <segments 5-16(17), gently and gradually tapering thereafter. Collum with three transverse rows of setae, 4+4 anterior, 2+2 intermediate, and 3+3
posterior
setae; caudal corner of paraterga dentiform, pointed, directed caually (Fig. 2A, B & J). Tegument smooth and shining, prozona very finely shagreened, metaterga slightly rugulose; surface below paraterga smooth. Postcollum metaterga with two transverse rows of setae, these being always abraded and traceable as insertion points: 2+2 in anterior (pre-sulcus) row, 3+3 in posterior (postsulcus) one. Axial line barely visible both on pro- and metazona. Paraterga very strongly developed (Fig. 2A-G, J-L), especially so in ♂, subhorizontal, always lying below dorsum, thin in lateral view, like blunt blades, a little thicker only on pore-bearing segments, always clearly projecting well behind tergal margin. Calluses delimited both dorsally and ventrally, only on segment 2 without ventral sulcus, thin, especially so on poreless segments. Paraterga 2 broad, anterior edge rounded, lateral edge with two small, but evident incisions in anterior 1/3; posterior edge evidently concave (Fig. 2A & J). Paraterga 3 and 4 subequal,
like
subsequent paraterga, anterior edge slightly rounded, bordered and fused to callus, lateral edge with a small incision in anterior third. Paraterga 15-19 with tip of caudal corner evidently curved mesad. Ozopores evident, lateral, lying in an ovoid groove at about 1/3 of metazonital length. Transverse sulcus present on metaterga 5-18, shallow, not reaching bases of paraterga, finely beaded at bottom (Fig. 2A, C, F, J-L). Stricture between pro- and metazona narrow, shallow, beaded at bottom down to base of paraterga (Fig. 2D & E). Pleurosternal carinae complete crests only on segment 2 or segments 2 and 3, with a small, sharp, caudal tooth on segments 3-7(8) (♂) or 4-6 (♀), thereafter with a very small caudal denticle until segment 15 (♂, ♀). Epiproct (Fig. 2E-G & L) conical, flattened dorsoventrally, apical papillae well-developed, acute and directed ventrad; tip subtruncate; pre-apical papillae small, but visible. Hypoproct (Fig. 2G) subtriangular, setiferous knobs at caudal edge well-separated.
Sterna sparsely setose, without modifications, but with a pair of small, rounded, completely separated, setose cones between ♂ coxae 4 (Fig. 2H & I). No conspicuous ridge in front of gonopod aperture. Legs long and slender, slightly incrassate in ♂, midbody ones ca 1.2-1.3 (♂) or 0.8-0.9 times (♀) as long as body height, prefemora without modifications, tarsal brushes present until legs of segment 9.
Gonopods (Fig. 3) simple. Coxa long and slender, with several setae distodorsally. Prefemoral (= densely setose) portion more than 3 times shorter than femorite (measured until beginning of solenomere, including
"postfemoral"
part lying beyond lateral sulcus). Femorite slender, slightly curved and not enlarged distad,
"postfemoral"
part demarcated by an oblique lateral sulcus; tip of solenophore evidently trifid, middle denticle much smaller than both a terminal tooth and a subterminal lobule; solenomere about as long as solenophore, flagelliform.
Figure 1.
Orthomorpha beaumontii
(Le Guillou, 1841), ♀ holotype. A, B segments 2-5, dorsal and lateral views, respectively C, D segments 10 and 11, dorsal and lateral views, respectively E segments 16-20, dorsal view F posterior part of body, ventral view (after
Jeekel 1963
).
Figure 2.
Orthomorpha beaumontii
(Le Guillou, 1841), ♂ (
A-I
) and ♀ (
J-L
) syntypes of
Orthomorpha hydrobiologica spinala
Attems, 1932. A, B, J anterior part of body, dorsal, lateral and dorsal views, respectively C, D, K segments 10 and 11, dorsal, lateral and dorsal views, respectively
E-G
, L posterior part of body, lateral, dorsal, ventral and dorsal views, respectively H, I sternal cones between coxae 4, subcaudal and sublateral views, respectively.
Figure 3.
Orthomorpha beaumontii
(Le Guillou, 1841), ♂ syntype of
Orthomorpha hydrobiologica spinala
Attems, 1932. A,B right gonopod, lateral and mesal views, respectively.
Remarks.
A complete historical review of the typification of
Orthomorpha
has long been provided by
Jeekel (1963)
. Despite some confusion,
Orthomorpha
was properly typified by
Pocock (1909)
, with
Orthomorpha beaumontii
(Le Guillou, 1841) serving as the type-species.
Originally described as a subspecies of
Orthomorpha hydrobiologica
(see
Attems 1932
), not as a variety as mistakenly quoted by
Jeekel (1968)
, spinala has since been treated as a full species (
Jeekel 1968
). The above samples, especially the only available ♀ syntype, agree in almost every detail with the very accurate redescription of the
Orthomorpha beaumontii
holotype provided by
Jeekel (1963)
, making a restudy of the holotype superfluous. The few differences, such as size (4.4 vs 5.0 mm), coloration (brown vs blackish), the shape of the caudal tooth on pleurosternal carinae (sharp teeth vs triangular lappets), the presence of an anterolateral denticle on paraterga (very small vs virtually missing) etc., are deemed too minor, rather reflecting individual or population-level variation, to consider
Orthomorpha spinala
as being distinct from
Orthomorpha beaumontii
at the species level. Hence the new synonymy advanced. In addition, the type series of
Orthomorpha spinala
derives from an islet lying nearly halfway between Java and the beaumontii type locality, Borneo.
Jeekel (1963)
, when trying to find the closest match among the known
Orthomorpha
species to the holotype of
Orthomorpha beaumontii
, emphasized its especially strong similarities to
Orthomorpha weberi
. Slight differences were only noted in the shape of the paraterga. It
was
this that allowed Jeekel to unequivocally conserve the concept of
Orthomorpha
. Zoogeographically, the strong morphological similarities between
Orthomorpha beaumontii
and
Orthomorpha weberi
make sense, because the latter species is endemic to Java, Indonesia.
With the above synonymization, the nomenclature of
Orthomorpha
becomes stabilized, confirming this
genus'
present scope. The identity of its type-species,
Orthomorpha beaumontii
, has been refined, based on male characters as well.
Bollman (1893)
, when proposing
Orthomorpha
as a replacement name for the preoccupied
Paradesmus
De Saussure, 1859, synonymized
Orthomorpha beaumontii
with
Orthomorpha spectabilis
(Karsch, 1881), the latter species from Java. Apparently because he provided no evidence whatsoever to substantiate his synonymization, it has since been neglected, spectabilis still remaining a dubious name (e.g.
Attems 1937
;
Jeekel 1968
).
(
Attems (1898
,
1914
,
1937
) referred to beaumontii a sample from Java, Indonesia which he had received from the Berlin Museum, thus providing a second record of this species. However, because the gonopod tip of that sample shows a remarkably small subterminal lappet, while the paraterga and pleurosternal carinae slightly differ in shape from those of beaumontii, there can be no doubt of
Attems'
misidentification. Hence our references to it as such in the catalogue section above.
Species with only a single terminal lobule on the gonopod tip