Disparrhopalites naasaveqw n. sp. from caves at Wupatki National Monument, Arizona, synonymy of Dietersminthurus Palacios-Vargas, Cuéllar & Vázquez, 1998 with Disparrhopalites Stach, 1956 and composition of Songhaicinae (Collembola: Sminthuridae)
Author
Wynne, J. Judson
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-11-11
4319
1
77
90
journal article
32138
10.11646/zootaxa.4319.1.4
01ae3f18-f954-4779-9a38-9c46b46c1bcc
1175-5326
888621
71D6F6A1-1Bc0-44Dc-9Dd9-713A9889Decf
Disparrhopalites
Stach, 1956
Disparrhopalites
Stach, 1956
:63
.
Dietersminthurus
Palacios-Vargas, Cuéllar & Vázquez, 1998
:13,
new synonym
.
Type species:
Disparrhopalites patrizii
(
Cassagnau & Delamare Deboutteville, 1953
)
Other
species:
D. enkerlinius
(
Palacios-Vargas, Cuellar & Vazquez, 1998
)
n. comb.
D. naasaveqw
n. sp.
D. tergestinus
Fanciulli, Colla & Dallai, 2005
Pararrhopalites
patrizii
Cassagnau & Delamare Deboutteville, 1953
was transferred to the new genus
Disparrhopalites
by
Stach (1956)
. This widespread European species (
Dallai 1971
,
Fanciulli
et al.
2005
) has been collected and studied thoroughly since then (
Christian 1998
;
Dallai 1970
,
1971
;
Delamare Deboutteville & Bassot 1957
;
Fanciulli et al. 2005
;
Gama 1988
,
2005
;
Marx & Weber 2013
,
2015
). However,
Disparrhopalites
was not compared to more recently described but clearly similar genera (
Dietersminthurus,
Gisinurus, Songhaica
,
Soqotrasminthurus
,
Varelasminthurus
, see Tables 1 & 2 for authorities and dates), perhaps because the two known
Disparrhopalites
spp. lack a prominent cavity-like formation on the unguis. The
type
species,
D. patrizii
, possibly a weak troglophile, has a shallow linear cavity while the highly modified troglobiont
D. tergestinus
apparently lacks the cavity completely.
Disparrhopalites naasaveqw
n. sp.
, a presumed obligate troglophile, is very similar to
D. patrizii
but has a distinct ungual cavity. The ungual cavity may be a synapomorphy for this small clade of species that secondarily disappears with increasing troglomorphy. This scenario could account for the reduction of the cavity in
D. patrizii
and its complete loss in
D. tergestinus
, as well as its retention in
D. enkerlinius
and
D. naasaveqw
n. sp.
The monospecific genus
Dietersminthurus
was differentiated from similar genera by the presence of 5+5 eyes and eight setae on the anterior face of the dens (
Palacios-Vargas
et al.
1998
). The reduction in eye number is recognised in a few other sminthurid genera, and the number of dental setae can be species-specific in several genera, e.g.,
Sminthurus
s. str.
Latreille, 1802 (see
Bretfeld 1999
) and
Sminthurinus
Börner, 1901
(
Christiansen & Bellinger 1998
). Ungual structure in
D. enkerlinius
appears to be identical to that of
D. patrizii
except that the ungual cavity is well-developed in
D. enkerlinius
and weakly developed in
D. patrizii
, and
D. enkerlinius
possesses eight anterior dental setae while
D. patrizii
has nine.
Disparrhopalites naasaveqw
n. sp.
bridges these species by having a
patrizii
-like unguis with a well-developed
enkerlinius
-like cavity and nine anterior dental setae as in other
Disparrhopalites
spp. Therefore,
Dietersminthurus
is considered a junior subjective synonym of
Disparrhopalites
, and its sole species
,
Dietersminthurus enkerlinius
, becomes
Disparrhopalites enkerlinius
(
Palacios-Vargas, Cuéllar & Vázquez, 1998
)
n. comb.
Varelasminthurus
was separated from similar genera by the absence of the posterior pretarsal seta (
Da Silva
et al.
2015
). The number of pretarsal setae of
Disparrhopalites naasaveqw
n. sp.
varies (1 or 2) from leg to leg, and therefore this character may not have significant validity at the generic level in
Songhaicinae
. However, the tunica of the single species,
V. potiguarus
Da Silva, Palacios-Vargas & Bellini, 2015
, is heavy and fused to an external crest-like, serrated pseudonychium (
Da Silva
et al.
2015
). Therefore, despite its similarities with
Disparrhopalites
spp. it is maintained here as a valid genus.