New species and distribution of the genera Lophoturus and Ancistroxenus (Myriapoda, Diplopoda, Penicillata) in the Caribbean and northern South America
Author
Duy-Jacquemin, Monique Nguyen
Laboratoire de Zoologie (Arthropodes), Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, 61 rue Buffon, F- 75231 Paris cedex 05 (France) monguyen @ mnhn. fr.
monguyen@mnhn.fr
text
Zoosystema
2002
24
2
451
470
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5393017
1638-9387
5393017
Macroxenodes
aff.
amazonicus
Ishii, Nguyen Duy-Jacquemin & Condé, 1999
(
Fig. 6
)
MATERIAL
EXAMINED. —
Tobago
.
Castara Bay, under bark of live tree,
9.
VII
.1999
, 1
10 p.
l. — Man of War Bay, North of Charlotteville, track to Pigeon Peak, under bark of live tree,
11.
VII
.1999
, M. Judson leg., 2 ind.
8 p.
l. (only one described), 1 ind.
6 p.
l.
DESCRIPTION
Stadium VI (female with 10 pairs of legs)
Measurements.
Body length (without caudal pencil)
1.85 mm
. Tarsus II length of 10
th
leg 95 µm.
Head.
Posterior tufts with anterior row of 12 and posterior row of eight trichomes. Surface of labrum covered with numerous, small, cuticular setae and two anterior rows of granules; anteromedian margin of labrum with 6 + 1 + 5lamellar fingers. Clypeo-labrum with 10 setae along posterior margin.
Each outer palpus of gnathochilarium with 15 sensilla basiconica pseudo-segmented at apex, each inner palpus with 22 sensilla.
Trunk.
Position of trichomes as in
M. amazonicus
, with maximum number of trichomes (73) on tergite IV; lateral protuberance of collum with four and five trichomes.
FIG. 7. — Distribution of the genera
Ancistroxenus
Schubart, 1947
and
Lophoturus
Brolemann, 1931 (Penicillata)
in Central America (except Mexico) and northern South America.
L. anisorhabdus
Condé & Terver 1964
, collected in Guatemala in a orchid clump from an unknown locality, is not shown on this map.
Stadium V (
one larva
with eight pairs of legs)
Measurements.
Body length (without caudal pencil)
1.40 mm
. Tarsus II length of 8
th
leg 85 µm.
Head.
Posterior tufts with anterior row of 10 and posterior row of seven and eight trichomes. Surface of labrum as in larva VI, but with 4 + 1 + 4lamellar fingers. Clypeo-labrum with eight setae along posterior margin.
Each outer palpus of gnathochilarium with 15 sensilla basiconica, each inner palpus with 21 sensilla.
Trunk.
Forty four to 46 trichomes on tergite II to IV; lateral protuberance of collum with three and four trichomes.
Stadium IV (
one larva
with six pairs of legs)
Measurements.
Body length (without caudal pencil)
1.25 mm
. Tarsus II length of 6
th
leg 78 µm.
Head.
Posterior tufts with anterior row of eight and 10 trichomes; posterior row of seven and eight trichomes. Surface of labrum as larva VI, but with 4 + 4 lamellar fingers. Clypeo-labrum with nine setae along posterior margin.
Each outer palpus of gnathochilarium with 13 sensilla basiconica, each inner palpus with 21 sensilla.
Trunk.
Forty two to 45 trichomes on tergite II to V; each lateral protuberance of collum with five trichomes.
REMARKS
As in
M. amazonicus
from
Brazil
vicinity of Manaus, antennal article VI has a dorsal group composed of three sensilla basiconica
a
,
i
,
p
, one setiform sensilla
s
between
a
and
i
, one sensillum coeloconicum
c
posterior to
p
. However, in contrast to typical
M. amazonicus
, the posterior sensillum
p
is thinner than
i
and additional thin sensilla are present: one or two (
Fig. 6D
) in stadium IV, three or four in stadium V. In the right antenna of larva VI, the separation between the dorsal and postero-ventral groups of antennal sensilla is not evident (
Fig. 6B
), unlike the
holotype
of
Macroxenodes amazonicus
(
Fig. 6E
). These larvae clearly differ from the
Macroxenus
sp.
from near Manaus (
Ishii
et al.
1999
), which has numerous sensilla arranged in one or two rows and a different arrangement of trichome areas on the tergites.
Macroxenodes
is one of three genera of
Polyxenidae
(with
Macroxenus
Brölemann, 1917
and
Chilexenus
Silvestri, 1948
) with the gnathochilarial sensilla basiconica showing a pseudo-segmentation at apex.