Revision of the scolopendrid centipede Digitipes Attems, 1930, from India (Chilopoda: Scolopendromorpha): reconciling molecular and morphological estimates of species diversity
Author
Joshi, Jahnavi
Author
Edgecombe, Gregory D.
text
Zootaxa
2013
3626
1
99
145
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3626.1.5
135b7553-b75c-4020-b1a6-c689a05b7e66
1175-5326
218625
58AD6857-8CDD-4423-88D0-619CD8D793AC
Otostigmus gravelyi
(Jangi and Dass, 1984)
n. comb.
Digitipes gravelyi
Jangi and Dass, 1984: 41
, figs 58–64.
Digitipes gravelyi
. Sureshan
et al
. 2006: 2287.
Remarks.
This species was described on the basis of its
holotype
alone, a female collected from Parambikulam, Kerala, in 1914. Specimens from the Quilon district in Kerala were subsequently assigned to it by Sureshan
et al
. (2006). Collections by JJ at the
type
locality did not produce any specimens that correspond to the
holotype
with respect to the presence of four apical spines and two strong lateral spines on the coxopleural process, having as many as four spines in the VM and VL rows on the ultimate leg prefemur, and showing a transition from smooth TT1–2 to keeled, tuberculate T3. We have in fact not identified these character states in specimens of
Digitipes
from any other locality, apart from the specimens assigned to
D. gravelyi
by Sureshan
et al
. (2006). The latter (photographs provided by D. Balan) indicate that these distinctive character states of the
holotype
are conserved in other specimens, even from other localities. Accordingly we regard these characters as potentially being diagnostic of this species. The otostigmine collected by JJ at the
type
locality of
D. graveleyi
is clearly a different species, identified below as
Otostigmus ruficeps
Pocock, 1890
.
The male has not been described for “
D.
”
gravelyi
so its membership in the genus was not solidly established.
As
noted above under discussion of the genus, some of its characters deviate from very stable conditions shared by the other species of
Digitipes
. It has 19–21 antennal articles, whereas all other Indian species have a conserved number of 17 articles. It has five teeth on each forcipular tooth plate, in contrast to a highly conserved pattern of only four teeth in the other Indian and African species. No
Digitipes
in
India
or Africa has dorsal spines accompanying the two apical spines on the coxopleural process, and none has more than a single lateral spine (versus two very strong lateral spines in “
D
”.
gravelyi
). These character states are, however, present in various species of
Otostigmus
, and indeed there is little to separate
“D.
”
gravelyi
from
Otostigmus rugulosus
Porat, 1876
. Because we have no new collections of the species, the possibility of synonymy with
O
. rugulosus
is not followed up here, but the close similarity warrants the reassignment of the species to
Otostigmus
as the new combination
Otostigmus
(
Otostigmus
)
gravelyi
(Jangi and Dass, 1984)
.