Revision of the rare centipede genus Sterropristes Attems, 1934, with description of a new species from Thailand (Chilopoda: Scolopendromorpha: Scolopendridae)
Author
Muadsub, Sawitree
Author
Sutcharit, Chirasak
Author
Pimvichai, Piyatida
Author
Enghoff, Henrik
text
Zootaxa
2012
3484
35
52
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.282388
762a8dc0-b7db-4eb4-9947-749fcce86b9c
1175-5326
282388
9436D0DF-837C-4573-8103-0E09C912E8A1
Genus
Sterropristes
Attems, 1934
Sterropristes
Attems, 1934
: 43
–47.
Verhoeff, 1937
: 201
, 202.
Schileyko, 1997
: 34
.
Malaccolabis
Verhoeff, 1937
: 201
.
Type
species:
Malaccolabis metallica
Verhoeff, 1937
, by monotypy.
Schileyko and Pavlinov, 1997
: 34
.
Syn. nov.
Type
species.
Sterropristes sarasinorum
Attems, 1934
, by monotypy.
Diagnosis.
The unique distinguishing character of
Sterropristes
is the saw-like internal margin of the forcipular tarsungula. Other characters include basally wide, dorso-ventrally flattened antennae; tergite 1 abutting the cephalic plate; forcipular coxosternal tooth plate with 4+4 teeth; forcipular trochanteroprefemora without processes; tergites from at least T6 to T20 and sternites from at least S13 to S19 with complete paramedian sutures; spiracular apertures oval, spiracles present on trunk segment 7; coxopleura of ultimate legs truncated, without processes and spines; ultimate legs short, thickened; prefemora without spines; distal part of femora with a groove on their dorsal sides; ventral side of either tibiae or tarsi (or both) prominently convex; pretarsi longer than second tarsi.
Remarks.
The traditional classification of the
Scolopendridae
is based on morphological characters, for example, the shape of the spiracle and the presence or absence of three-flapped valves in it, the presence and shape of coxopleural processes, and details of spinulation of the ultimate legs (
Attems, 1930
). The classification of Sterropristini as a group at the tribe or subfamily level particularly emphasizes serrated margins of the forcipular tarsungula (
Verhoeff, 1937
).
Schileyko (1992)
proposed a new classification of the
Scolopendromorpha
, placing particular weight on the number of body segments and presence of a spiracle on trunk segment 7 (
Fig. 1
C, F, I). The name Sterropristinae was applied therein to a group united by a spiracle on segment 7, that group then being subdivided into Ethmostigmini (
Ethmostigmus
,
Rhysida
and
Alluropus
) and Arrhabdotini (
Edentistoma
,
Sterropristes
and
Malaccolabis
).
Schileyko and Pavlinov (1997)
presented a cladistic analysis of
Scolopendromorpha
in which
Sterropristes
and
Malaccolabis
formed a clade that was sister-group to
Edentistoma
Tömösváry, 1882
(=
Arrhabdotus
Attems, 1930
), another deviating monotypic scolopendromorph genus (see
Lewis, 1981b
). Recent analyses of either morphological data (
Edgecombe and Koch 2008
, 2009; Koch
et al
. 2009;
Vahtera
et al
. 2012b
) or molecular data analyzed either on their own or in combination with morphology (
Vahtera
et al
. 2012a
) have not supported Schileyko and Pavlinov’s findings with respect to a taxonomic separation between Otostigmini and “Ethmostigmini”, and the value of a spiracle on segment 7 as a high-level taxonomic character in
Scolopendromorpha
has been called into question (
Di
et al
. 2010
). Although the exact position of Sterropristini in the phylogeny of
Scolopendridae
remains unsettled, the ovate outline of the spiracles and their strongly humped atrial wall and floor (
Fig. 1
) are consistent with membership in Otostigminae.
Verhoeff (1937)
erected the monotypic genus
Malaccolabis
for material from Penang Hill, Penang,
Malaysia
. However, on the basis of the newly collected specimens (including topotypes of
M. metallica
) and re-study of pertinent
type
material we treat
Malaccolabis
Verhoeff, 1937
as a junior subjective synonym of
Sterropristes
Attems, 1934
. Although the
type
species of
Malaccolabis
differs from that of
Sterropristes
in some characters, notably the number of sparsely setose antennal articles, these do not warrant separation at the genus level (
Table 1
). Some of the purportedly diagnostic differences of
Malaccolabis
exhibit variability now that additional specimens of its
type
species are known, with the range of variation overlapping with
S. sarasinorum
. For example, the difference in number of antennal articles (17 versus 12–15) is likely a result of the
holotype
of
S. metallicus
being teratological or due to damage and repair with respect to this character because the new topotypes of
S. metallicus
have 17 articles as in
S. sarasinorum
. A supposedly diagnostic difference in number of teeth on the forcipular tarsungula (9 versus 13) can likewise be dismissed because topotypes of
S. metallicus
have as few teeth as the
holotype
of
S. sarasinorum
. The presence or absence of a dorsal groove on the ultimate leg femur was cited by
Verhoeff (1937)
as diagnostic for two genera, but this furrow is in fact present in
S. sarasinorum
but was not described or illustrated by
Attems (1934)
(see below).