An unexpected diversity of Cyphophthalmi (Arachnida: Opiliones) in Upper Cretaceous Burmese amber
Author
Bartel, Christian
Author
Dunlop, Jason A.
Author
Giribet, Gonzalo
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-05-29
5296
3
421
445
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5296.3.6
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5296.3.6
1175-5326
59AD1B4F-15B2-4DC0-A57E-2F6B57539D1A
Suborder
Cyphophthalmi
Simon, 1879
Remarks.
All specimens described here can be unequivocally identified as members of the opilionid suborder
Cyphophthalmi
due to the presence of (1) a scutum completum, (2) raised ozophores and (3) a single claw on each tarsus of all legs. The modern families
Neogoveidae
and
Troglosironidae
can be excluded from the outset as none of the amber specimens feature a row of ventral teeth on the claw of leg II. Due to their restrictive modern day distribution we assume the affinities of the amber specimens to lie with
Stylocellidae
, which is the main extant cyphophthalmid family in Southeast Asia today. However, extant
Pettalidae
are found in
Sri Lanka
(and on the southern continents) and may have been previously distributed across the Indian subcontinent.
Ogoveidae
is today restricted to West Africa (
Giribet & Prieto 2003
). We want to point out that Burmese amber has been shown to contain some groups that are typically Gondwanan, as well as taxa found today in the Neo- or Afrotropics but not in Southeast Asia. Examples belonging to arachnids include some Laniatorean harvestmen (
Bartel
et al.
2021
) and the rare arachnid order
Ricinulei (
Wunderlich 2017
)
. The cyphophthalmid family
Sironidae
is distributed across former Laurasian terranes (North America, Europe, the near East and
Japan
) and could potentially have inhabited other Asian regions which were in contact with the Sibumasu terrane during the Cretaceous (
Clouse
et al.
2010
;
Metcalfe 2017
). Therefore the remaining cyphophthalmid families
Pettalidae
,
Ogoveidae
and
Sironidae
should not a priori be excluded. Furthermore, all amber specimens examined herein appear to differ from the first described Burmese amber species
Palaeosiro burmanicum
. The fossil described by
Poinar (2008)
features relatively long ozophores in comparison with its small body size, circular spiracles and a large sternal gland on the first sternite: a unique combination of characters not seen in our new material.