Annotated checklist of Afrotropical Trogolaphysa Mills, 1938 (Hexapoda: Collembola: Paronellidae) and description of a new species from Madagascar
Author
Nguyen, Minh
Author
Soto-Adames, Felipe N.
text
Zoosystema
2018
2018-05-23
40
10
179
196
journal article
10.5252/zoosystema2018v40a10
ea3961a2-6410-4963-9e03-af59316cac6d
1638-9387
3738229
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F2681FDC-D9BE-48F8-918C-63CF67FF6F52
Trogolaphysa nigromaculata
(
Schött, 1903
)
n. comb.
Paronella nigromaculata
Schött, 1903
: IV, VII, pl. 1 fig. 8-11 (Bonge,
Cameroon
). —
Wahlgren 1908: 2
, 4, 6-8 (description, material used by
Mitra 2002c
to describe
D.
wahlgreni
,
Meru
,
Kenya
). —
Philiptschenko 1926: 192-193
(description, senior synonym of
P. fuelleborni
, Molo
,
British East Africa
). —
Schött 1927: 25
, 27-30, pl. II figs 10-15 (redescription and description of variation, key to species, Debundscha,
Cameroon
). —
Handschin 1929: 77
: 16, 22-23, fig. 5 (descriptive notes,
Ethiopia
). —
Denis 1933: 267
, 268 (key to species, comments on variation reported in literature). — Delamare Debouteville & Paulian 1952: 77 (mention,
Ivory Coast
). —
Salmon 1956: 32-35
, figs 88-102 (description,
Rwanda
,
Burundi
). —
Paclt 1959: 56-58
(
Neophorella dubia
as junior synonym of
T. nigromaculata
, Natal
,
South Africa
); 1967: 142 (record,
Tanzania
). —
Martynova 1961: 848
, 854-857, fig. 5-7 (descriptive notes on variation,
Ethiopia
). —
Mitra 2002c: 106
, 109, 112 (
syntypes
deposited at the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, descriptive notes on chaetotaxy, comparison with
D. whalgreni
).
Neophorella dubia
Womersley, 1934: 464-465
, fig. 12 (description, synonymyzed by
Paclt 1959
; Table Mount,
Cape
Town,
South Africa
).
Dicranocentruga nigromaculata
–
Mitra 1992: 212
. —
Mitra 2002c: 114
, pl. I, fig. 1D (photo of slide-mounted
syntype
).
TYPE
LOCALITY. —
Bonge
,
Cameroon
.
DISTRIBUTION. —
Cameroon
,
Ivory Coast
,
Rwanda
,
Burundi
,
Tanzania
,
Ethiopia
.
REMARKS
The description of
Neophorella dubia
Womersley, 1934
was based on a single individual collected in
Cape
Town,
South Africa
. Neither the original description of the species nor the accompanying figures recall or resemble a paronellid by any stretch of the imagination (habitus isotomid-like, with 3
rd
abdominal segment longer than 4
th
abdominal segment, dens twice as long as manubrium, scales absent, and mucro with three apical teeth). However,
Paclt (1959)
studied the
holotype
and indicated that the claw does resemble that of
T. nigromaculata
n. comb.
, and that dental spines are present.
Paclt (1959)
did not mention the structure of the mucro.
Ireson & Greenslade (1990)
re-examined the type specimen (and only known individual) of
N. dubia
and concluded that the species belongs in
Tomoceridae Schäffer, 1896
, as originally proposed by Womersley. Additional attempts to find the species at the type locality have been unsuccessful (Janion-Scheepers
et al.
2015), but it seems safe to conclude that
N. dubia
does not belong in
Trogolaphysa
.
Trogolaphysa nigromaculata
n. comb.
is transferred to
Tro - golaphysa
on account of
Mitra (2002c)
, who examined some
types
(see below) and placed the species in
Dicranocentruga
, a junior synonym of
Trogolahysa
(Soto-Adames &Taylor 2013).
Trogolaphysa nigromaculata
n. comb.
is the most often reported and cited member of the genus in Africa, with putative distribution covering most of the tropical and southern subtropical regions of the continent. The original and subsequent descriptions by
Schött (1903
,
1927
), although relatively extensive, provide few characters useful in distinguishing the widespread populations. The absence of a description of relevant diagnostic characters of the
type
material has lead authors to consider
T. nigromaculata
n. comb.
a very variable species.
The main diagnostic character of the species is related to the morphology of the unguis, which
Schött (1903)
described as having three inner teeth. However, samples including individuals with three or four inner ungual teeth was interpreted by various authors as intraspecific variation. Following this interpretation in claw variation the species was reported from
Kenya
(Whalgren 1908),
Ethiopia
(
Philiptschenko 1926
;
Handschin 1929
;
Martynova 1961
),
Ivory Coast
(Delamare Debouteville & Paulian 1952),
Rwanda
and
Burundi
(
Salmon 1956
), and
Tanzania
(
Paclt 1967
).
It is unlikely that populations from such distant localities (which cover more than
7000 km
) and diverse environmental conditions (from the lowland tropical rain forest of
Ivory Coast
and
Cameroon
, to the highland forest of
Rwanda
and
Burundi
, and the xeric conditions of
Ethiopia
) represent the same species.
Mitra (2002c)
studied some
syntypes
of
T. nigromaculata
n. comb.
from
Cameroon
and individuals with three-toothed unguis from
Kenya
(originally identified as
P. nigromaculata
by
Wahlgren 1908
) and found the two populations to be easily distinguishable using head chaetotaxy. Extrapolating from
Mitra’s (2002c)
observation, it is likely that variation in claw morphology reported in the literature reflects a mixture of species and that
T. nigromaculata
n. comb.
as currently delimited is a species complex.
The abbreviated description that follows is based on the original description by
Schött (1903)
with a few details of head chaetotaxy reported by
Mitra (2002c)
. The redescription by
Schött (1927)
is unreliable because the material on which it is based was collected in Debundscha, not in the
type
locality of Bonge.
Schött (1927)
reports two color forms, the pale one matching the original description, and a dark one with more extensive blue pigment distributed along the flanks. In addition to differences in color pattern, the unguiculus in the dark form is truncate instead of lanceolate, and one of the inner paired ungual tooth is considerably longer than the other. The dark form is likely an unnamed species (
Mitra 2002c
might have been referring to these two forms when he pointed out that Schött’s material from
Cameroon
and Wahlgren’s material from
Kenya
includes three species).
The light form of
T. nigromaculata
n. comb.
is characterized by a whitish body, with dark blue pigment on all antennal segments, eye patch and coxae; head dorsally with five paired anterior macrochaetae (A2, A5, M2, S3, S5), paired posterior macrochaeta Pa5 absent; tenet hair somewhat short and spatulate; unguis with three inner teeth, basal teeth inserted on basal half of inner edge, unpaired tooth on distal half; unguiculus lanceolate; mucro square, quadridentate, with basal teeth paired.