The millipede genus Lissodesmus Chamberlin, 1920 (Diplopoda: Polydesmida: Dalodesmidae) from Tasmania and Victoria, with descriptions of a new genus and 24 new species
Author
Mesibov, Robert
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2005
2005-12-31
62
2
103
146
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-62-issue-2-2005/pages-103-146/
journal article
53801
10.24199/j.mmv.2005.62.4
7c43d20c-c0a8-47ad-896a-fc9a1619e294
1447-2554
8064747
F70083BA-29DD-4E6E-AEF3-19C31465A5A7
Lissodesmus martini
(
Carl, 1902
)
Pseudoprionopeltis martini
Carl, 1902: 599
.—
Brolemann, 1916: 541
.—
Chamberlin, 1920: 133
.—
Verhoeff, 1932: 1982
.—
Attems, 1940: 453
.
Pseudoprionopeltis
(
Australopeltis
)
martini
Johns, 1964: 47
.
Lissodesmus martini
Jeekel, 1983: 150
.—
Jeekel, 1984: 86
.
Material examined.
Holotype
(not seen). Male,
Australia
,
Victoria
.
Melbourne
, date of collection unknown, collected by “
Consul Martin
”, deposited in the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle in Geneva.
According to
Johns (1964: 47)
, who re-illustrated the gonopod of the type, the holotype body has been lost and only a slide mount of the gonopods remains.
Paratypes
. None designated.
Other material.
50 males
,
19 females
and
8 juveniles
from
Acheron Gap, “The Beeches” near Marysville, Belgrave West, the Bennison Plains area NE of Licola, Coalville, Cockatoo Creek, Emerald, Erica, Gembrook, the Latrobe River near Powelltown, Mt Observation, Narracan, Narracan East, Neerim, Noojee, Sherbrooke Forest, Slippery Hill N of Dargo, Starvation Creek NE of Warburton, Toolangi, Yallourn North and Yinnar
(see “
Lissodesmus
supplement” for details).
I have not examined the male from Ferntree Gully National Park described by
Jeekel (1983)
.
Description
. Male c.
18 mm
long,
H
= 1.6 mm. In alcohol, well-coloured specimens under low magnification with pale brown body colour, red speckling anteriorly on metatergites and a red transverse band posteriorly on prozonites, paranota near-white. Antenna moderately long (
Fig. 69
mar).
Paranota
fairly wide,
R
= 1.5, with about 3 posterior marginal teeth (
Fig. 70
mar), posterior corners not turned up. Legs robust, tarsus longer than femur, tibia with prominent ventral distal swelling (
Fig. 71
mar). Telopodite (
Figs 49
,
50
) almost reaching leg 5 when retracted. Solenomere arising at about half the telopodite height, directed posterodistally at a small angle (c. 30°) to telopodite axis, terminating with toothed subapical collar at just under half the prefemoral process height. Tibiotarsus origin on posteromesal surface of telopodite, not close to solenomere origin; tibiotarsus a thin, pointed rod almost parallel to solenomere but curving anterodistally, about half the length of the solenomere.
Femoral process arising at level of solenomere origin, a massive, wide, bluntly pointed blade directed distally, close to prefemoral process, terminating at just over half the prefemoral process height (distal to solenomere tip). Prefemoral process at its base about half as wide as telopodite base, curving slightly mesally at half its height, bent posteromesally at about three-quarters its length, the tip expanded and dentate on its posterior-facing edge.
Uncus prominent, arising near mesal edge of prefemoral process at just under half the process height (at same level as solenomere tip), with inconspicuously dentate outer edge.
Distribution and habitat.
In dry and wet eucalypt forest and cool temperate rainforest in the Central Highlands and parts of Gippsland. To judge from earlier records,
L. martini
once ranged east and north-east from Melbourne for ca.
200 km
, and it is still Victoria’s most widely distributed
Lissodesmus
species
(
Fig. 79
). It is abundant in the Yarra Ranges and occurs up to at least
1120 m
elevation.
Remarks
.
Carl (1902)
characterised
Pseudoprionopeltis
as having 21 segments behind the head, rather than the expected 19 or 20. The correct number, 20, was first given by
Johns (1964)
for
L. martini
.
Enghoff et al. (1993: 148)
suggested that Carl’s “21” may have been a typographical error.
Chamberlin (1920)
gave
Polydesmus
(
Oxyurus
)
serratus
Hutton, 1877
as a synonym of
P. martini
, and listed the
type
locality of
serratus
, Dunedin
in
New Zealand
, as the only
P. martini
locality. This was clearly an error, as
Chamberlin (1920: 133)
also claimed that both the identity and generic placement of
P. serratus
were impossible to determine.
This is the fourth time
L. martini
has been described and illustrated, and I am contributing little new other than a scanning electron micrograph of the gonopods.
L. martini
varies only slightly over most of its range, but specimens from the east of that range are smaller and paler than those from the west.