Euro-Mediterranean fauna of Campodeinae (Campodeidae, Diplura)
Author
Sendra, Alberto
11636BAE-AE66-4898-A7C8-35B329E7E3A8
Coleccions Torres-Sala i Siro de Fez, Servei de Patrimoni Històric, Ajuntament de València, València, Spain. Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, DK- 2100 København Ø, Denmark. Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Enviromental Changes (cE 3 c), Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal.
alberto.sendra@uv.es
Author
Reboleira, Ana Sofia P. S.
338DE845-4839-4EF5-B684-587C021F076C
asreboleira@fc.ul.pt
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2020
2020-12-09
728
1
130
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2020.728.1181
4918514a-aecb-4fa1-a019-fb5fc9083f3c
4316883
F8DAFD36-2878-438D-B7C0-B8D05531EC5C
Campodea
(
Campodea
)
giardi
Silvestri, 1912
Campodea
(
Campodea
)
giardi
Silvestri, 1912: 120
, fig. VIII.
Diagnosis
(
Silvestri 1912
;
Bareth 2006
)
Body length
3.5–4.5 mm
; long, thin, smooth clothing setae; antennae with 22–29 antennomeres; sensillum of third antennomere in ventral position plus 1–4 sensilla on IV to VII antennomeres (in a few specimens these extra sensilla are absent); notal macrosetae long, thin and smooth or with 1–2 barbs; marginal setae long, poorly barbed with 1–2 barbs; one sensillum trochanteral; 1+1 long
ma
urotergal macrosetae with insertion backward towards marginal setae from urotergites I to VII; 1+1
la
, 1+1
lp
on V–VII urotergites; 1+1
mp
, 3+3
lp
on VIII urotergite and 1+1
mp
, 5+5
lp
on IX abdominal segment; cerci covered in macrosetae with some barbs and a few clothing setae; middle-sized spermatozoid fascicles,
Figs 35–36.
Campodea
(
Campodea
)
ghilarovi
Rusek, 1965
.
35
. ♀, 2.5 mm, pronotum, mesonotum and metanotum, right side, from Abkhazia.
36
. ³, 2.8 mm, first urosternite, right side, from Abkhazia. Abbreviations:
a
,
a
,
g
= glandular setae; see Material and methods. Scale bar: 0.1 mm.
1
2
1
55–60 μm diameter and 25 μm wide, spiral filament with 2–3 spirals, 240–360 μm long and 2.8–3.3 μm diameter in round section.
Habitat and distribution
Soil-dwelling species with a preference for mountain habitats. It was collected from the central and eastern Pyrenees (
Denis 1930
;
Condé & Mathieu 1957
;
Sendra & Jiménez 1986
). Outside the Pyrenees,
C. giardi
is cited from two localities at Durham, NE
England
(
Bagnall 1915
) and from two further localities in
France
: a mine of Gard and in a humid cave near Nancy (
Husson 1946
), but
Condé (1956a)
considered that they needed to be revised.