Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov.

Himalanura draconis sp. nov. (Figs 3P, 6 F–G 48A–F) Holotype . Male, on slide, QLD, St George, - 28.0374°N, 148.5807°E, 200m asl, sweeping grasses, 12.v.1974, P.G leg. [SAMA 22670-01]. Paratypes. Two males subadult on the same slide, same collection data as holotype. Description. Size. Length up to...

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Main Authors: Jordana, Rafael, Greenslade, Penelope
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815983
https://zenodo.org/record/3815983
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3815983
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Formicidae
Himalanura
Himalanura draconis
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Formicidae
Himalanura
Himalanura draconis
Jordana, Rafael
Greenslade, Penelope
Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Formicidae
Himalanura
Himalanura draconis
description Himalanura draconis sp. nov. (Figs 3P, 6 F–G 48A–F) Holotype . Male, on slide, QLD, St George, - 28.0374°N, 148.5807°E, 200m asl, sweeping grasses, 12.v.1974, P.G leg. [SAMA 22670-01]. Paratypes. Two males subadult on the same slide, same collection data as holotype. Description. Size. Length up to 1.524 mm excluding antennae (n=3). Colour. Body colour pattern as in Fig 6F, ground colour clear brownish with lateral band blue violet lateral in Th II–Abd I. Blue violet almost the whole Abd II–IV, and the tip of Abd V and VI. Antennae blue/violet (Fig. 3P). Clothing. Body clothed with expanded chaetae like narrow scales (Fig, 6G, 47C) characteristic of the genus Himalanura . Head. Antennal length 778 μm (Holotype), 2.5 times the length of the head, Ant IV with a bilobed apical ves- icle. The relative length of Ant I / II / III / IV =1.0/3.5/2.5/2.9. 8 eyes, GH smaller in size than EF. Four labral papillae smooth (Fig. 47A). Four prelabral chaetae ciliated, 5,5,4 labral smooth chaetae. Lateral process of labial papilla E reaching the papilla tip. Posterior labial row with MREL 1 L 2, but only are present two ciliated chaetae, but the alveoli of chaetae R is small than of that M. Thorax and abdomen. Trochanteral organ with 8 spiny chaetae. Unguis with 4 teeth on internal edge: first pair at 50% distance from base of unguis, and 2 unpaired teeth, first one at 75% distance from the base and the most distal one minute. Dorsal tooth approximately near the internal pair of teeth. Unguiculus spike-like, with a serrated external edge on leg III. Furca length 583 μm (Holotype). Manubrial plate with 4 chaetae and two pseudopores. Mucro with 2 teeth, subapical tooth in size similar to the apical one. Mucronal spine present. Chaetotaxy. Simplified formula: 3,1,0,1,2/3,3/0,2/0,0,1/0,0,2,1,2. Head chaetotaxy with H1 area with An 2, An 3a1 and An 3, as in Fig. 47B, H 2 area with A 5, S’ 0 Mc absent, H4 area with S 1, S 3,S 4, S 5i and S 5 Mc; H5 with Ps 2 and Ps 5. Thorax with Area T1 on Th II with 3 Mc (m 1, m 2, and m 2i present) (Fig. 47D). Area T2 on Th II with 3 Mc present (a 5, m 4, and m 4i). Abdomen with Area A1 on Abd II without Mc as in Fig. 47E and area A2 on Abd II with 2 Mc. Abd III with 1 Mc on area A5, without Mc on area A3 and A4. Abd IV with 10 Mc on central area among bothriotricha (A 4, A 6, and B 4 –B 6). (Fig 47F). Measurements . Length ratio of Abd IV/III=3.38 (n=3). Remarks. The genus, Himalanura, is reported for the first time from Australia. Its chaetotaxy is unique for an Entomobrya and also for a Himalanura . In 2014 Baquero, Mandal & Jordana described a new species from India and gave a complete chaetotaxy for the genus. The genus until now was only known from Taimyr Peninsula (Russia), Yukutia and Magadan provinces (Russia) (Siberia) and high altitude sites in the Himalayas, India, Tadjikistan, Afghanistan and China (Jordana, 2012). Baquero et al . (2014) described it as having an artic-alpine disjunction. The Australian record extends its distribution around 7,000 km south east and to a low altitude habitat of arid grassland. This new species has the same chaetotaxy on Th II as H. maculae Yosii, 1971 and H. nuptsae Yosii, 1971, but the chaetotaxy of Abd II and III separate the three species: 0,2/0,0,1 Mc for the sp. nov. , 1,2,011 Mc for H. maculae and 2,7/0,2,2 Mc for H. nuptsae . Etymology. The species name is refers to the legend of the name’s locality (Saint George) near the sampling site. : Published as part of Jordana, Rafael & Greenslade, Penelope, 2020, Biogeographical and ecological insights from Australasian faunas: the megadiverse collembolan genus, Entomobrya (Entomobryidae), pp. 1-104 in Zootaxa 4770 (1) on pages 90-92, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4770.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3797958 : {"references": ["Jordana, R. (2012) Synopses on Palaearctic Collembola, Capbryinae and Entomobryini. Soil Organisms, 84 (1), 1 - 390.", "Baquero, E., Mandal, G. & Jordana, R. (2014) Singular Fauna of Entomobryidae (Collembola) from \" Land of Passes \" in the Himalayas, India. Florida Entomologist, 97 (4), 1554 - 1587. https: // doi. org / 10.1653 / 024.097.0430", "Yosii, R. (1971) Collembola of Khumbu Himal. In: Ergebn Forsch Unternehmens Nepal Himalaya. 4 (1). Universitatsverlag Wagner, Innsbruck, Munchen pp. 80 - 130."]}
format Text
author Jordana, Rafael
Greenslade, Penelope
author_facet Jordana, Rafael
Greenslade, Penelope
author_sort Jordana, Rafael
title Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov.
title_short Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov.
title_full Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov.
title_sort himalanura draconis jordana & greenslade 2020, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815983
https://zenodo.org/record/3815983
long_lat ENVELOPE(150.803,150.803,59.564,59.564)
geographic Magadan
geographic_facet Magadan
genre Taimyr
Siberia
genre_facet Taimyr
Siberia
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3815983 2023-05-15T18:31:17+02:00 Himalanura draconis Jordana & Greenslade 2020, sp. nov. Jordana, Rafael Greenslade, Penelope 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815983 https://zenodo.org/record/3815983 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/3797958 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FD22FF91FF916579FFF7C141FFC0BD54 http://zoobank.org/39F2F040-E300-4065-9E8E-83A9D6286D1F https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4770.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/3797958 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FD22FF91FF916579FFF7C141FFC0BD54 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3797970 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3797982 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3798134 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3797966 http://zoobank.org/39F2F040-E300-4065-9E8E-83A9D6286D1F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815982 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera Formicidae Himalanura Himalanura draconis Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815983 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4770.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3797970 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3797982 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3798134 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3797966 https: 2022-02-08T13:25:49Z Himalanura draconis sp. nov. (Figs 3P, 6 F–G 48A–F) Holotype . Male, on slide, QLD, St George, - 28.0374°N, 148.5807°E, 200m asl, sweeping grasses, 12.v.1974, P.G leg. [SAMA 22670-01]. Paratypes. Two males subadult on the same slide, same collection data as holotype. Description. Size. Length up to 1.524 mm excluding antennae (n=3). Colour. Body colour pattern as in Fig 6F, ground colour clear brownish with lateral band blue violet lateral in Th II–Abd I. Blue violet almost the whole Abd II–IV, and the tip of Abd V and VI. Antennae blue/violet (Fig. 3P). Clothing. Body clothed with expanded chaetae like narrow scales (Fig, 6G, 47C) characteristic of the genus Himalanura . Head. Antennal length 778 μm (Holotype), 2.5 times the length of the head, Ant IV with a bilobed apical ves- icle. The relative length of Ant I / II / III / IV =1.0/3.5/2.5/2.9. 8 eyes, GH smaller in size than EF. Four labral papillae smooth (Fig. 47A). Four prelabral chaetae ciliated, 5,5,4 labral smooth chaetae. Lateral process of labial papilla E reaching the papilla tip. Posterior labial row with MREL 1 L 2, but only are present two ciliated chaetae, but the alveoli of chaetae R is small than of that M. Thorax and abdomen. Trochanteral organ with 8 spiny chaetae. Unguis with 4 teeth on internal edge: first pair at 50% distance from base of unguis, and 2 unpaired teeth, first one at 75% distance from the base and the most distal one minute. Dorsal tooth approximately near the internal pair of teeth. Unguiculus spike-like, with a serrated external edge on leg III. Furca length 583 μm (Holotype). Manubrial plate with 4 chaetae and two pseudopores. Mucro with 2 teeth, subapical tooth in size similar to the apical one. Mucronal spine present. Chaetotaxy. Simplified formula: 3,1,0,1,2/3,3/0,2/0,0,1/0,0,2,1,2. Head chaetotaxy with H1 area with An 2, An 3a1 and An 3, as in Fig. 47B, H 2 area with A 5, S’ 0 Mc absent, H4 area with S 1, S 3,S 4, S 5i and S 5 Mc; H5 with Ps 2 and Ps 5. Thorax with Area T1 on Th II with 3 Mc (m 1, m 2, and m 2i present) (Fig. 47D). Area T2 on Th II with 3 Mc present (a 5, m 4, and m 4i). Abdomen with Area A1 on Abd II without Mc as in Fig. 47E and area A2 on Abd II with 2 Mc. Abd III with 1 Mc on area A5, without Mc on area A3 and A4. Abd IV with 10 Mc on central area among bothriotricha (A 4, A 6, and B 4 –B 6). (Fig 47F). Measurements . Length ratio of Abd IV/III=3.38 (n=3). Remarks. The genus, Himalanura, is reported for the first time from Australia. Its chaetotaxy is unique for an Entomobrya and also for a Himalanura . In 2014 Baquero, Mandal & Jordana described a new species from India and gave a complete chaetotaxy for the genus. The genus until now was only known from Taimyr Peninsula (Russia), Yukutia and Magadan provinces (Russia) (Siberia) and high altitude sites in the Himalayas, India, Tadjikistan, Afghanistan and China (Jordana, 2012). Baquero et al . (2014) described it as having an artic-alpine disjunction. The Australian record extends its distribution around 7,000 km south east and to a low altitude habitat of arid grassland. This new species has the same chaetotaxy on Th II as H. maculae Yosii, 1971 and H. nuptsae Yosii, 1971, but the chaetotaxy of Abd II and III separate the three species: 0,2/0,0,1 Mc for the sp. nov. , 1,2,011 Mc for H. maculae and 2,7/0,2,2 Mc for H. nuptsae . Etymology. The species name is refers to the legend of the name’s locality (Saint George) near the sampling site. : Published as part of Jordana, Rafael & Greenslade, Penelope, 2020, Biogeographical and ecological insights from Australasian faunas: the megadiverse collembolan genus, Entomobrya (Entomobryidae), pp. 1-104 in Zootaxa 4770 (1) on pages 90-92, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4770.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3797958 : {"references": ["Jordana, R. (2012) Synopses on Palaearctic Collembola, Capbryinae and Entomobryini. Soil Organisms, 84 (1), 1 - 390.", "Baquero, E., Mandal, G. & Jordana, R. (2014) Singular Fauna of Entomobryidae (Collembola) from \" Land of Passes \" in the Himalayas, India. Florida Entomologist, 97 (4), 1554 - 1587. https: // doi. org / 10.1653 / 024.097.0430", "Yosii, R. (1971) Collembola of Khumbu Himal. In: Ergebn Forsch Unternehmens Nepal Himalaya. 4 (1). Universitatsverlag Wagner, Innsbruck, Munchen pp. 80 - 130."]} Text Taimyr Siberia DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Magadan ENVELOPE(150.803,150.803,59.564,59.564)