Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887

4. Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens Haase, 1887 Figs 13 –17 Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae : Attems, 1930: 140; Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens : Attems, 1930: 141; Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae : Schileyko, 1995: 81; Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae loriae : Schileyko, 2007: 79; Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens : Lewis, 2014: 399....

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Main Authors: Schileyko, Arkady A., Stoev, Pavel E.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6077637
https://zenodo.org/record/6077637
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6077637
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
Chilopoda
Scolopendromorpha
Scolopendridae
Otostigmus
Otostigmus multidens
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Chilopoda
Scolopendromorpha
Scolopendridae
Otostigmus
Otostigmus multidens
Schileyko, Arkady A.
Stoev, Pavel E.
Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Chilopoda
Scolopendromorpha
Scolopendridae
Otostigmus
Otostigmus multidens
description 4. Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens Haase, 1887 Figs 13 –17 Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae : Attems, 1930: 140; Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens : Attems, 1930: 141; Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae : Schileyko, 1995: 81; Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae loriae : Schileyko, 2007: 79; Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens : Lewis, 2014: 399. Material. E Indonesia, West Papua Province, S Bird’s Neck, 05 – 09.09.2010: 1 ad [spm 1, largest, No. 7508], Kaimana 7–9 km NW, 3°35’02”S, 133°42’58”E, 25–200 m, primeval lowland rainforest on limestone, leg. DT; 1 ad [spm 2, No. 7509] + 2 ad [spm 3, СDT; spm 4 (larger one), No. 7510], Kaimana 47 km E, Triton bay, Kamaka (former Warika) village env., lake Kamakawalar and surroundings, 03°46’22”S, 134°12’02”E, 60–310 m, primeval lowland rainforest on limestone, leg. DT; 1 ad [spm 5, No. 7511], Kaimana 47 km E, Triton bay, Kamaka (former Warika) village env., lake Kamakawalar, 03°45’33”S, 134°12’05”E, 90 m, primeval lowland rainforest on limestone, leg. M. Kalninsh. Range. Cambodia; Vietnam; The Philippines; West Malaysia (Pahang); Indonesia: Sumatra, Maluku Islands, West Papua; Papua New Guinea. Remarks. Our specimens correspond well to the comprehensive description and drawings of Lewis (2014: 400) and can be readily recognized by the specific shape of the multi-dentated forcipular tooth-plates (Figs 13, 14). They differ insignificantly in having 22 (vs 21) antennomeres, of which 2.3– 2.7 (vs 2.3) basal ones with few long setae, complete paramedian sutures at tergites 4–20 (vs 6–20) and 1 additional dorsal (subapical) spine of coxopleural process (Fig. 15). The New Guinean specimens are also considerably larger reaching a length of 68–69 mm (spm 1). It should also be noted that the studied specimens have tergites (11)13–20 with 9 well-recognizable keels (Fig. 16), latter being replaced in the Vietnamese and Malaysian exemplars by a single weakly developed medial keel. The degree of development of the tergal keels seems to vary quite widely in subgenus Parotostigmus (Schileyko, 2014: 177). As for Otostigmus s.str. Lewis (2007, 2010) regarded these structures as widely variable intraspecifically—from well-developed to nearly absent; for example Lewis (2007) noted that some exemplars of O. ( O. ) orientalis (which is type-species of the genus) have these keels but others lack them. Thus, the presence of tergal keels is a species-specific character for some species (eg, O. scaber Porat, 1876, O. amballae Chamberlin, 1913, O. orientalis ), but varies significantly in others (eg, O. multidens ). All studied specimens have spiracles with well-developed and deep atrium, spiracles of segment 3 are quite narrow (Fig. 17); similar conditions are found in the Vietnamese exemplars, too. Otostigmus telus was described by Chamberlin (1939) from Pionierbivak at Mamberamo river (Indonesia, Papua Province) on the basis of a single adult(?) (48 mm long) specimen. Its short and meager description lacks drawings and important detail (eg, information about the structure of forcipular tooth-plates). However, Chamberlin stated that O. telus is “close to O. loriae [= O. multidens ] Silvestri”. Lewis (2014: 408) considered this species as nomen dubium although in Bonato et al. (2016) it is listed among the valid species. Since we haven’t examined the type specimen and given its poor morphological diagnosis it is not included in our List of Papuan species. : Published as part of Schileyko, Arkady A. & Stoev, Pavel E., 2016, Scolopendromorpha of New Guinea and adjacent islands (Myriapoda, Chilopoda), pp. 247-280 in Zootaxa 4147 (3) on pages 253-255, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4147.3.3, http://zenodo.org/record/264843 : {"references": ["Haase, E. (1887) Die Indisch-Australischen Myriopoden. 1. Chilopoden. Abhandlungen und Berichte des Koniglichen zoologischen und anthropologisch-ethnographischen Museum zu Dresden, 4, 1 - 118.", "Attems, C. (1930) Myriopoda. 2. Scolopendromorpha. Das Tierreich 54. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, pp. 1 - 308.", "Schileyko, A. (1995) Scolopendromorph centipedes of Vietnam (Chilopoda Scolopendromorpha) Part 2. Arthropoda Selecta, 4 (2), 73 - 87.", "Schileyko, A. (2007) The scolopendromorph centipedes (Chilopoda) of Vietnam, with contributions to the faunas of Cambodia and Laos. Part 3. Arthropoda Selecta, 16 (2), 71 - 95.", "Schileyko, A. (2014) A contribution to the centipede fauna of Venezuela (Chilopoda: Scolopendromorpha). Zootaxa, 3821 (1), 151 - 192. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3821.2.1", "Chamberlin, R. V. (1939) On a collection of Chilopods from the East Indies. Bulletin of the University of Utah, 29 Biol. series 15, 1 - 19.", "Bonato, L., Chagas Junior, A., Edgecombe, G., Lewis J., Minelli A., Pereira L., Shelley, R., Stoev, P. & Zapparoli, M. (2016) ChiloBase 2.0 - A World Catalogue of Centipedes (Chilopoda). Available from: http: // chilobase. biologia. unipd. it (Accessed 2 Aug. 2016)"]}
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author Schileyko, Arkady A.
Stoev, Pavel E.
author_facet Schileyko, Arkady A.
Stoev, Pavel E.
author_sort Schileyko, Arkady A.
title Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887
title_short Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887
title_full Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887
title_fullStr Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887
title_full_unstemmed Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887
title_sort otostigmus (o.) multidens haase 1887
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6077637 2023-05-15T18:33:43+02:00 Otostigmus (O.) multidens Haase 1887 Schileyko, Arkady A. Stoev, Pavel E. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6077637 https://zenodo.org/record/6077637 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/264843 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC44A1F0E48B00DFFCBFF9EBC17FFF9 http://zoobank.org/6238B25B-787F-4F50-BFAE-03CD33D0F699 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4147.3.3 http://zenodo.org/record/264843 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC44A1F0E48B00DFFCBFF9EBC17FFF9 http://zoobank.org/6238B25B-787F-4F50-BFAE-03CD33D0F699 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6077636 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Chilopoda Scolopendromorpha Scolopendridae Otostigmus Otostigmus multidens article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6077637 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4147.3.3 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6077636 2022-04-01T10:20:29Z 4. Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens Haase, 1887 Figs 13 –17 Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae : Attems, 1930: 140; Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens : Attems, 1930: 141; Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae : Schileyko, 1995: 81; Otostigmus ( O. ) loriae loriae : Schileyko, 2007: 79; Otostigmus ( O. ) multidens : Lewis, 2014: 399. Material. E Indonesia, West Papua Province, S Bird’s Neck, 05 – 09.09.2010: 1 ad [spm 1, largest, No. 7508], Kaimana 7–9 km NW, 3°35’02”S, 133°42’58”E, 25–200 m, primeval lowland rainforest on limestone, leg. DT; 1 ad [spm 2, No. 7509] + 2 ad [spm 3, СDT; spm 4 (larger one), No. 7510], Kaimana 47 km E, Triton bay, Kamaka (former Warika) village env., lake Kamakawalar and surroundings, 03°46’22”S, 134°12’02”E, 60–310 m, primeval lowland rainforest on limestone, leg. DT; 1 ad [spm 5, No. 7511], Kaimana 47 km E, Triton bay, Kamaka (former Warika) village env., lake Kamakawalar, 03°45’33”S, 134°12’05”E, 90 m, primeval lowland rainforest on limestone, leg. M. Kalninsh. Range. Cambodia; Vietnam; The Philippines; West Malaysia (Pahang); Indonesia: Sumatra, Maluku Islands, West Papua; Papua New Guinea. Remarks. Our specimens correspond well to the comprehensive description and drawings of Lewis (2014: 400) and can be readily recognized by the specific shape of the multi-dentated forcipular tooth-plates (Figs 13, 14). They differ insignificantly in having 22 (vs 21) antennomeres, of which 2.3– 2.7 (vs 2.3) basal ones with few long setae, complete paramedian sutures at tergites 4–20 (vs 6–20) and 1 additional dorsal (subapical) spine of coxopleural process (Fig. 15). The New Guinean specimens are also considerably larger reaching a length of 68–69 mm (spm 1). It should also be noted that the studied specimens have tergites (11)13–20 with 9 well-recognizable keels (Fig. 16), latter being replaced in the Vietnamese and Malaysian exemplars by a single weakly developed medial keel. The degree of development of the tergal keels seems to vary quite widely in subgenus Parotostigmus (Schileyko, 2014: 177). As for Otostigmus s.str. Lewis (2007, 2010) regarded these structures as widely variable intraspecifically—from well-developed to nearly absent; for example Lewis (2007) noted that some exemplars of O. ( O. ) orientalis (which is type-species of the genus) have these keels but others lack them. Thus, the presence of tergal keels is a species-specific character for some species (eg, O. scaber Porat, 1876, O. amballae Chamberlin, 1913, O. orientalis ), but varies significantly in others (eg, O. multidens ). All studied specimens have spiracles with well-developed and deep atrium, spiracles of segment 3 are quite narrow (Fig. 17); similar conditions are found in the Vietnamese exemplars, too. Otostigmus telus was described by Chamberlin (1939) from Pionierbivak at Mamberamo river (Indonesia, Papua Province) on the basis of a single adult(?) (48 mm long) specimen. Its short and meager description lacks drawings and important detail (eg, information about the structure of forcipular tooth-plates). However, Chamberlin stated that O. telus is “close to O. loriae [= O. multidens ] Silvestri”. Lewis (2014: 408) considered this species as nomen dubium although in Bonato et al. (2016) it is listed among the valid species. Since we haven’t examined the type specimen and given its poor morphological diagnosis it is not included in our List of Papuan species. : Published as part of Schileyko, Arkady A. & Stoev, Pavel E., 2016, Scolopendromorpha of New Guinea and adjacent islands (Myriapoda, Chilopoda), pp. 247-280 in Zootaxa 4147 (3) on pages 253-255, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4147.3.3, http://zenodo.org/record/264843 : {"references": ["Haase, E. (1887) Die Indisch-Australischen Myriopoden. 1. Chilopoden. Abhandlungen und Berichte des Koniglichen zoologischen und anthropologisch-ethnographischen Museum zu Dresden, 4, 1 - 118.", "Attems, C. (1930) Myriopoda. 2. Scolopendromorpha. Das Tierreich 54. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, pp. 1 - 308.", "Schileyko, A. (1995) Scolopendromorph centipedes of Vietnam (Chilopoda Scolopendromorpha) Part 2. Arthropoda Selecta, 4 (2), 73 - 87.", "Schileyko, A. (2007) The scolopendromorph centipedes (Chilopoda) of Vietnam, with contributions to the faunas of Cambodia and Laos. Part 3. Arthropoda Selecta, 16 (2), 71 - 95.", "Schileyko, A. (2014) A contribution to the centipede fauna of Venezuela (Chilopoda: Scolopendromorpha). Zootaxa, 3821 (1), 151 - 192. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3821.2.1", "Chamberlin, R. V. (1939) On a collection of Chilopods from the East Indies. Bulletin of the University of Utah, 29 Biol. series 15, 1 - 19.", "Bonato, L., Chagas Junior, A., Edgecombe, G., Lewis J., Minelli A., Pereira L., Shelley, R., Stoev, P. & Zapparoli, M. (2016) ChiloBase 2.0 - A World Catalogue of Centipedes (Chilopoda). Available from: http: // chilobase. biologia. unipd. it (Accessed 2 Aug. 2016)"]} Text Triton Bay DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Triton ENVELOPE(-55.615,-55.615,49.517,49.517) Triton Bay ENVELOPE(-92.384,-92.384,76.602,76.602)