Trigoniulus corallinus Synanthropic 1847

42. Trigoniulus corallinus (Gervais, 1847) Iulus corallinus Gervais in Eydoux and Souleyet, 1841: 275 (D). Iulus corallinus Gervais, 1847: 171 (D). Spirobolus rugosus Voges, 1878: 181 (D), synonymized by Shelley and Lehtinen (1999: 1389). Spirobolus phranus— Pocock, 1889: 298 (D, R), synonymized by...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Likhitrakarn, Natdanai, Jirapatrasilp, Parin, Golovatch, Sergei I., Panha, Somsak
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/5032637
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5032637
Description
Summary:42. Trigoniulus corallinus (Gervais, 1847) Iulus corallinus Gervais in Eydoux and Souleyet, 1841: 275 (D). Iulus corallinus Gervais, 1847: 171 (D). Spirobolus rugosus Voges, 1878: 181 (D), synonymized by Shelley and Lehtinen (1999: 1389). Spirobolus phranus— Pocock, 1889: 298 (D, R), synonymized by Shelley and Lehtinen (1999: 1389). Spirobolus goësi — Pocock, 1893: 393 (R, M), synonymized by Shelley and Lehtinen (1999: 1389). Trigoniulus goësi — Pocock, 1896: 352 (M). Trigoniulus lumbricinus — Golovatch and Korsós, 1990: 32 (D, R). Trigoniulus corallinus — Shelley and Lehtinen, 1999: 1389 (L, M); Jeekel, 2002: 35 (M); Jeekel, 2001c: 72 (L); Enghoff et al., 2004: 35 (R); Enghoff, 2005: 90 (R); Likhitrakarn et al., 2015a: 179 (R). New material: 3 males, 1 female (CUMZ), Myanmar, Mandalay Region, Mandalay District, Apache Cement Factory, 20˚52′03″N, 96˚23′30″E, 358 m a.s.l., 0 7.10.2016, leg. C. Sutcharit, W. Siriwut and R. Srisonchai. Records from Myanmar: North Chin Hills; Sagaing Division (Sagaing Region) (Shelley and Lehtinen 1999); Rangoon (Voges 1878; Golovatch and Korsós 1990); Pyinmana, north of Tungoo; Tharrawaw on Irrawaddy; Rangoon; Moulmein; southern Tenasserim; Great Coco Island, Andamans; (Teike Kyee) Taikkyi (Pegu); Malewoon (Pocock 1893); King Island; Owen Island (Pocock 1889). The male lectotype of Iulus corallinus and one female and two juvenile paralectotypes, all from the Mauritius Island, Indian Ocean, are kept in the Paris Museum (Shelley and Lehtinen 1999). Remarks. This is a pantropical anthropochore species very common even on remote islands (Shelley and Lehtinen 1999; Jeekel 2001c). It seems to be native to Southeast Asia, most likely interior Myanmar and Thailand (Shelley and Lehtinen 1999). Authorship and date of the original description has recently been discussed in Jeekel, 2002. Published as part of Likhitrakarn, Natdanai, Jirapatrasilp, Parin, Golovatch, Sergei I. & Panha, Somsak, 2017, A checklist of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of Myanmar, with an updated list of Leonardo Fea's ...