Published July 6, 2021 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Zoosphaerium ambatovaky Wesener & Sagorny 2021, sp. nov.

  • 1. Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig (ZFMK), Leibniz Institute for Animal Biodiversity, Section Myriapoda, Adenauerallee 160, D- 53113 Bonn, Germany.
  • 2. Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig (ZFMK), Leibniz Institute for Animal Biodiversity, Section Myriapoda, Adenauerallee 160, D- 53113 Bonn, Germany. & University of Bonn, Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Ecology, D- 53121 Bonn, Germany.

Description

Zoosphaerium ambatovaky sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 42C1A931-D533-4FF6-B76A-CAB8F7E1461D

Figs 2C, 3, 5C, 7

Diagnosis

The presence of only 7 or 8 ventral spines on the walking legs in Z. ambatovaky sp. nov., especially in combination with a glossy green color, two stridulation ribs on the male harp and more than 10 apical cones on the antenna, is only shared with Z. muscorum Wesener & Bespalova, 2010. The new species differs from Z. muscorum in the presence of an apical spine on the third leg pair (absent in Z. muscorum), the movable finger of the posterior telopod being 2.5 times as long as wide (2 times as long as wide in Z. muscorum) and the second locking carina of the anal shield being 2–3 times as long as the first (4–5 times as long as the first in Z. muscorum).

Etymology

‘Ambatovaky’, noun in apposition, after the forest of Ambatovaky, the only known locality for this species (Fig. 3).

Material examined

Holotype MADAGASCAR – Toamasina • ♂; Rés. Speciale Ambatovaky, Sandrangato River; 16°46′22″ S, 49°15′56″ E; alt. 450 m; rainforest; 20 Feb. 2010; B.L. Fisher et al. leg.; coll. no. BLF24311; CASENT 9068294 /1.

Description

Male

BODY LENGTH. Holotype male: length ca 44 mm, width of thoracic shield 23.1 mm, of tergite 5 24.4 mm (widest), height of thoracic shield 14.1 mm (highest).

COLORATION. Some discoloration may have occurred because of preservation in ethanol. Head, collum, thoracic shield and tergites shiny green with a conspicuous narrow light posterior margin (Fig. 2C). Anal shield of a different color, jade-like green. Antennae green, legs basally dark green, apically brownish.

HEAD. Eyes with> 95 ommatidia. Antennae long, with cylindrical joints, protruding posteriorly to leg pair 4. Length of antennomeres 1>2> 3=4= 5<6. A shallow groove present on antennomere 1. Male apical disc with 45/35 apical sensory cones. Organ of Tömösváry located in antennal groove.

GNATHOCHILARIUM AND MANDIBLE. Not dissected.

STIGMATIC PLATES. First stigmatic plate triangular, apex well rounded, nearly as wide as at base, slightly turned towards coxa. Hair most abundant on apical margin, very few hairs on basal and lateral margins (Fig. 7C).

PLEURITES. First pleurite well-rounded, not projecting.

COLLUM. Glabrous.

THORACIC SHIELD. Smooth and glabrous, without protuberances.

TERGITES. Surface glabrous and shiny, lacking small pits. Tips of paratergites of midbody tergites projecting posteriorly.

ENDOTERGUM. Inner section with numerous short triangular spines and longer setae. Middle area above spines with a single row of sparse circular cuticular impressions slightly varying in size. Apically with 1–2 rows of short marginal bristles, protruding to ⅔ of distance of tergite margin (Fig. 5C). Bristles with numerous small spines.

ANAL SHIELD. Male anal shield bell-shaped, without hairs, glabrous. Underside with two black locking carinae, posterior one 2–3 times as long as anterior one, both located close to anal shield margin.

LEGS. Leg 1 with 4 ventral spines, leg 2 with 6 or 7, leg 3 with 6. First two leg pairs without an apical spine, spine present on leg 3. Leg pairs 4–21 with 7 or 8 ventral spines and an apical spine. On leg 9, femur 2 and tarsus 4.5 times as long as wide. All podomeres with setae (Fig.).

Male sexual characters

GONOPORE. Covered with a single undivided, rounded membranous plate, covering ¼ of surface of coxa. Gonopore located on basal half of joint (Fig. 7B).

ANTERIOR TELOPODS. Harp with two stridulation ribs, one long and well pronounced rib located laterally of a less pronounced and shorter mesal rib (Fig. 7D). First podomere with only a few setae, restricted to apical parts of lateral margins, 1.5 times as wide as long. Process of second podomere nearly as long as basal ⅔ of third podomere, not visible in anterior view, and with an apical mound of a few sclerotized spots juxtaposed to third podomere (Fig. 7E–F). Third podomere with an apical brown sclerotized spot and a field of elevated sclerotized spots at inner margin below brown spot; two small spines located below sclerotized spot (Fig. 7F); depression lateral to field of spots with one small sclerotized spine, lateral margin with up to 6 crenulated teeth (Fig. 7E–F). Second podomere densely setose, third podomere with setae mainly apically and laterally.

POSTERIOR TELOPODS. Movable finger (podomere 3) 2.5 times as long as wide, weakly curved towards immovable finger (process of podomere 2). Shallowly hollowed-out inner margin with five sclerotized spines, three positioned apically and two in middle of cavity next to small membranous lobe. Additional sclerotized spine at base of movable finger. Posterior aspect with ca 12 small crenulated teeth (Fig. 7H). Immovable finger thinner and shorter than movable finger, curved towards the latter. Sclerotized spine located on anterior side near base of immovable finger. Inner part of immovable finger apically covered with a few sclerotized spots (Fig. 7I). Movable finger glabrous on both sides except for a few hairs basolaterally. Second podomere in posterior view setose, in anterior view with a few setae on finger.

Female

Unknown.

Distribution and ecology

Zoosphaerium ambatovaky sp. nov. is currently known only from the type locality, a lowland rainforest close to the Ille Sainte Marie (Fig. 3). This species seems to be closely related to Z. muscorum from the montane forest of Anjanaharibe-Sud, the only species with which it shares the presence of only 7 or 8 ventral spines on the walking legs, as well as a glossy green color, two stridulation ribs on the male harp and more than 10 apical cones on the antenna. A female Zoosphaerium from the same forest (CASENT 9068291B) belongs to a different species. The forest of Ambatovaky is isolated and shrinking rapidly (Rakotondrasoa et al. 2017).

Notes

Published as part of Wesener, Thomas & Sagorny, Christina, 2021, Seven new giant pill-millipede species and numerous new records of the genus Zoosphaerium from Madagascar (Diplopoda, Sphaerotheriida, Arthrosphaeridae), pp. 1-48 in European Journal of Taxonomy 758 (1) on pages 21-23, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2021.758.1423, http://zenodo.org/record/5075824

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
CASENT
Event date
2010-02-20
Family
Arthrosphaeridae
Genus
Zoosphaerium
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
CASENT 9068294
Order
Sphaerotheriida
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Wesener & Sagorny
Species
ambatovaky
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2010-02-20
Taxonomic concept label
Zoosphaerium ambatovaky Wesener & Sagorny, 2021

References

  • Wesener T., Bespalova I. & Sierwald P. 2010 b. Madagascar's living giants: discovery of five new species of endemic giant pill-millipedes from Madagascar (Diplopoda: Sphaerotheriida: Arthrosphaeridae: Zoosphaerium). African Invertebrates 51 (1): 133 - 161.
  • Rakotondrasoa L. O., Malaisse F. & Bogaert J. 2017. Modelisation de la dynamique du paysage forestier de la Reserve Speciale d'Ambatovaky (Nord-Est de Madagascar). Tropicultura 35 (4): 312 - 324.