Published December 10, 2025 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Cernethia dysmica Mesibov, 2025, sp. nov.

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Ulverstone, Tasmania, Australia

Description

Cernethia dysmica sp. nov.

Figs 8, 15 B

Type material.

Holotype. Male, Kosciuszko National Park (NSW), 0.34 km W of summit of Mt Guthrie, site HS 39-C-L 2, -36.4280, 148.3334 ± 25 m, 1880 m, 2025-02 - 09, coll. Nicholas Porch and Aidan Fitt, 1 m 2 litter sample from shrubby subalpine snow gum woodland, NMV K 16501. Paratypes. 1 M, 5 F, 11 J, same details, NMV K 16502; 2 M, 1 F, same details but 0.31 km W by N of summit of Mt Guthrie, site HS 39-C-L 1, -36.4275, 148.3338 ± 25 m, 1875 m, NMV K 15990.

Additional material.

2 M, 6 F, 10 J from four other sites. See Suppl. material 1 for details.

Diagnosis.

Solenomere with medial portion directed anteromedially in Cernethia dysmica sp. nov., directed distally in C. inopinata; small, finger-like, posterobasally directed process near telopodite division in C. inopinata lacking in C. dysmica sp. nov. Medial process of telopodite more or less straight in C. inopinata, sinuous in C. dysmica sp. nov.

Description.

Males and females as for C. inopinata, including colour pattern in alcohol (Fig. 8 A); length ca 14–15 mm. Gonopod telopodite (Fig. 8 B left, C) erect, subcylindrical, tapering from base, divided at ca 1 / 2 telopodite height into mediolaterally flattened, lateral solenomere and medial branch. Solenomere divided near apex; lateral portion carrying prostatic groove, medial portion short, finger-like, directed anteromedially; lateral portion with very small spine-like process directed posterolaterally, sometimes broken off; solenomere tip rounded and slightly expanded posteriorly. Medial branch of telopodite flattened mediolaterally, directed distolaterally, then sinuously curving distomedially, with small tooth on anterior edge at ca 1 / 3 branch height; medial branch terminating just distal to solenomere tip. Prostatic groove on medial surface of telopodite, running between telopodite branches and following solenomere to tip.

Female a little shorter than male, stouter and with thinner legs; epigynum elevated medially; cyphopods not examined.

Distribution.

Collected in subalpine woodland at 1590 to 1880 m, at several localities from Dead Horse Gap to Rennix Gap in Kosciuszko National Park, NSW, a linear range of ca 20 km (Fig. 15 B).

Name.

Adjective from Greek dysmikos, “ western ”. This species was found west of the type locality for C. inopinata.

Remarks.

The two Cernethia species are very similar and can only be distinguished by inspection of the gonopod telopodite of a mature male. Like C. inopinata, C. dysmica sp. nov. has a powerful defensive secretion whose smell persists in alcohol-preserved material.

Notes

Published as part of Mesibov, Robert, 2025, Dalodesmid millipedes from alpine and subalpine habitats in New South Wales and Victoria, Australia (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Dalodesmidae), pp. 303-333 in ZooKeys 1262 on pages 303-333, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1262.176273

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
NMV
Material sample ID
NMV K 15990 , NMV K 16501 , NMV K 16502
Event date
2025-09-02
Verbatim event date
2025-09-02
Scientific name authorship
Mesibov
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Polydesmida
Family
Dalodesmidae
Genus
Cernethia
Species
dysmica
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Type status
holotype , paratype
Taxonomic concept label
Cernethia dysmica Mesibov, 2025