<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <title>Otostigmus diringshofeni Bucherl 1969</title> <meta content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" http-equiv="content-type"/> </head> <body> <h2> <i>* Otostigmus diringshofeni</i> Bücherl, 1969</h2> <p> <b>Type locality.</b> São Paulo de Olivença, state of Amazonas.</p> <p> <b>Brazilian published records.</b> None.</p> <p> <b>New records.</b> None.</p> <p> <b>Remarks.</b> <i>Otostigmus diringshofeni</i> was the last species of centipede to be described by Wolfgang Bücherl and the most recently described species of <i>Parotostigmus</i>. In the original description of <i>O. diringshofeni</i>, the type locality was cited as São Paulo, but the label of the holotype states São Paulo de Olivença, northwestern Brazil, near the border of Colombia (Figure 42). This <i>Otostigmus</i> species resembles <i>O. pococki</i> by the rugose dorsal integument, the presence of median longitudinal keel and longitudinal keels on each side of the paramedian sutures on the tergites and a digitiform appendix which emerges from the base in dorsomedian position in the prefemur of the ultimate pair of legs. The shape and length of the digitiform appendix and position of the tuft of hairs are similar to <i>O. rex</i> also, but <i>O. diringshofeni</i> differs from the latter in the absence of paramedian keels on tergites and the presence of two tarsal spurs on first three pairs of legs. Bücherl (1969) stated that <i>O. diringshofeni</i> was related to <i>O. insignis</i>, <i>O. silvestrii</i>, <i>O. lavanus</i> and <i>O. mesethus</i> by the similarity of the digitiform appendix in male of <i>O. diringshofeni</i>, but it was distinct from those by the absence of a distal prolongation of the coxa of legs 19 and 20.</p> </body> </html>