Published December 31, 2016 | Version v1
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Charmus Karsch 1879

Description

Genus Charmus Karsch, 1879

(Figs. 12, 41–43, 47–119, 194, 423–426, 548, Tables 1– 2)

Charmus Karsch, 1879: 104; Kraepelin, 1899: 39; Pocock, 1900: 31–32; Kraepelin, 1913: 131; Vachon, 1982: 79, 81; Tikader & Bastawade, 1983: 140–152, figs. 382–416; Sissom, 1990: 101; Kovařík, 1998: 120; Lourenço, 2000: 295; Kovařík, Soleglad & Fet, 2007: 201; Kovařík, 2009: 31.

= Heterocharmus Pocock, 1892: 46–47,

type species by monotypy Heterocharmus cinctipes Pocock, 1892 (= Charmus laneus Karsch, 1879) (syn. by Kraepelin, 1899: 39; Pocock, 1900: 31).

TYPE SPECIES. Charmus laneus Karsch, 1879

DIAGNOSIS. Small buthids, adults 12 mm (male) – 23.5 mm (female). Sternum type 1, subpentagonal, roughly as wide as long, exhibiting horizontal compression. Pedipalps trichobothrial pattern Aα; femur trichobothrium d 2 located dorsally, patella d 3 dorsal of dorsomedian carina; chela with 3 Eb trichobothria on manus. Movable finger of pedipalp longer than manus. Pectines with or without fulcra. Dentate margin of pedipalp chela movable finger with distinct granules divided into 8–9 linear rows, apical rows of 4–6 granules, and 3 terminal granules. Cheliceral fixed finger armed with two denticles on ventral surface (Fig. 67a). Tergites I –VI granular, with one clearly visible carina. Carapace granular without carinae, anterior edge with epistome present medially. Metasomal segments IV–V punctate without developed carinae. Telson vesicle punctate, without subaculear tooth. Pedipalps, metasoma and telson densely hirsute. Legs III and IV with well developed long tibial spurs, first and second tarsomeres with ventral setae.

NOTE. A remarkable feature of the metasoma and telson of Charmus laneus is the extremely dense pubescence (Figs. 71–73). All segments bear an abundance of fine setae of various lengths emerging from pits containing sockets or perforations in the thickened cuticle. These setae can be divided into at least two types: (1) straight or uniformly curved, non-fluorescent golden setae; and (2) terminally curved, brightly fluorescent, translucent setae with intense pinpoint fluorescence at the tip (Figs. 6 8–70). Comparing these setae to similar kinds of setae found in other scorpions, we suggest that type 1 setae may be mechanoreceptive and tactile, and type 2 setae may be chemoreceptive in function. Putative chemotactic microsetae in other scorpions are typically also fluorescent and exhibit a similar, apically curved shape, but are usually quite short compared to the long fluorescent setae seen here. A similar densely hirsute metasoma is also present in C. saradieli sp. n. and was also described in the other two known members of the genus, C. indicus Hirst, 1 915 and C. singhagadensis Tikader et Bastawade, 1983 (Sreenivasa Reddy, 1966: 247–256; Tikader & Bastawade, 1983: 140–152). A similar, probably homologous development of dense setation is also observed in the closely related genus Thaicharmus (Kovařík, 1995, 2013; Mirza et. al., 2016). This massive concentration of multimodal sensory input indicates that Charmus is another example of the evolution of the metasoma into a specialized sensory organ. As noted previously, this has apparently occurred independently in several different buthid lineages, e.g. Butheoloides Hirst, 1925; Isometroides Keyserling, 1885; Karasbergia Hewitt, 1914; Microbuthus Kraepelin, 1898; Orthochirus Karsch, 1892; etc. (E. Fet et al., 2003; Lourenço, 2001, 2003; Lowe, 2010; Prendini, 2004).

DISTRIBUTION. India, Sri Lanka.

Notes

Published as part of Kovařík, František, Lowe, Graeme, Ranawana, Kithsiri B., Hoferek, David & Š, V. A., 2016, Scorpions of Sri Lanka (Scorpiones Buthidae, Chaerilidae, Scorpionidae) with description of four new species of the genera Charmus Karsch, 1879 and Reddyanus Vachon, 1972, stat n, pp. 1-133 in Euscorpius 220 on pages 17-20, DOI: 10.18590/euscorpius.2016.vol2016.iss220.1, http://zenodo.org/record/7124466

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Scientific name authorship
Karsch
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Scorpiones
Family
Buthidae
Genus
Charmus
Taxon rank
genus
Taxonomic concept label
Charmus Karsch, 1879 sec. Kovařík, Lowe, Ranawana, Hoferek & Š, 2016

References

  • KARSCH, F. 1879. Skorpionologische Beitrage I. and II. Mitteilungen des Munchener Entomologischen Vereins, 3: 6 - 22, 97 - 136.
  • KRAEPELIN, K. 1899. Scorpiones und Pedipalpi. In: F. DAHL (ed.), Das Tierreich. Herausgegeben von der Deutschen Zoologischen Gesellschaft. Berlin: R. Friedlander und Sohn Verlag, 8. Lieferung. 265 pp.
  • POCOCK, R. I. 1900. Arachnida. The fauna of British India, including Ceylon and Burma. Published un- der the authority of the Secretary of State for India in Council. London: W. T. Blandford, xii, 279 pp
  • KRAEPELIN, K. 1913. Neue Beitrage zur Systematik der Gliederspinnen. III. A. Bemerkungen zur Skorpionenfauna Indiens. B. Die Skorpione, Pedipalpen und Solifugen Deutsch - Ostafrikas. Jahrbuch der Hamburgischen Wissenschaftlichen Anstalten, 30: 123 - 196.
  • VACHON, M. 1982. Les scorpions de Sri Lanka (Recherches sur les scorpions appartenant ou deposes au Museum d`Histoire naturelle de Geneve III.). Revue suisse de Zoologie, 89: 77 - 114.
  • TIKADER B. K. & D. B. BASTAWADE. 1983. The Fauna of India: Scorpions. Scorpionida, Arachnida. Vol III. Zoological Survey of India, Calcutta, 668 pp.
  • SISSOM, W. D. 1990. Systematics, biogeography and paleontology. Pp. 64 - 160. In: Polis, G. A. (ed.), The Biology of Scorpions. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 587 pp.
  • KOVARIK, F. 1998. Stiri [Scorpiones]. Publishing House " Madagaskar ", Jihlava (Czech Republic). 175 pp. (in Czech).
  • LOURENCO, W. R. 2000. Taxonomic considerations about the genus Charmus Karsch, 1879 with description of a new species to India (Scorpiones,
  • KOVARIK, F., M. E. SOLEGLAD & V. FET. 2007. A new species of scorpion in the " Charmus " group from India (Scorpiones: Buthidae). Boletin Sociedad Entomologica Aragonesa, 40: 201 - 209.
  • KOVARIK, F. 2009. Illustrated catalog of scorpions. Part I. Introductory remarks; keys to families and genera; subfamily Scorpioninae with keys to Heterometrus and Pandinus species. Clairon Production, Prague, 170 pp.
  • POCOCK, R. I. 1892. Descriptions of two new genera of scorpions, with notes upon some species of Palamnaeus. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 6 (9): 38 - 49.
  • KOVARIK, F. 1995. Review of Scorpionida from Thailand with descriptions of Thaicharmus mahunkai gen. et sp. n. and Lychas krali sp. n. (Buthidae). Acta Societatis Zoologicae Bohemicae, 59: 187 - 207.
  • KOVARIK, F. 2013. Review of Thaicharmus Kovarik, 1995, with description of Thaicharmus indicus sp. n. from India (Scorpiones, Buthidae). Euscorpius, 175: 1 - 9.
  • KARSCH, F. 1892. Arachniden von Ceylon und von Minikoy, gesammelt von den Herren Doctoren P. und F. Sarasin. Berliner Entomologische Zeitschrift, 36 (1891): 267 - 310.
  • FET, E. V., D. NEFF, M. R GRAHAM & V. FET. 2003. Metasoma of Orthochirus (Scorpiones: Buthidae): are scorpions evolving a new sensory organ? Revista Iberica de Aracnologia, 8: 69 - 72.
  • LOURENCO, W. R. 2001. Taxonomic considerations on the genera Butheolus Simon, Nanobuthus Pocock and Neobuthus Hirst (Scorpions, Buthidae) with the description of a new species of Neobuthus from Ethiopia. Pp. 171 - 183. In: I. Prakash (ed.), Ecology of Desert Environments. Jodhpur: Scientific Publishers.
  • LOURENCO, W. R. 2003. Notes on Isometroides vescus (Karsch, 1880) (Scorpiones, Buthidae), an endemic element to Australia. Entomologische Mitteilungen aus dem Zoologischen Museum Hamburg, 14 (167): 105 - 110.
  • LOWE, G. 2010 a. New picobuthoid scorpions (Scorpiones: Buthidae) from Oman. Euscorpius, 93: 1 - 53.
  • PRENDINI, L. 2004. Revision of Karasbergia Hewitt (Scorpiones; Buthidae), a monotypic genus endemic to southern Africa. Journal of Afrotropical Zoology, 1: 77 - 93.