Published May 29, 2023 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Foveacorpus parvus Bartel & Dunlop & Giribet 2023, sp. nov.

Description

Species Foveacorpus parvus sp. nov.

Fig. 13

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: BC6852F1-9D85-46BF-9B15-EFF0F7230F9A

Holotype. Specimen GPIH05130, ex coll. Patrick Müller, BUB3634.

Type-locality. Myanmar, Hukawng Valley; Burmese amber, Upper Cretaceous (Lower Cenomanian)

Etymology. The Latin adjective “parvus, -a, -um” (= small) refers to the small size of this species.

Diagnosis. Distinct from Foveacorpus cretaceus sp. nov. by its more pear-shaped body, smaller body size (less than 1mm), smaller tegumental pits and more bulbous ozophores.

Description. Body pear-shaped, subtriangular at anterior end and completely covered with small pits (diameter 0.011*); total L 0.82, maximum prosomal W behind ozophores 0.39, maximum opisthosomal W 0.48. Rounded ozophores probably in type 1 position. Distal part of left ozophore appearing bulbous (Fig. 13A, C). L of ozophores 0.09, W at base 0.10, distance between base of ozophores 0.26. Eyes equivocal. Chelicerae moderately long, finely granular on proximal segment; dentition equivocal; basal segment L 0.20, median segment L?, distal segment L?. Pedipalps small and thin; pedipalp length: tr?, fe 0.11, pa 0.03, ti 0.05, ta?. Legs relatively short, robust and granular; tarsus I not subdivided, bearing a single smooth claw and numerous setae; leg length: I tr 0.10, fe 0.19, pa 0.07*, ti 0.09, mt 0.10, ta 0.12, total 0.67; II tr?, fe 0.18, pa 0.06, ti?, mt?, ta?; III tr?, fe?, pa 0.10, ti 0.10, mt?, ta?; IV tr?, fe 0.16, pa 0.10, ti 0.10, mt 0.07, ta?. Ventral side of opisthosoma also covered with numerous small pits. Possible spiracles indicated by a few small denticles situated posterior to coxa IV. Anal plate rounded, with few small pits and with a corona analis, W 0.12, L 0.07 (Fig. 13B, D).

Remarks. The developmental stage of the holotype of Foveacorpus parvus sp. nov. (GPIH05130; Fig. 13A– D) is difficult to assess because important characters like the gonostome or tarsus IV are obscured. Due to its strong sclerotization and dark colouration the fossil presumably is an adult. Nevertheless, this is another interesting specimen whose body is completely covered with small pits similar to those observed in the holotype of Foveacorpus cretaceus sp. nov. (GPIH05129; see above). Many of these pits seem to be open and originally preserved on the ventral side of the body (Fig. 13B). Therefore we again exclude the possibility of an artefact. Additionally, both congeneric specimens possess a corona analis and granular legs (Fig. 13B, D cf. Fig. 11D). A modified right leg III as in specimen GPIH05129 cannot be observed in this fossil. Furthermore, GPIH05130 is smaller, features more bulbous ozophores and a more subtriangular anterior margin of the dorsal scutum. Based on these differences GPIH05130 is associated with a different new species.

Notes

Published as part of Bartel, Christian, Dunlop, Jason A. & Giribet, Gonzalo, 2023, An unexpected diversity of Cyphophthalmi (Arachnida: Opiliones) in Upper Cretaceous Burmese amber, pp. 421-445 in Zootaxa 5296 (3) on pages 437-439, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5296.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record/7984131

Files

Files (3.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:a22d26be84983177b95d00c2d6c047d6
3.3 kB Download

System files (17.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:c0d26d80fc58c019fb113f4fa3e5e2e6
17.1 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

Biodiversity

Collection code
GPIH
Material sample ID
GPIH05130
Scientific name authorship
Bartel & Dunlop & Giribet
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Opiliones
Family
Stylocellidae
Genus
Foveacorpus
Species
parvus
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Type status
holotype
Taxonomic concept label
Foveacorpus parvus Bartel, Dunlop & Giribet, 2023