Published May 20, 2020 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Miopsalis dillyi Schmidt & Clouse & Sharma 2020, sp. nov.

  • 1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Madison-Wisconsin, 352 Birge Hall, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA & sschmidt 23 @ wisc. edu
  • 2. Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West at 79 Street, New York City, NY 10024, USA. ronaldmclouse @ gmail. com; hattps: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 2366 - 2536

Description

Miopsalis dillyi sp. nov.

(Figs. 1–4, Tables 1–2)

Types. Male holotype (NMP) from Center for Environmental Development and Recreation (CEDAR), Impalutao, Impasug-ong, Bukidnon Province, Mindanao I., Philippines, 767 m alt. (8.254894°N, 125.035732°E), leg. D. Mohagan, D.J.B. Mohagan, V. Yamba, D.E.M. General, R.M. Clouse, 3 July 2014, from sifted leaf litter. Two male (both dissected for genitalia) and one female paratypes in 96% EtOH (MCZ 154598), same collecting data as for holotype; 1 male mounted on SEM stubs (MCZ 154599), same collecting data as for holotype. One male and 2 female paratypes in 96% EtOH (MCZ 154600) from Center for Environmental Development and Recreation (CEDAR), Impalutao, Impasug-ong, Bukidnon Province, Mindanao I., Philippines, 775 m alt. (8.254933°N, 125.035749°E), leg. D. Mohagan, V. Yamba, R. M. Clouse, 30 June 2014, from sifted leaf litter. One male and 2 female paratypes in 96% EtOH (MHNG) from Center for Environmental Development and Recreation (CEDAR), Impalutao, Impasug-ong, Bukidnon Province, Mindanao I., Philippines, 775 m alt. (8.254933°N, 125.035749°E), leg. D. Mohagan, V. Yamba, R. M. Clouse, 30 June 2014, from sifted leaf litter. One male paratype (1 dissected for genitalia) in 96% EtOH (MCZ 154601) from western slope of Mt. Kitanglad, Lantapan, Kaatoan, Bukidnon Province, Mindanao I., Philippines, 1300 m alt. (8.072258°N, 125.008909°E), leg. A. Mohagan, D. Mohagan, D.J.B. Mohagan, V. Yamba, R. M. Clouse, 1 July 2014, from sifted leaf litter. Two female paratypes (extracted for DNA) in 96% EtOH (MCZ 154602) and 1 female paratype on SEM stubs (MCZ 154603), from western slope of Mt. Kitanglad, Lantapan, Kaa- toan, Bukidnon Province, Mindanao I., Philippines, 1300 m alt. (8.072258°N, 125.008909°E), leg. A. Mohagan, D. Mohagan, D.J.B. Mohagan, V. Yamba, R. M. Clouse, 1 July 2014, from sifted leaf litter.

Additional material studied. Three juveniles (1 extracted for DNA; MCZ) in 96% EtOH from Center for Environmental Development and Recreation (CEDAR), Impalutao, Impasug-ong, Bukidnon Province, Mindanao I., Philippines, 775 m alt. (8.254933° N, 125.035749° E), leg. D. Mohagan, V. Yamba, R. M. Clouse, 30 June 2014, from sifted leaf litter.

Etymology. The specific epithet honors the invertebrate physiologist Geoffrey Fowler Dilly.

Diagnosis. Medium-sized (ca. 3.6 mm) Cyphophthalmi presenting a character combination diagnostic for Miopsalis: distinct eyes, anal gland pore and Rambla’s organ present, distinct sternum, extensive sculpturing on second cheliceral article, nearly parallel ventral opisthosomal sulci, nearly straight posterior margin of gonostome, and coxae II and IV each with distinct meeting points in males. Male also with distinct solea on tarsus I; presence of digiti of the gonopore complex; and arrangement of five ventral microtrichia of spermatopositor, with one proximal microtrichium on ventral midline and four subdistal microtrichia arranged in an arc. Distinguished from congeners by unique combination of medium size, and presence of anal gland pore, eyes, Rambla’s organ, prominent second ventral cheliceral process, and claw-like chelicerae. For example, M. mulu (Shear, 1993) and M. sabah (Shear, 1993) are also medium-sized and have anal gland pores, but they have attenuate chelicerae and no Rambla’s organ; M. gryllospeca (Shear, 1993) has a small Rambla’s organ, claw-like chelicerae, and a large second ventral cheliceral process, but lacks an anal gland pore and is considerably larger (> 5 mm) (see table 1 and figure 19 in Clouse 2012 for further comparison).

Description. Length of holotype (female paratype in parentheses) 3.64 (3.59); maximum body width 1.93 (1.84) at third opisthosomal segment; length/width ratio 1.88 (1.95). Distance between ozopores, 1.67 (1.61) (Fig. 1)

Body oval, dark orange-coloured to reddish brown (in alcohol) depending on incidence of light (Fig. 1). Body almost entirely with a dense tuberculate-microgranulate surface microstructure. Distinct eye lenses anterior to Type I ozophores (Juberthie 1970; see also Giribet 2003) (Fig. 1C, F). Mid-dorsal, longitudinal opisthosomal sulcus absent (male; Fig. 1A) or poorly defined (female; Fig. 1D). Posterior end of body evenly rounded. Coxae of leg II fused to coxae of legs III and IV (Fig. 2A, 2B). Sternum present (Fig. 2A, 2B). Proximal end of coxae I or III of males not meeting along the midline (in females, only coxae II meeting in midline; Fig. 2A, B). Male gonostome semicircular to trapezoidal, with weakly concave posterior edge, without cuticular projections (Fig. 2A). Spiracles C-shaped (Fig. 2A, B). Sternal opisthosomal glands absent. Sternites 8 and 9 and tergite IX free. Tergite IX of male distinctly bilobed. Anal plate of male with indistinct, raised, medial, longitudinal area lacking granulation, with shallow medial groove posteriorly (Fig. 2C, D). Anal gland pore present in male (Fig. 2C).

Chelicerae (Fig. 3A) not of the protruding type (Giribet 2003) and claw-like (Clouse 2012), distal article/median article ratio 0.32 (0.31); widest part of median cheliceral article near the base and with ornamentation concentrated proximally; proximal article with dorsal crest and two distinct ventral processes. Palpal trochanter without ventral process (Fig. 3B). Legs with all metatarsi and tarsi ornamented; claws of all legs smooth (Fig. 3 C–K). Tarsus I with a distinct solea (Fig. 3D, J). Rambla’s organ of male small, oval in shape, in distal portion of tarsus IV adjacent to tarsal claw (Fig. 3I). Adenostyle conspicuous, subtriangular, robust, fringing at the tip; located in proximal half of tarsus (Fig. 3I). Appendage measurements provided in Tables 1–2.

Spermatopositor (Fig. 4), examined in three male paratypes, in dorsal view with eight long microtrichia on each side, their bases separated at midline. Dorsal microtrichia without serration (Fig. 4A). Ventral side with small denticles and five microtrichia, i.e. one proximal microtrichium on the ventral midline and four subdistal microtrichia arranged in an arc (Fig. 4B). Gonopore complex with a pair of long and gracile digiti (Fig. 4C).

Variation. Range of measurements of males (n=4) and females (n=6, in parentheses): Body length 3.48–3.79 (3.59–3.85), maximum width 1.82–1.96 (1.84–1.94).

Distribution. Known only from the two localities provided.

Notes

Published as part of Schmidt, Stephanie M., Clouse, Ronald M. & Sharma, Prashant P., 2020, A new Miopsalis from Mindanao supports a biogeographic umbilicus between Borneo and the southern Philippines (Arachnida: Opiliones: Cyphophthalmi: Stylocellidae), pp. 379-390 in Zootaxa 4779 (3) on pages 381-385, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record/3835431

Files

Files (7.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:409ea58306a013754faf4f74b9082c77
7.0 kB Download

System files (67.5 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:4f7c6ac38cf90d5ded38dcf30c6baf4e
67.5 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
CEDAR , MCZ , MCZ, CEDAR, V, R , MHNG, CEDAR , V, R
Event date
2014-06-30 , 2014-07-01
Family
Stylocellidae
Genus
Miopsalis
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
MCZ 154599 , MCZ 154600 , MCZ 154601 , MCZ 154602 , MCZ 154603
Order
Opiliones
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Schmidt & Clouse & Sharma
Species
dillyi
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
paratype
Verbatim event date
2014-06-30 , 2014-07-01
Taxonomic concept label
Miopsalis dillyi Schmidt, Clouse & Sharma, 2020

References

  • Shear, W. A. (1993) New species in the opilionid genus Stylocellus from Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines (Opiliones, Cyphophthalmi, Stylocellidae). Bulletin of the British Arachnological Society, 9 (6), 174 - 188.
  • Juberthie, C. (1970) Les genres d'opilions Sironinae (Cyphophthalmes). Bulletin du Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, 2 e serie, 41, 1371 - 1390.
  • Giribet, G. (2003) Karripurcellia, a new pettalid genus (Arachnida: Opiliones: Cyphophthalmi) from Western Australia, with a cladistic analysis of the family Pettalidae. Invertebrate Systematics, 17 (3), 387 - 406. https: // doi. org / 10.1071 / IS 02014