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Filling a gap in the distribution of Taulidesmella tabatinga (Polydesmida, Pyrgodesmidae): a new record from the upper Amazon River, Brazil

ABSTRACT

The millipede species Taulidesmella tabatinga is known from the border of Brazil with Peru and Colombia, Iquitos (Peru), and environs of Manaus (Brazil). Based on freshly collected material during the rainy season in 2014 along the Amazon River upriver from its confluence with the Negro River, we report a new record of T. tabatinga in floodplain forests in the municipality of Alvarães, Amazonas state (Brazil), filling a gap of 1,000 km between its previously known occurrence points. This record indicates that T. tabatinga is likely widespread along both margins of the upper Amazon River, mostly associated with tree trunks and litter of riparian and floodplain forests.

KEYWORDS:
Amazon rainforest; Neotropics; flooplain forest; Diplopoda

RESUMO

A espécie de Diplopoda Taulidesmella tabatinga é conhecida apenas da região de fronteira entre o Brasil com Peru e Colômbia, Iquitos (Peru), e arredores de Manaus (Brasil). Com base em material coletado recentemente durante a estação chuvosa em 2014 ao longo do Rio Amazonas a montante da confluência com o Rio Negro, nós reportamos um novo registro para T. tabatinga em florestas de várzea no município de Alvarães, Amazonas, preenchendo uma lacuna de 1000 km entre seus pontos de ocorrência previamente conhecidos. Este novo registro indica que T. tabatinga provavelmente é amplamente distribuída ao longo de ambas margens do alto do Rio Amazonas, principalmente associada a troncos de árvores e serapilheira de matas ciliares e inundáveis.

PALAVRAS-CHAVE:
floresta amazônica; Neotrópico; floresta inundável; Diplopoda

The millipede family Pyrgodesmidae is distributed in tropical regions, and marginally in Europe, northern Africa, southern USA, Japan, Taiwan, and central China (Enghoff et al. 2015Enghoff, H.; Golovatch, S.I.; Short, M.; Stoev, P.; Wesener, T. 2015. Diplopoda -taxonomic overview. In: Minelli, A. (Ed.). Treatise on Zoology - Anatomy, Taxonomy, Biology. The Myriapoda v. 2. Leiden & Boston, Brill, p.363-453.). The family is composed of nearly 170 genera, mostly monotypic, and 400 species (Hoffman 1980Hoffman, R.L. 1980. Classification of the Diplopoda. Múseum d‘Histoire Naturelle, Genève, 239p.; Enghoff et al. 2015). In Brazil, the highest species richness is found in the southeast region, mainly in the states of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro (Schubart 1944Schubart, O. 1944. Os Diplopodos de Pirassununga. Acta Zoologica Lilloana, 2: 321-440., 1945Schubart, O. 1945. Os Proterospermophora do Distrito Federal (Myriapoda, Diplopoda). Arquivos do Museu Nacional, 38: 1-156.; Silvestri 1948Silvestri, F. 1948. Contributo alla conoscenza dei Diplopodi termitofili dell’America meridionale. Bollettino del Laboratorio di Entomologia Agraria “Filippo Silvestri”, 8: 1-32.). In northern Brazil, they are known mainly from the environs of Manaus, state of Amazonas (Hoffman 1985Hoffman, R.L. 1985. A new milliped of the genus Gonographis from an inundation forest near Manaus, Brazil (Pyrgodesmidae). Amazoniana , 9: 243-245.; Golovatch 1996Golovatch, S.I. 1996. Two new and one little-known species of the millipede family Pyrgodesmidae from near Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda: Polydesmida). Amazoniana, 14: 109-120., 1997Golovatch, S.I. 1997. One some further Neotropical Pyrgodesmidae, partly from the environs of Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda, Polydesmida). Amazoniana, 14: 323-334., 1999Golovatch, S.I. 1999. On six new and some older Pyrgodesmidae from the environs of Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda, Polydesmida). Amazoniana, 15: 221-223., 2001Golovatch, S.I. 2001. Two new polydesmoid millipedes from a whitesand forest area near Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda, Polydesmida: Pyrgodesmidae, Fuhrmannodesmidae). Arthropoda Selecta, 10: 27-30.; Golovatch and Adis 1998; Golovatch and Sierwald 2001Golovatch, S.I.; Sierwald, P. 2001. Review of the millipede genus Poratia Cook & Cook, 1894 (Diplopoda: Polydesmida: Pyrgodesmidae). Arthropoda Selecta, 9: 181-192.). The diversity and richness of the family in the Neotropics are still poorly known, primarily due to the scarcity of specialists in the group and lack of sampling.

The genus TaulidesmellaKraus, 1959Kraus, O. 1959. Myriapoden aus Peru, VII. Senckenbergiana Biologica, 40: 191-208. is a pyrgodesmid endemic to the Neotropical region characterized by the absence of ozopores, 20 body rings in adults, and males with gonopods deeply bipartite and telopodite suberect (see Figure 31 in Kraus 1959; Figure 9 in Golovatch and Adis 1998Golovatch, S.I.; Adis, J. 1998. Description of Taulidesmella tabatinga n.sp. (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Pyrgodesmidae) from Amazon River floodplains, with notes on its distribution and ecology. Amazoniana, 15: 57-66.). To date, the genus is known from its type species, T. chanchamayo Kraus, 1959, collected in the Andean region of Peru (Kraus 1959), and T. tabatinga Golovatch and Adis, 1998, known from Tabatinga, the environs of Manaus (Brazil), and Iquitos (Peru). Despite the scarce occurrence records of the genus, the biology and ecology of T. tabatinga is relatively well documented. Adults of this species living in floodplain forests can climb tree trunks right before inundation events, aggregating in groups of around 200 specimens on the bark surface up to 2 m above the water-level during the day. The species shows physiological alterations related to flood tolerance, and foraging adaptations related to the presence of elongated teeth of pectinate lamellae coated by green algae (Golovatch and Adis 1998).

Based on freshly collected material along the Amazon River upriver from its confluence with the Negro River during the rainy season in 2014, we report a new record for T. tabatinga, filling a gap of around 1,000 km between its previously known occurrence points in the Amazon region.

Six specimens (Figures 1 and 2) were collected in the municipality of Alvarães, state of Amazonas, Brazil (Figure 3), in an area of floodplain forest about 20 km from the urban center of Tefé. The material examined is deposited in the zoological collection of Instituto Butantan, São Paulo, Brazil (IBSP). The specimens were identified according to the description provided by Golovatch and Adis (1998Golovatch, S.I.; Adis, J. 1998. Description of Taulidesmella tabatinga n.sp. (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Pyrgodesmidae) from Amazon River floodplains, with notes on its distribution and ecology. Amazoniana, 15: 57-66.). Photographs were taken with a Leica DFC 500 digital camera mounted on a Leica MZ16A stereomicroscope at IBSP (São Paulo, Brazil). Focus-stacked images were composed with Leica Application Suite (ver. 2.5.0, Leica Microsystems, Canton de Saint-Gall, Switzerland). The geographical coordinates and ecological remarks were obtained directly from the original label of all the samples. The distribution map was prepared using the software DIVA-GIS 7.5.0 (Hijmans et al. 2001Hijmans, R.J.; Cruz, M.; Rojas, E.; Guarino, L. 2001. DIVA-GIS, Version 1.4. A geographic information system for the management and analysis of genetic resources data. Manual. International Potato Center (CIP), Lima, Peru.) with the locality data provided by the examined material and original description.

Figure 1
Adult female of Taulidesmella tabatinga (IBSP 8296). A - Dorsal view of whole body; B - Anterior region, in ventral view; C - Posterior region, in ventral view; D - Midbody rings, in dorsal view; E - Detail of midbody rings, in dorsal view. Scale bars: A = 1 mm; B, E = 0.3 mm; C-D = 0.5 mm. This figure is in color in the electronic version.

Figure 2
Adult male of Taulidesmella tabatinga (IBSP 8297): A - Ventral view of midbody rings with gonopods fully exposed; B - Detail of gonopods fully exposed; C - Left gonopod, in ectal view; D - Left gonopod, in mesal view. Scale bars: A = 0.5 mm; B = 0.3 mm; C-D = 0.2 mm. This figure is in color in the electronic version.

Figure 3
Distribution map of Taulidesmella tabatinga records in the Amazon region. The red triangles refer to the previously known records and the yellow star to the new record. This figure is in color in the electronic version.

Taulidesmella tabatinga Golovatch & Adis, 1998Golovatch, S.I.; Adis, J. 1998. Description of Taulidesmella tabatinga n.sp. (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Pyrgodesmidae) from Amazon River floodplains, with notes on its distribution and ecology. Amazoniana, 15: 57-66.

New distributional record. BRAZIL: Amazonas: Alvarães, trilha do Paracuúba, Comunidade Jarauá (02°50’02.5’’S, 65°02’42.8’’W), 04-11/iv/2014, C.A. Rheims, R.Y. Lemos, J. Cabra-García and R.P. Indicatti coll., ♂ (IBSP 8287); 3♂♂ 2♀♀ (IBSP 8296).

Descriptive notes. Description here presented based on the examined specimens to illustrate morphological features. Measurements: length ca. 13-14 mm, width of midbody rings 3.2 mm. Coloration (long-preserved in 70% ethanol): body dark grey to blackish, head and antennae blackish, legs faded (Figures 1-2). Head: Head circular, labral region moderately setose, vertex microgranulate. Interantennal isthmus nearly twice wider than diameter of antennal socket (Figure 1b); antennae moderately subclavate, antennomere 5 longer and thicker. Body rings: collum flabellate, with 12 lobes, completely covering the head from above (Figure 1a, b); slightly tuberculate anteriorly, superficially microgranulate dorsally, coating with cerotegument. Metaterga microtuberculate, with three transverse rows of slightly rounded tubercules, coating with cerotegument; paraterga broad, rather irregularly tuberculate, with three moderately incised lobulations (Figure 1d, e). Last body ring projected caudad beyond tergal distal region. Ozopore absent. Epiproct short, fully exposed in dorsal view, directed ventrocaudally; hypoproct broad, subtriangular, with 1+1 strong, widely separated paramedian knobs (Figure 1c). Legs invisible from above; unmodified, relatively long, slender. Gonopods: gonopodal aperture somewhat transversely oval (Figure 2a); gonopods in situ held subparallel to each other (Figure 2b). Coxite relatively large, subglobose, finely granulate and microsetose. Telopodite suberect, fully exposed distally, strongly setose on prefemoral region. Acropodite slender, deeply bipartite (Figure 2c, d); solenomere S-shaped, mesally lobed, curved mesad; ectal branch longer than solenomere, curved mesad, slightly expanded, with two small lobes distally.

Diagnosis. The species differs from the congeneric T. chanchamayo by having larger and flatter body size, collum with 12 rounded lobes (Figure 1). Males of T. tabatinga are characterized by large and subglobose coxites, finely granulate, microsetose distally; telopodite exposed distally. Acropodite deeply bipartite: solenomere S-shaped, mesally lobed and curved mesad; ectal branch curved mesad, expanded distally (Figure 2c, d).

Distribution. Taulidesmella tabatinga has been reported from environs of Manaus, the border of Brazil with Colombia and Peru (Tabatinga), and Iquitos (Nanay River, Peru) (Golovatch and Adis 1998Golovatch, S.I.; Adis, J. 1998. Description of Taulidesmella tabatinga n.sp. (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Pyrgodesmidae) from Amazon River floodplains, with notes on its distribution and ecology. Amazoniana, 15: 57-66.). The new record from Alvarães fills a gap of distributional range by approximately 1,000 km (in a straight line) between the occurrence points of Tabatinga and Manaus, along the floodplain forests of the upper and central Amazon River (Figure 3). The record reported in here indicates that T. tabatinga is likely widespread along both margins of the upper Amazon River, as suggested by Golovatch and Adis (1998). Further surveys are likely to reveal the frequency of occurrence of this and other species of Taulidesmella in the region.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to the collectors of the sampled specimens. Special thanks to the reviewers and the editor-in-chief for their constructive comments which improved the quality of this manuscript. This study was partially supported by Vale S.A. LFMI was supported by a grant (n° 162977/2020-4) from Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq); RSB was supported by grant from Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - Brazil (CAPES) (n° 88887.510007/2020-00); ADB was supported by grant CNPq (303903/2019-8). This study was financed in part by CAPES - Finance Code 001.

REFERENCES

  • Enghoff, H.; Golovatch, S.I.; Short, M.; Stoev, P.; Wesener, T. 2015. Diplopoda -taxonomic overview. In: Minelli, A. (Ed.). Treatise on Zoology - Anatomy, Taxonomy, Biology. The Myriapoda v. 2. Leiden & Boston, Brill, p.363-453.
  • Golovatch, S.I. 1996. Two new and one little-known species of the millipede family Pyrgodesmidae from near Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda: Polydesmida). Amazoniana, 14: 109-120.
  • Golovatch, S.I. 1997. One some further Neotropical Pyrgodesmidae, partly from the environs of Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda, Polydesmida). Amazoniana, 14: 323-334.
  • Golovatch, S.I. 1999. On six new and some older Pyrgodesmidae from the environs of Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda, Polydesmida). Amazoniana, 15: 221-223.
  • Golovatch, S.I. 2001. Two new polydesmoid millipedes from a whitesand forest area near Manaus, Central Amazonia, Brazil (Diplopoda, Polydesmida: Pyrgodesmidae, Fuhrmannodesmidae). Arthropoda Selecta, 10: 27-30.
  • Golovatch, S.I.; Adis, J. 1998. Description of Taulidesmella tabatinga n.sp. (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Pyrgodesmidae) from Amazon River floodplains, with notes on its distribution and ecology. Amazoniana, 15: 57-66.
  • Golovatch, S.I.; Sierwald, P. 2001. Review of the millipede genus Poratia Cook & Cook, 1894 (Diplopoda: Polydesmida: Pyrgodesmidae). Arthropoda Selecta, 9: 181-192.
  • Hijmans, R.J.; Cruz, M.; Rojas, E.; Guarino, L. 2001. DIVA-GIS, Version 1.4. A geographic information system for the management and analysis of genetic resources data Manual. International Potato Center (CIP), Lima, Peru.
  • Hoffman, R.L. 1980. Classification of the Diplopoda Múseum d‘Histoire Naturelle, Genève, 239p.
  • Hoffman, R.L. 1985. A new milliped of the genus Gonographis from an inundation forest near Manaus, Brazil (Pyrgodesmidae). Amazoniana , 9: 243-245.
  • Kraus, O. 1959. Myriapoden aus Peru, VII. Senckenbergiana Biologica, 40: 191-208.
  • Schubart, O. 1944. Os Diplopodos de Pirassununga. Acta Zoologica Lilloana, 2: 321-440.
  • Schubart, O. 1945. Os Proterospermophora do Distrito Federal (Myriapoda, Diplopoda). Arquivos do Museu Nacional, 38: 1-156.
  • Silvestri, F. 1948. Contributo alla conoscenza dei Diplopodi termitofili dell’America meridionale. Bollettino del Laboratorio di Entomologia Agraria “Filippo Silvestri”, 8: 1-32.
  • CITE AS:

    Iniesta, L.F.M.; Bouzan, R.S.; Souza, C.A.R.; Brescovit, A.D. 2022. Filling a gap in the distribution of Taulidesmella tabatinga (Polydesmida, Pyrgodesmidae): a new record from the upper Amazon River, Brazil. Acta Amazonica 52: 162-165.

Edited by

ASSOCIATE EDITOR:

Pitágoras C. Bispo

Data availability

Data citations

Hijmans, R.J.; Cruz, M.; Rojas, E.; Guarino, L. 2001. DIVA-GIS, Version 1.4. A geographic information system for the management and analysis of genetic resources data Manual. International Potato Center (CIP), Lima, Peru.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    04 July 2022
  • Date of issue
    Apr-Jun 2022

History

  • Received
    10 Sept 2021
  • Accepted
    28 Feb 2022
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