A new , disjunct , diplopod genus from Espirito Santo , Brasil ( Polydesmida : Chelodesmidae )

The new generic and specific names Cryptosolenomeris macrogon are proposed for a large chelodesmoid milliped collected at Linhares, Espírito Santo, Brazil, and characterized particularly by the elongated gonotelopodites lacking torsion and apically recurved into a calyciform shield concealing the solenomere; the typical chelodesmoid prefemoral process appears to be either undeveloped or present in a disjunct position. There are no known close generic relatives in the known Brazilian fauna.


IntRoduCtIon
The following account documents a recently identified new element in the milliped fauna of Espírito Santo, distinguished from all other known genera of the Chelodesmidae by a combination of unusual traits in gonopod structure.It is especially desirable to add this apparently endemic taxon to the diverse and endangered biota of the Atlantic forest region, in so doing calling attention to the hitherto largely neglected millipeds of the coastal mountains between Rio de Janeiro and Bahia.Although the peripheral features of the new animal are generally consonant with various other genera of southeastern Brazil, no attempt is made to suggest tribal relationships owing to the still retarded condition of chelodesmoid classification.
As recently as 1938, the majority of Brazilian chelodesmids (less than 100) were contained in the Virginia Museum of Natural History, Martinsville, Virginia 24112, USA.E-mail: richard.hoffman@vmnh.virginia.gov1.
Volume 49(42):557-562, 2009 single multiformous genus Leptodesmus.Investigations conducted from 1938 to 1962 by Otto Schubart, and since that time by the present author, working with far more extensive material than available to our predecessors, have gradually exposed the actual size and diversity of this family.While substantial progress has been made in the direction of diagnosing homogenous genera and defining some obvious tribal units, probably less than 20% of the native species have been described and even a preliminary classification of the Chelodesmidae is unlikely to be achieved in the near future.While the opportunistic description of individual new taxa is not an ideal solution, publication of the more significant elements seems preferable to suppressing them indefinitely with the loss of useful information.
Name: A neologism derived from the Greek elements kryptos (hidden) + solaenomeron (a grooved part), referring to the concealed position of the gonopod solenomere.
Diagnosis: Body elongate, broadest and with largest paranota on anteriormost segments, paranota of midbody segments reduced in size and widely separated by the minimally inserted prozona, posteriormost segments abruptly reduced in size, 19 th almost entirely telescoped into 18 th and lacking ozopores.Legs long and slender, tibial pads present on 2 nd to 8 th pairs in males; femora of last two pairs elongated and notably curved.Sternum of 5 th segment with large apically indented process between anterior legpair.Gonopod aperture small, oval, not contacting posterior edger of stricture, edges flared upward.Gonopods without median sternal remnant, coxosternal apodemes long and straight, coxae moderately compressed, coxal apodeme large, displaced to dorsolateral side of coxa.Prefemoral region of gonopods small proportionate to length of telopodite, latter long, nearly straight, with incipient torsion (the prostatic groove deflected to ventral surface and not visible in mesal aspect; a long, straight, acuminate accessory process at about midlength on mesal side; telopodite recurved apically, forming a calyciform shield over solenomere which is concealed on the dorsal side, without trace of cingulum or other structural separation into prefemur and acropodite regions.
Species: Only the type species is known.

Distribution:
The genus is known only from the type locality of the single included species, in the Atlantic forest region of southeastern Brazil.10-14 -8.3 4 -9.9 16 -8.05-6 -9.2 18 -5.0

Cryptosolenomeris macrogon
Color in life unknown, but appearing to have been maroon dorsally and laterally, with head, antennae, peritremata, legs, and possibly a transverse metatergal stripe yellow.
Stigmata elongated slits, similar in size and shape, placed just anterior to dorsal coxal condyles, the latter produced into small acute lobes.
Podosterna low, flat, and glabrous, about as wide as length of prefemora (2.5 mm), produced into small conical tubercles just posterior to coxal condyles.Legs long and slender, virtually glabrous except near base of tarsal claw.Anterior legs with small apical tibial pads on 2 nd to 8 th pairs, otherwise unmodified.Sternum of segment 5 produced into conspicuous, apically bifid median process between anterior legs (Fig. 6).Gonopores opening on low, inconspicuous convexities.
Gonopod aperture small, oval, the entire edge elevated, highest at lateral ends.Gonopods without median sternal element, coxae small relative to telopodites, largely withdrawn into aperture; coxosternal apodeme straight, slender, as long as main body of coxa; coxal apophysis notably displaced into a lateral position (Fig. 9); no coxal macrosetae evident except two on lateral side.Telopodites unusually long, straight, without torsion, extending anteriad to sternum of 5 th segment, narrowest proximally at prefemoral region, claviform distad, the two telopodites lying parallel in situ (Fig. 7).Setose prefemoral region short, no verifiable prefemoral process present.Mesal face of telopodite near midlength with an elongate, slender, acuminate accessory process.Prostatic groove located on ventral surface and not visible in mesal aspect, implying a moderate torsion at base.Apex of telopodite recurved mesad, calyptrate and concealing the small slender solenomere (Fig. 11, S), to which the groove gains access by crossing over beneath the hyaline apical lobe from ventral to dorsal side.No trace of cingulum setting off acropodite from prefemur.

dISCuSSIon
The known chelodesmid fauna of southeastern Brazil is largely characterized by a general external body facies in which the paranota of the anteriormost segments (1-3 or 4) are broadest despite being notably declivent, midbody paranota tend to become smaller and separated, and the 19 th segment largely telescoped into the 18 th .In these taxa, the legs are long and slender, with tibial pads present back to at least the gonopodal segment, and pleurosternal carinae are present.A median sternal process (or two) is usually present between the anterior leg pair of the 5 th segment.The gonopodal aperture is small, not extending anteriad into the stricture, nor laterad beyond the coxae of the 8 th legs; median gonosternal element is usually not present, coxosternal apodeme tends to be slender and straight.Coxae typically are provided with a slender acuminate coxal apophysis, and not are prolonged on the lateral side.The prostatic groove of the telopodite terminates on a small but discrete solenomere.Within this framework, Brasilodesmus and Henrisaussurea are locally abundant representatives.Although subgroups can be recognized, for instance, by the larger gonapertures such as occur in Leptodesmus and Brachyurodesmus, such distinctions are currently limited by the fact that numerous distinctive chelodesmid genera remain to be distinguished, named, and placed in a tentative systematic pattern.Of the few genera that are fairlywell established, Brasilodesmus perhaps best qualifies as a plausible relative of Cryptosolenomeris (at least in terms of shared peripheral features).
An important caveat affecting research on this family is realization that modifications of the basic gonopod structure are relatively constrained: there is only so much diversification possible with the basic elements of a coxa and a biramous telopodite.Considering the family in its present broad context, it is inevitable that homoplasy would occur frequently in lineages (clades) considered to be unrelated on the basis of both structural and geographic indications.Attention to details of peripheral traits therefore assumes an increasingly important role in the resolution of chelodesmid taxonomy.

sp. nov. Figures 1-11
Name: A neologism composed of the Greek elements macros (long) + gon (from gonopod), in reference to the unusually elongated gonotelopodite.Diagnosis: With the characters of the genus, gonopod structure as shown in Figures 600.Holotype: Adult male, broken into several fragments and largely decolored.Body relatively slender owing to reduced size of paranota; broadest at segment 3, notably narrower back to segment 7. Penultimate segment reduced in size and deeply telescoped into 18