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Type: Article
Published: 2008-09-29
Page range: 36–46
Abstract views: 56
PDF downloaded: 31

Variability in trunk segmentation in the centipede order Scolopendromorpha: a remarkable new species of Scolopendropsis Brandt (Chilopoda: Scolopendridae) from Brazil

Departamento de Invertebrados, Laboratório de Aracnologia, Museu Nacional, UFRJ, Quinta da Boa Vista, s/no, São Cristóvão, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil, CEP-20940-040
Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, U.K
Dipartimento di Biologia, Università degli Studi di Padova, Via Ugo Bassi 58 B, I-35131 Padova, Italy
Myriapoda Chilopoda trunk segmentation Scolopendrinae taxonomy Tocantins

Abstract

Of the two centipede orders that complete segmentation during embryogenesis, most species belonging to Geophilomorpha have an intraspecifically variable number of trunk segments, whereas those of the Scolopendromorpha have been assumed to have a fixed segment number, with minor variation (21 or 23 segments) across the group as a whole. Trunk segment numbers are used as a taxonomic character as high as the familial or subordinal level in Scolopendromorpha. The first known instance of variability in trunk segment numbers within a scolopendromorph species has recently been proposed for the Brazilian Scolopendropsis bahiensis (Brandt, 1841), which has either 21 or 23 segments in different parts of its geographic range. Here we document a closely related scolopendrid from Tocantins State, central Brazil, Scolopendropsis duplicata n. sp., which differs from S. bahiensis in having either 39 or 43 segments. This unique segment count is incorporated into a revised diagnosis of the order Scolopendromorpha. The deeply nested position of Scolopendropsis within the Scolopendridae implies that the geophilomorph-like trunk segment number in S. duplicata is convergent with similar segmentation in Geophilomorpha.

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