Prosopodesmus

{{Short description|Genus of millipedes}}

{{Italic title}}

{{Automatic taxobox

| image = Prosopodesmus panporus.jpg

| image_caption = Prosopodesmus panporus

| taxon = Prosopodesmus

| authority = Silvestri, 1910

| type_species = Prosopodesmus jacobsoni

| type_species_authority = Silvestri, 1910

| synonyms =

  • Homodesmus Chamberlin, 1918
  • Rhipidopeltis Miyosi, 1958

}}

Prosopodesmus is a genus of flat-backed millipedes in the family Haplodesmidae.{{Cite web |title=MilliBase - Prosopodesmus Silvestri, 1910 |url=https://www.millibase.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=892414 |access-date=2024-08-25 |website=www.millibase.org}} These millipedes are found primarily in Australia and southern Japan.{{Cite journal |last1=Enghoff |first1=Henrik |last2=Golovatch |first2=Sergei |last3=Short |first3=Megan |last4=Stoev |first4=Pavel |last5=Wesener |first5=Thomas |date=2015-01-01 |title=Diplopoda — taxonomic overview |url=https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004188273/B9789004188273_017.xml |journal=Treatise on Zoology – Anatomy, Taxonomy, Biology. The Myriapoda, Volume 2 |language=en |pages=363–453 [402] |doi=10.1163/9789004188273_017 |isbn=9789004188273|url-access=subscription }} This genus includes the species P. panporus, which is notable for exhibiting sexual dimorphism in segment number: Whereas adult females of this species feature the usual 20 segments (counting the collum as the first segment and the telson as the last) usually observed in the order Polydesmida, the adult males of this species feature only 19 segments.{{Cite journal |last1=Enghoff |first1=Henrik |last2=Dohle |first2=Wolfgang |last3=Blower |first3=J. Gordon |date=1993 |title=Anamorphosis in Millipedes (Diplopoda) — The Present State of Knowledge with Some Developmental and Phylogenetic Considerations |url=https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-abstract/109/2/103/2646268?redirectedFrom=fulltext |journal=Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society |volume=109 |issue=2 |pages=103–234 [147–148] |doi=10.1111/j.1096-3642.1993.tb00305.x|url-access=subscription }}

Discovery and distribution

This genus was created by the Italian zoologist Filippo Silvestri in 1910 to contain the newly discovered type species P. jacobsoni.{{Cite journal |last1=Silvestri |first1=Filippo |date=1910 |title=Descrizioni preliminari di nuovi generi di Diplopodi. I. Polydesmoidea |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/29109 |journal=Zoologischer Anzeiger |language=la |volume=35 |pages=357–364 [360–362]}} Although Silvestri based the original description of this species on type material collected from Java, this species has since proven to be a pantropical synanthrope, found in Louisiana, Florida, Puerto Rico, Haiti, Panama, Brazil, India, Taiwan, and Fiji, among other places.{{Cite journal |last=Mesibov |first=Robert |date=2012-05-04 |title=New species of Prosopodesmus Silvestri, 1910 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Haplodesmidae)from Queensland, Australia |journal=ZooKeys |language=en |issue=190 |pages=33–54 |doi=10.3897/zookeys.190.3276 |doi-access=free |issn=1313-2970 |pmc=3349066 |pmid=22639530|bibcode=2012ZooK..190...33M }} In 1920, the French myriapodologist Henri W. Brölemann originally described P. hilaris as a subspecies of P. jacobsoni found in Zanzibar,{{Cite journal |last1=Brolemann |first1=Henry Wilfred |date=1920-08-03 |title=Myriapodes III. Diplopoda |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/282851 |journal=Voyage de Ch. Alluaud et R. Jeannel en Afrique orientale (1911-1912). Résultats scientifiques |volume=16 |pages=49–298 [226–231]}} but some authorities now regard this millipede to be a separate species.{{Cite web |title=MilliBase - Prosopodesmus hilaris Brölemann, 1920 |url=https://www.millibase.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=938461 |access-date=2024-08-25 |website=www.millibase.org}}

In 1980, the British myriapodologist John Gordon Blower and Adrian J. Rundle described another species in the same genus, P. panporus.{{Cite journal |last1=Blower |first1=J. Gordon |last2=Rundle |first2=Adrian J. |date=1980 |title=Prosopodesmus panporus, an interesting new species of polydesmoid millipede from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, England |url=https://www.vmnh.net/content/vmnh/uploads/PDFs/research_and_collections/myriapodologica/myriapodologica_v1_n4.pdf |journal=Myriapodologica |volume=1 |issue=4 |pages=27–34}} They based the original description of this species on several specimens collected from the hothouses for tropical plants in the Kew Gardens in England. The geographic origin of this species remained a mystery until 2012, when the zoologist Robert Mesibov reported the discovery of P. panporus specimens collected in 1986 from a remote tropical rainforest in the Cape York peninsula of Queensland in Australia, which authorities now consider likely to be the native range of this species.

In 2009, authorities deemed the genus Rhipidopeltis to be a junior synonym of Prosopodesmus.{{Cite journal |last1=Golovatch |first1=Sergei |last2=Geoffroy |first2=Jean-Jacques |last3=Mauriès |first3=Jean-Paul |last4=VandenSpiegel |first4=Didier |date=2009-04-07 |title=Review of the millipede family Haplodesmidae Cook, 1895, with descriptions of some new or poorly-known species (Diplopoda, Polydesmida) |url=https://zookeys.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=1970 |journal=ZooKeys |language=en |issue=7 |pages=1–53 [40, 43] |doi=10.3897/zookeys.7.117 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2009ZooK....7....1G |issn=1313-2970}} This synonymy moved two more species to the genus Prospodesmus, both found in Japan: The species P. sinuatus was first described by the Japanese myriapodologist Yasunori Miyosi in 1958 and is found in southern Honshu,{{Cite journal |last=Miyosi |first=Yasunori |date=1958 |title=Beiträge zur Kenntnis japanischer Myriopoden. 25. Aufsatz: Über eine neue Gattung und eine neue Art von Diplopoden |url=https://dl.ndl.go.jp/en/pid/10839672 |journal=Zoological Magazine |language=ja, de |volume=67 |issue=10 |pages=297–300 |via=NDL Digital Collections}} whereas the species P. similis was first described by A. Haga in 1968 and is found in Kyushu.{{Cite journal |last1=Golovatch |first1=Sergei I. |last2=Mikhaljova |first2=Elena V. |last3=Korsós |first3=Zoltán |last4=Chang |first4=Hsueh-Wen |date=2010-04-01 |title=The Millipede Family Haplodesmidae (Diplopoda, Polydesmida) Recorded in Taiwan for the First Time, with the Description of a New Species |url=https://li01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/tnh/article/view/102938 |journal=Tropical Natural History |language=en |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=27–36 [33] |issn=2586-9892}}

Finally, in 2012, Mesibov described three new Prosopodesmus species, all found in the Wet Tropics of north Queensland in Australia. The species P. crater is found in the rainforest in the Atherton Tableland southwest of Cairns in Queensland. The species P. kirrama is found in the rainforest in the mountains northwest of Ingham and southwest of Tully in Queensland. The species P. monteithi is found in the rainforest from Daintree National Park west of Cape Tribulation to the Malbon Thompson range on the coast southeast of Cairns in Queensland.

Description

Adults in this genus feature 20 segments (including the telson), except for adult males of the species P. panporus, which have only 19 segments. The species in this genus range in size from P. panporus, which reaches a maximum length of only 4.3 mm and is one of the smallest millipedes known, to P. monteithi, which reaches a maximum length of 15 mm and is the largest known species in the genus Prosopodesmus. These millipedes are not capable of volvation. The paranota are well developed and sloping, and the tergites feature three transverse rows of tubercles. The gonopods are shaped like hooks and are fairly simple, with no separate solenomere branch.

Species

This genus includes eight species:

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References