Pandirodesmus Silvestri, 1932

Romero-Rincon, Juan, Bouzan, Rodrigo S. & Ferreira, Rodrigo L., 2025, The first troglobitic species of the extraordinary genus Pandirodesmus Silvestri, 1932 from the Brazilian Amazon (Polydesmida, Chelodesmidae, Pandirodesmini), Zootaxa 5673 (4), pp. 571-584 : 575

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5673.4.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CF68904F-6E05-4A12-A463-25FE3829DCCF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17079491

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B3552A-FFFB-FFCE-0594-1BDE264EF934

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pandirodesmus Silvestri, 1932
status

 

Genus Pandirodesmus Silvestri, 1932 View in CoL

Pandirodesmus Silvestri, 1932: 1 View in CoL (first description, in Latin); Jeekel 1971: 342 (in genus catalogue); Hoffman 1975: 143 (on the systematic affinities with Trachelodesmini View in CoL ); 1980: 153 (in genus catalogue); Adis & Golovatch 2000: 98 (notes on the morphology of the spiracles and legs); Enghoff et al. 2015: 395 (in taxonomic overview); Shelley & Smith 2015: 3 View Cited Treatment (brief overview for a description of P. rutherfordi View in CoL ); VandenSpiegel et al. 2022: 568 View Cited Treatment (brief overview); Suriel et al. 2024: 253 (in a list of Chelodesmidae View in CoL from the Antilles and Bahamas).

Type species: P. disparipes Silvestri, 1932 View in CoL , by monotypy.

Diagnosis. (modified after Shelley & Smith (2015) and VandenSpiegel et al. (2022)).

A genus of small-bodied (ca. 13 mm) Chelodesminae , characterized by a lightly sclerotized, smooth exoskeleton ranging from white (troglobitic species) to greyish white, and by alternating long and short legs. The exposed parts usually covered with densely cemented, yet loosely attached, sand grains that impart a dark beige to black coloration and conceal the setae. Metaterga narrow, without sulci, but possibly with concave microsculptures, each metatergum with a pair of moderately large, subconical/digitiform projections, with ozopores opening subapically on some of the latter. Paraterga absent. Spiracles opening apically on slender, inconspicuous tubules narrowly segregated from, and slightly shorter than, adjacent coxae. Generally, with anterior legs longer and arising ventrolaterad, posterior legs shorter and arising submediad, anterior halves of sterna thus broader than caudal halves; leg lengths alternating along most of body length, posterior pair ~2/3 as long as anterior on rings 5–18; femora and tarsi substantially longer than remaining podomeres on all legs, postfemora short, swollen and nodular, articulating extremities of tibiae and tarsi also swollen and nodular (less evident in P. zogbiae sp. nov.). Claws narrow and “pin-like”, barely discernible, obscured by long, filiform setae. Setae on coxae to proximal end of tarsi ramose and dendritic apically (with the exception to P. zogbiae sp. nov.). Gonopods minute; coxae with or without apophyses, joined by a strong and distinct sternum; telopodite triramous, prefemoral process (medialmost) expanded, folded, and laminate, partly enveloping other branches, primary branch (lateralmost) long, curving broadly mediad and partly overhanging other branches, terminating in a thin, simple point bearing the solenomere or divided distad into a medial solenomere and a subequal tibiotarsus; secondary (inner) branch suberect, narrowing and expanding all along, its tip bilobed when traceable.

Distribution. Brazil, Guyana, Trinidad & Tobago ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Polydesmida

SubOrder

Leptodesmidea

Family

Chelodesmidae

Tribe

Pandirodesmini

Loc

Pandirodesmus Silvestri, 1932

Romero-Rincon, Juan, Bouzan, Rodrigo S. & Ferreira, Rodrigo L. 2025
2025
Loc

Pandirodesmus

VandenSpiegel, D. & Golovatch, S. I. & Rutherford, M. G. 2022: 568
Enghoff, H. & Golovatch, S. & Short, M. & Stoev, P. & Wesener, T. 2015: 395
Shelley, R. M. & Smith, J. M. 2015: 3
Adis, J. & Golovatch, S. I. 2000: 98
Hoffman, R. L. 1975: 143
Silvestri, F. 1932: 1
1932
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