Morphological adaptations of the semiaquatic millipede Aporodesminus wallacei Silvestri 1904 with notes on the taxonomy, distribution, habitats and ecology of this and a related species (Pyrgodesmidae Polydesmida Diplopoda)

Citation
J. Adis et al., Morphological adaptations of the semiaquatic millipede Aporodesminus wallacei Silvestri 1904 with notes on the taxonomy, distribution, habitats and ecology of this and a related species (Pyrgodesmidae Polydesmida Diplopoda), TROP ZOOL, 11(2), 1998, pp. 371-387
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences
Journal title
TROPICAL ZOOLOGY
ISSN journal
03946975 → ACNP
Volume
11
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
371 - 387
Database
ISI
SICI code
0394-6975(199812)11:2<371:MAOTSM>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
The poorly known millipede Aporodesminus wallacei Silvestri 1904 appears to be a widespread pantropical species currently reported from St. Helena Isl and (southern Atlantic Ocean), the Hawaiian Islands, Tahiti (central Polyne sia), and the vicinity of Sydney, Australia (Pacific Ocean). Of these recor ds (the latter two are new), the Sydney adults and subadults have been take n underwater in a few creeks of a single small catchment area. This is only the third polydesmoid, and second Pyrgodesmidae, definitely attributable t o semiaquatic millipedes. This habit is further proved by indirect evidence coming from the structure of the mouthparts and a cerotegument enabling pl astron respiration. As virtually no record can readily be associated with m an/human settlements, the hypothesis is put forth that, as is the case for numerous (sub)cosmopolitan water-dwellers, dispersal of this minute species (4.5-6.6 mm) could have been due to zoochory at least not less likely than to hydrochory or anthropochorism, whereas the remote and scattered islands can hardly be taken as the original source area for A. wallacei. Based sol ely on similar cerotegment structures as well as on a strikingly similar di stribution pattern, but without direct evidence of hydrophily, the same hab its if not dispersal mechanism can be suggested for one more pantropical py rgodesmid, Cryptocorypha ornata (Attems 1938), which has been reported from St. Helena Island, the Hawaiis, the Cook Islands, the Marquesa Islands, Ta hiti and Hong Kong. The four latter localities are likewise new.