Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
21 June 2013 Systematics of the keyserlingii Group of DiplocentrusPeters, 1861 (Scorpiones: Diplocentridae), with Descriptions of Three New Species from Oaxaca, Mexico
Carlos E. Santibäñez-López, Oscar F. Francke, Lorenzo Prendini
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The scorpion genus Diplocentrus Peters, 1861, comprising more than 50 species, most of which are endemic to Mexico, is the most diverse in the family Diplocentridae Karsch, 1880 (Santibáñez-López et al., 2011). Hoffmann (1931) divided the Mexican species into two groups, the whitei group and the keyserlingi group, based largely on differences in size and coloration. Francke (1977) redefined these groups. The whitei group, renamed the mexicanus group because it included the type species of the genus, comprised species with short cheliceral fingers and the pedipalp femur wider than high. The keyserlingii group comprised species with long cheliceral fingers and the pedipalp femur higher than wide. Several new species of Diplocentrus were since described, but no attempt was made to synthesize the taxonomy of the species assigned to either group or further clarify the validity of the groups. In the present contribution, the species of Diplocentrus with the pedipalp femur higher than wide are reviewed. An operational diagnosis is provided for the keyserlingii group. Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, previously synonymized with Diplocentrus tehuano Francke, 1977, is reinstated. Revised, updated diagnoses are provided for all previously described species and three new species, Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., and Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., are described. The female of Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977, is described for the first time. A dichotomous key is provided for identification of the 10 species in the keyserlingii group.

INTRODUCTION

The scorpion genus Diplocentrus Peters, 1861, comprising more than 50 species, most of which are endemic to Mexico, is the most diverse in the family Diplocentridae Karsch, 1880 (SantibánezLópez et al., 2011). Hoffmann (1931) divided the Mexican species into two groups, the whitei group and the keyserlingi group, based largely on differences in size and coloration. Francke (1977) redefined these groups in a key to identification of the Diplocentrus species occurring in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. The whitei group, renamed the mexicanus group because it included the type species of the genus, Diplocentrus mexicanus Peters, 1861, comprised species with short cheliceral fingers and the pedipalp femur wider than high. The keyserlingii group comprised species with long cheliceral fingers and the pedipalp femur higher than wide. Francke (1978) realized that this distinction was problematic, however, because the diagnostic characters of the pedipalp femur were also used to separate other genera in subfamily Diplocentrinae Karsch, 1880. Several new species of Diplocentrus were since described (e.g., Stockwell, 1988; Sissom, 1994; Armas and Martín-Frías, 2000; Santibáñez-López et al., 2011), but no attempt was made to synthesize the taxonomy of the species assigned to either group or to further clarify the validity of the groups.

In the present contribution, the species of the keyserlingii group of Diplocentrus are reviewed (fig. 1). An operational diagnosis is provided for the group, but its monophyly is not assumed, pending further investigation of phylogenetic relationships within the genus. Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, previously synonymized with Diplocentrus tehuano Francke, 1977, is reinstated. Revised, updated diagnoses are provided for all previously described species and three new species, Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., and Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., are described. The female of Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977, is described for the first time. A dichotomous key is provided for identification of the 10 species in the keyserlingii group.

METHODS

New material reported in the present contribution was collected during the course of several field expeditions in Mexico, mostly in the state of Oaxaca, between 2004 and 2009. Most of the vegetation types and altitudinal ranges occurring in the state were surveyed, and the type localities of all previously described species of Diplocentrus were visited.

Scorpions were collected mostly at night with ultraviolet (UV) light detection (Sissom et al., 1990). Fossorial species of Diplocentrus were captured doorkeeping at their burrow entrances, by snatching them with forceps. When attempts to snatch individuals retreating into their burrows were unsuccessful, burrow locations were marked and the burrows excavated the following day. Lithophilous species of Diplocentrus, inhabiting rock crevices, were collected in a similar manner. Scorpions were also collected during the daytime, by turning rocks and excavating burrows, which are easy identified from those of other fossorial arthropods by their oval entrances (Lamoral, 1979; Polis, 1990; Prendini et al., 2003; Quijano-Ravell et al., 2012; fig. 1A).

FIGURE 1.

Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, microhabitat and representative species. A. Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977, burrow entrance. B. Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., female with brood in burrow under stone. C. D. hoffmanni, ♂. D. Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977, ♂. E. Diplocentrus rectimanus Pocock, 1898, ♂ . F . D. sissomi, n. sp., ♀.

f01_01.jpg

Material is deposited in the following collections: American Museum of Natural History, New York (AMNH), with tissue samples stored in the Ambrose Monell Cryocollection (AMCC); Natural History Museum, London, UK (BMNH); Colección “Luis F. de Armas,” Instituto Tecnológico del Valle de Oaxaca, Mexico (CALA); Colección Nacional de Aräcnidos, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City (CNAN); Eliezer Martín-Frías Private Collection, Mexico City (EMF); Instituto de Ecología y Sistemática, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, Havana (IES); Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, (MCZ); Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Germany (ZMB).

FIGURE 2.

Number and distribution of spiniform macrosetae on ventral surface of basitarsi of third and fourth legs in Diplocentrus mexicanus group (A, B) and Diplocentrus keyserlingii group (C). A. Three terminal, one subterminal and one medial spiniform macrosetae. B. Three terminal, two subterminal and one medial spiniform macrosetae. C. Three terminal and one subterminal spiniform macrosetae.

f02_01.jpg

Geographical coordinates of collection localities were recorded in the field with a GARMIN eTREX H GPS device. Localities without geographical coordinates were retroactively georeferenced using the INEGI (2011) Archivo Histórico de Localidades dataset. Distribution maps were generated in ArcView Ver. 3.2 (ESRI) using the locality coordinates, a base map from the CONABIO (2011) digital database, and a digital elevation model from the CGIAR Consortium for Spatial Information (Jarvis et al., 2008).

Observations were made using Nikon SMZ-800 and SMZ-1500 stereomicroscopes. Measurements, given in millimeters, were obtained with an ocular micrometer calibrated at 10X. Hemispermatophores were dissected following Vachon (1952), and cleared with pancreatin. Digital images were taken under visible and UV light with a Microptics ML-1000 digital imaging system, equipped with a Nikon DS80 camera, or a Nikon SMZ-800 with Nikon Coolpix S10 VR camera attachment. The focal planes of image stacks were fused with CombineZM (Hadley, 2008) and composite images edited with Adobe Photoshop.

Scorpion higher classification follows Prendini and Wheeler (2005). Nomenclature and mensuration follows Stahnke (1970b), except for hemispermatophore (San Martín, 1963), trichobothria (Vachon, 1974), carination of the metasoma (Francke, 1977) and pedipalps (Prendini, 2000), and carapace surfaces (Prendini et al., 2003). The ventrosubmedian spiniform macrosetae on the leg telotarsi (tarsomeres), counts of which have long been used as species-level diagnostic characters in Diplocentridae, were incorrectly referred to as “spines” by some authors (e.g., Francke, 1977; Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003; Francke and Ponce Saavedra, 2005) prior to Francke and Quijano-Ravell (2009). Lamoral (1979) first pointed out that these articulated structures are setae, rather than spines or spinules (fixed cuticular projections), an observation that was later corroborated (e.g., Williams and Savary, 1991; Prendini, 2000; McWest, 2009). Spiniform macrosetae on the leg basitarsi, informative in the systematics of Scorpionidae Latreille, 1802 (Prendini et al., 2003), were not previously studied in Diplocentridae. The configuration of spiniform macrosetae on the basitarsi of the third and fourth legs is informative at the generic level in Diplocentridae and within the Diplocentrus, providing a diagnostic character for the keyserlingii group (fig. 2).

SYSTEMATICS

Family Diplocentridae Karsch, 1880
Genus Diplocentrus Peters, 1861

  • Diplocentrus Peters, 1861: 512, type species by subsequent designation (Stahnke, 1976; Francke, 1977): Diplocentrus mexicanus Peters, 1861.

  • Diplocentrus Peters, 1861: 512; Thorell, 1876: 12; Pocock, 1893: 393; Kraepelin, 1894: 12, 13 (part); Laurie, 1896a: 193; 1896b: 128; Kraepelin, 1899: 99, 100 (part); Pocock, 1902: 2, 3; Birula, 1917a: 162, 190; 1917b: 58, 108; Mello-Campos, 1924: 290 (part); Ewing, 1928: 4; Hoffmann, 1931: 303– 305; Kästner, 1941: 234; Bücherl, 1971: 323 (part); Vachon, 1974: 914, 916; Francke, 1977: 145, 146; 1978: 3–5, 23, 32, 33, 55; 1985: 7, 17, 20; Stockwell, 1988: 154, 155; Sissom, 1990: 120, 121 (part); Nenilin and Fet, 1992: 9 (part); Stockwell, 1992: 441, 412, 420, fig. 2, 9, 18, 20; Kovařík, 1998: 130; Sissom and Fet, 2000: 336–344; Beutelspacher, 2000: 25–36; Francke, 2007: 72; Santibáñez-López et al., 2011: 4.

  • Didymocentrus: Caporiacco, 1938: 252.

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingii group
    Figures 119

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingi group: Hoffmann, 1931: 303, 318.

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingii group: Francke, 1977: 147, 148; 1978: 5, 23, 32, 33, 55; Sissom, 1994: 257–266.

  • DIAGNOSIS: Species of the keyserlingii group may be distinguished from other species of Diplocentrus by the following characters (fig. 1C–F). The length of the cheliceral movable finger is greater than the length of the manus and the length of the fixed finger is greater than the width of the manus in the keyserlingii group, whereas the length of the movable finger is less than the length of the manus and the length of the fixed finger is less than the width of the manus in other species of Diplocentrus. The height of the pedipalp femur is greater than its width and the dorsal surface of the femur is slightly to markedly convex in the keyserlingii group, whereas the height of the femur is less than its width and the dorsal surface of the femur is flat or shallowly convex in other species of Diplocentrus. The pedipalp chela ventrointernal carina is weakly to moderately developed, and not infuscated in the keyserlingii group, but moderately to strongly developed and densely infuscated in other species of Diplocentrus. The ventral surfaces of the basitarsi of legs III and IV each possess three terminal and one subterminal spiniform macrosetae in the keyserlingii group (fig. 2C), but three terminal, one or two subterminal, and one medial spiniform macrosetae in other species of Diplocentrus (fig. 2A, B).

  • INCLUDED SPECIES: Ten species are included in the keyserlingii group as defined above: Diplocentrus coylei Fritts and Sissom, 1996; Diplocentrus jormosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003; Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977; Diplocentrus keyserlingii Karsch, 1880; Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp.; Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977; Diplocentrus rectimanus Pocock, 1898; Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp.; Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp.; Diplocentrus tenango SantibáñezLópez and Francke, 2008.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Species of the keyserlingii group are recorded from four states of central Mexico: Estado de México, Guerrero, Morelos, and Oaxaca (fig. 3).

  • FIGURE 3.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, known records in central Mexico. A. Diplocentrus coylei Fritts and Sissom, 1996 (circles); Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003 (squares); Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977 (triangles); Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp. (crosses); Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp. (stars). B. Diplocentrus keyserlingii Karsch, 1880 (circles); Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977 (squares); Diplocentrus rectimanus Pocock, 1898 (cross); Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp. (triangles); Diplocentrus tenango Santibáñez-López and Francke, 2008 (star).

    f03_01.jpg

    KEY TO THE SPECIES IN THE KEYSERLINGII GROUP OF GENUS DIPLOCENTRUS

    1 Cheliceral movable finger length less than or equal to manus length, fixed finger length less than or equal to manus width; pedipalp femur width greater than height, dorsal surface flat to shallowly convex; pedipalp chela ventrointernal carina strongly developed, infuscated; legs III and IV, basitarsi each with three terminal, one or two subterminal, and one medial spiniform setae on ventral surface (fig. 2A, B) mexicanus group

    — Cheliceral movable finger length greater than manus length, fixed finger length greater than manus width; pedipalp femur height greater than width, dorsal surface slightly to markedly convex; pedipalp chela ventrointernal carina weakly to moderately developed, not infuscated; legs III and IV, basitarsi each with three terminal and one subterminal spiniform macrosetae on ventral surface (fig. 2C) 2 (keyserlingii group)

    2 Legs III and IV, telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 5/5:5/5-6 3

    — Legs III and IV, telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 6–7/6–7:6–7/6–7 4

    3 Pedipalp chela manus rounded, dorsal surface strongly reticulate; fingers similar length to manus (fig. 5A) D. keyserlingii

    Pedipalp chela manus slender, dorsal surface smooth; fingers longer than manus (fig. 5B) D. mitlae

    4 Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina granular (); pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface granular (♂, ♀ ), digital carina granular, weakly developed, dorsal secondary, digital and external secondary carinae similarly developed (fig. 12) D. formosus

    Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina smooth (); pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface smooth to reticulate (), digital carina smooth to slightly granular, strongly developed, dorsal secondary and external secondary carinae less developed than digital carina (fig. 6) 5

    5 Pedipalp chela, fixed finger straight or shallowly curved (♂); manus, dorsal surface granular (♀), digital carina moderately developed, granular, dorsal secondary and external secondary carinae weakly developed, granular (♀) 6

    — Pedipalp chela, fixed finger gently curved (♂); manus, dorsal surface smooth or faintly reticulate (♀), dorsal secondary, digital and external secondary carinae weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (♀) 7

    6 Carapace coloration (adult), brown to pale brown; pedipalp coloration paler than, and contrasting with carapace coloration; pedipalp patella, dorsoexternal carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (♂); pedipalp chela, fixed and movable fingers shallowly curved (♂; fig. 6A) D. rectimanus

    — Carapace coloration (adult), reddish to ferruginous; pedipalp coloration similar to, and not contrasting with carapace coloration; pedipalp patella, dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, weakly granular to crenulate (♂); pedipalp chela, fixed and movable fingers straight ( ♂; fig. 16A) D. sagittipalpus, n. sp.

    7 Legs III and IV, telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 7/7:7/7 D. tenango

    Legs III and IV, telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 6/6:6/6–7 8

    8 Pectinal tooth counts, 14–16 (♂), 11–13 (♀) D. coylei

    Pectinal tooth counts, 8–12 (♂), 6–10 (♀) 9

    9 Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface weakly reticulate ( 2 ), digital carina smooth ( 2 ) to granular (♂), manus rounded (♂; fig. 4B) D. hoffmanni

    — Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface smooth (♀), digital carina smooth to crenulate, manus slender (♂) 10

    10. Base coloration (adult), brown to orange-brown; carapace anteromedian notch U-shaped (fig. 7B); pedipalp patella, dorsoexternal carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂); pedipalp chela manus slender, dorsal surface strongly reticulate (♂), dorsal secondary and external secondary carinae weakly developed, smooth (♂), fingers curved D. kraepelini, n. sp.

    — Base coloration (adult), reddish orange; carapace anteromedian notch V-shaped (fig. 7D); pedipalp patella, dorsoexternal carina weakly to moderately developed, crenulate (S); pedipalp chela manus rounded, dorsal surface granular-reticulate (♂), dorsal secondary and external secondary carinae weakly to moderately developed, crenulate (♂), fingers shallowly curved D. sissomi, n. sp.

    Diplocentrus coylei Fritts and Sissom, 1996
    Figure 4A; tables 1, 2

  • Diplocentrus coylei Fritts and Sissom, 1996: 43–47, figs. 8–14; Kovařík, 1998: 130; Beutelspacher, 2000: 27; Sissom and Fet, 2000: 337; Teruel, 2003: 54 (part); Francke and Ponce-Saavedra, 2005: 52 (part); Armas, 2006: 11 (part); Santibáñez-Lopez et al., 2011: 4–5.

  • Diplocentrus malinalco Armas and Martín-Frías, 2000: 75, 76 (synonymized by Armas, 2006: 11).

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: ESTADO DE MÉXICO: Municipio de Malinalco: Holotype S [Diplocentrus malinalco] (IES), De la Vega [18°56.9′N 99°29.68′W], xi.1959 [not examined]. GUERRERO: Municipio de Pilcaya: Holotype ♂ (MCZ), 1 juv. paratype (AMNH), Grutas de Cacahuamilpa [18°40′N 99°30′W], outside the caves, 8.vi.1982, F. Coyle [not examined]; 1 ♂, 1 ♀,1 juv. paratypes (AMNH), Cacahuamilpa, 4 mi. W [18°41′N 99°34′W], summit, 3.ix.1966, J. and W. Ivie. Municipio de Taxco de Alarcón: 1 ♂, 1 ♀ paratypes (AMNH), Las Granadas [18°57′N 99°51′W], 12.vii.1980, E. Martin and R. Garcia.

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: ESTADO DE MÉXICO: Municipio de Malinalco: Chichicasco, 18°51.369′N 99°28.123′W, 1374 m, 25.vii.2002, E. González, 1 ♂, 2 subad. ♂ (AMCC [LP 2236]). Municipio de Tonatico: Tonatico, outside Estrella cave, near viewpoint, 18°44.740′N 99°37.821′W, 1594 m, 15.ix.2011, J. Mendoza, R. Monjaraz, D. Barrales and F. Torres, 2 ♀ (CNAN), 1 ♀ [leg] (AMCC [LP 11474]). GUERRERO: Municipio de Buenavista de Cuellar: Casino de la Unión, 2 km S, 18°35.53′N 99°28.91′W, 1178 m, 28.viii.2009, O. Francke, T. López, C. Santibáñez and A. Valdez, 2 ♂,6 juv. (CNAN), 1 juv. [leg] (AMCC [LP 11051]), 1 juv. [leg] (AMCC [LP 11053]). Municipio de Iguala de la Independencia: Iguala de la Independencia [18°21′N 99°33.6′W], vi.1961, 1 ♀ (CNAN); La Cumbre, 18°24.0306′N 99°29.1198′W, 1212 m, 28.viii.2009, O. Francke, C. Santibáñez and E. Miranda, thorn forest, on ground, UV light, 1 juv. (CNAN), 1 juv. [leg] (AMCC [LP 11033]), 1 juv. [leg] (AMCC [LP 11050]). Municipio de Ixcateopán de Cuauhtémoc: Ixcateopán, 2 km S, 18°30.2304′N 99°46.656′W, 1930 m, 21.iv.2012, J. Mendoza, R. Monjaraz, D. Ortiz and G. Contreras, 1 ♀ (CNAN), 1 ♀ [leg] (AMCC [LP 11480]). Municipio de Picaya: Cacahuamilpa [18°24.6′N 99°20.4′W], 1520 m, 11.viii.1984, R. Rios, 1 ♂, 1 ♀, 2 juv. (CNAN), 15. vii.2001, M. Córdova and A. Burgos, 1 ♀ (CNAN). Municipio de Tetipac: Dos Bocas [18°39.6′N 99°30.6′W], vi.1946, 1 ♂, 1 ♀ (CNAN); Iguala 18°21′N 99°33.6′W, vi.1961, 1 ♀ (CNAN). MORELOS: Municipio de Amacuzac: Huajintlán, 18°36.6′N 99°25.8′W, 1510 m, 4.ix.2004, M. Córdova and A. Gotilla, 1 ♀ (CNAN). Municipio de Coatlán del Rio: El Oyanco, 18°43.8′N 99°25.8′W, 1022 m, 6.viii.2004, M. Córdova and O. Sotelo, 1 ♀ (CNAN-S03005). Municipio de Miacatlán: Palpan, 18°51′N 99°25.2′W, 1587 m, 7.viii.2004, M. Córdova and O. Vázquez, 1 ♂, 4 ♀, 10 juv. (CNAN). Municipio de Tlaquiltenango: El Comal, border between Morelos and Guerrero, 18°27.086′N 99°17.139′W, 1749 m, 13.vi.2007, O. Francke, J. Ponce, M. Córdova, H. Montaño, L. Beitrán and A. Ballesteros, 6 ♂, 4 ♀, 1 subad. ♂, 2 subad. ♀, 3 juv. (AMNH), 6 ♂, 4 ♀, 1 subad. ♂, 3 subad. ♀, 3 juv. (CNAN), 1 ♂, 2 ♀, 2 juv. (CAS), 1 subad. ♂ (AMCC [LP 7031]).

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination, updated from Santibáñez-López et al. (2011), is diagnostic for D. coylei. Total length (adult), 48–60 mm. Base coloration (adult) brownish orange to pale brown. Carapace anteromedian notch V-shaped. Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface sparsely granular. Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina moderately developed, smooth to crenulate (♂); dorsoexternal carina obsolete, smooth (♂); externomedian carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (♂); ventromedian carina obsolete (♂, ♀). Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface smooth to reticulate (♂, ♀ ); dorsal secondary carina weakly developed, smooth (♂); digital carina strongly developed, smooth to weakly granular (♂) or obsolete, smooth (♀); external surfaces reticulate (♂) or smooth to weakly reticulate (♀); fingers gently curved (fig. 4A). Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 4/5:5/5:6/6:6/6 (variation in table 2). Pectinal tooth count, 14–16, mode = 14 (♂) or 11–13, mode = 12 (♀) (variation in table 1).

  • Diplocentrus coylei resembles D. mitlae and D. rectimanus in size and coloration but can be distinguished as follows. The counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs III and IV are higher in D. coylei (6/6:6/6) than in D. mitlae (5/5:5/5). The pectinal tooth count is higher in D. coylei (♂: 14–16; 2 : 11–13) than in D. mitlae (♂: 7–10; 2 : 7–8) and D. rectimanus (♂: 9–12; 2 : 8–9). The dorsal surface of the pedipalp chela manus (♀) is smooth in D. coylei and granular in D. rectimanus. The dorsal surface of the pedipalp chela manus (♂) is reticulate in D. coylei and smooth in D. mitlae.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus coylei is recorded from the following states and municipalities of central Mexico: Estado de México (Malinalco, Tonatico), Guerrero (Buenavista de Cuellar, Iguala de la Independencia, Ixcateopán de Cuauhtémoc, Picaya, Tetipac), and Morelos (Amacuzac, Coatlán del Rio, Huajintlán, Miacatlán, Tlaquiltenango) (fig. 3A).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was collected under logs and stones during daytime in a deciduous oak forest, and outside a cave. Centruroides limpidus (Karsch, 1879) was collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. coylei are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 4.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, dextral pedipalp chela, dorsoexternal aspect. A. Diplocentrus coylei Fritts and Sissom, 1996, ♂ (AMNH). B. Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977, ♂ (CNAN). Scale bar = 1 mm.

    f04_01.jpg

    FIGURE 5.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, dextral pedipalp chela, dorsoexternal aspect. A. Diplocentrus keyserlingii Karsch, 1880, holotype ♂ (AMNH) of Diplocentrus reticulatus Francke, 1977. B. Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977, holotype ♂ (AMNH). Scale bar = 1 mm.

    f05_01.jpg

    FIGURE 6.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, dextral pedipalp chela, dorsoexternal aspect. A. Diplocentrus rectimanus Pocock, 1898, ♂ (AMNH). B. Diplocentrus tenango Santibáñez-Lopez and Francke, 2008, holotype ♂ (CNAN-T0273). Scale bar = 1 mm.

    f06_01.jpg

    Table 1.

    Pectinal tooth count (number of teeth per pecten) in species of the Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, given as number of male and female pectines observed with corresponding tooth count, including data from the original descriptions of Diplocentrus Formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977, and Diplocentrus tenango Santibáñez-López and Francke, 2008.

    t01_01.gif

    Diplocentrus Formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003
    Figures 7A, 8A, 9A, 10A, 11A, 12, 13; tables 1, 2

  • Diplocentrus Formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003: 72–75, figs. 1–7, tables I, II.

  • Diplocentrus tehuano: Armas, 2006: 10 (in part, incorrect synonymy).

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE TEHUANTEPEC: Municipio de Santo Domingo Tehuantepec: Holotype ♂ (IES), 3 ♂ 29 ♀ paratypes (EMF), 1 ♂ 2 ♀ paratypes (CNAN) [lost?], 8 ♀ paratypes (IES), Colonia Emiliano Zapata, 5 km WSW Tehuantepec [16°19.655′N 95°17.283′W], 11.vi.2002, H. Cabrera [not examined].

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE TEHUANTEPEC: Municipio de Asunción Ixtaltepec: Chivela [16°42.813′N 94°59.827′W], 210 m, 30.v.1962, J. Martinez, 1 ♂, 1 ♀ (CNAN); Nizanda, 16°39.4902′N 95°00.6342′W, 99 m, 15.ix.2009, R. Paredes, C. Santibáñez, and A. Valdez, deciduous forest, in burrow entrance, UV light detection, 9 ♀ (CNAN), 1 ♀ [leg] (AMCC [LP 10979]); Santo Domingo Tehuantepec [16°19.650′N 95°17.273′W], 80 m, 9.vii. 2004, P. Berea, 4 ♂, 11 ♀ (CNAN).

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination, updated from Armas and Martín-Frías (2003), is diagnostic for D. jormosus. Total length (adult), 47–65 mm. Base coloration (adult) pale yellow to brown. Carapace anteromedian notch V-shaped (fig. 7A); frontal lobes and interocular surface granular. Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface sparsely granular, comprising larger granules medially (fig. 9A). Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina well developed, slightly granular (♂); dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, slightly granular (♂); externomedian carina weakly developed, granular (♂; fig. 11A); ventromedian carina obsolete (♂, ♀). Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal and external surfaces densely granular (♂, ♀); dorsal marginal carina well developed, comprising large granules; digital carina weakly developed, granular, obscured by granulation on dorsal and external surfaces; fingers gently curved (fig. 12). Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 5/6:5-6/6:6/6:6-7/7 (variation in table 2). Pectinal tooth count, 12–16, mode = 15 (♂; fig. 8A) or 10–14, mode = 12 (♀) (variation in table 1).

  • Diplocentrus jormosus resembles D. hoffmanni in the similar counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of leg IV, but can be separated from the latter as follows. The dorsal and external surfaces of the pedipalp chela manus (♂) are granular in D. jormosus but reticulate in D. hoffmanni. The pedipalp chela digital carina is weakly developed (♂) in D. jormosus, but moderately to weakly developed (♂) in D. hoffmanni. The pectinal tooth count is higher in D. jormosus (♂: 12–16; ♀: 10–14) than in D. hoffmanni (♂: 9–11; ♀: 7–9). The margin of the median lobe of the hemispermatophore is entire in D. jormosus, but crenulate in D. hoffmanni (see Sissom, 1994: fig. 22).

  • SUPPLEMENTARY DESCRIPTION: Based on additional ♂♂ (fig. 13A, B) and ♀♀ (fig. 13C, D) specimens.

  • Coloration: Carapace brown to brownish orange; moderately infuscate throughout, uniformly so around median ocelli, variegated elsewhere. Coxosternum pale orange. Pedipalps orange to reddish brown, carina weakly infuscate. Legs uniformly pale orange. Mesosoma brown to dark brown, tergites brown (♂, ♀ ), densely infuscate, sternites pale orange. Metasoma pale brown to orange; carinae weakly infuscate. Telson orange to reddish, uniformly infuscate.

  • Carapace: Anterior margin moderately setose; anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped (fig. 7A). Frontal lobes, surface densely granular; other surfaces sparsely granular or shagreened. Three pairs of subequal lateral ocelli.

  • Pedipalps: Orthobothriotaxic, type C. Femur height greater than width (fig. 10A); dorsal intercarinal surface markedly convex, coarsely and sparsely granular; external intercarinal surface smooth; ventral intercarinal surface flat, smooth; internal intercarinal surface finely and sparsely granular; dorsointernal carina moderately developed, granular, becoming obsolete posteriorly; dorsoexternal carina weakly developed, granular; ventroexternal carina obsolete; ventrointernal carina weakly to moderately developed, granular. Patella, dorsal intercarinal surfaces smooth to slightly granular (♂) or smooth (♀); external and ventral intercarinal surfaces granular (♂S, fig. 11A) or smooth (♀); internal intercarinal surface finely granular; proximal tubercle moderately developed, bifurcate; dorsointeral carina weakly developed to obsolete; dorsomedian carina strongly developed, granular (♂) or moderately developed, granular (♀); dorsoexternal carina moderately to weakly developed, granular (♂) or weakly developed, finely granular (♀); externomedian carina weakly developed, granular; ventroexternal carinae moderately developed, granular to crenulate (♀), or weakly developed, smooth to crenulate (♀); ventromedian carina weakly to moderately developed, granular; ventrointernal carina weakly to moderately developed, comprising large granules (♂), or weakly developed, granular to smooth (♀). Chela manus, rounded, height greater than width (♂, ♀), densely (♂) or sparsely (♀) setose; dorsal intercarinal surface granular (♂, fig. 12A) or finely granular (♀, fig. 12B); external intercarinal surface granular (♂) or finely granular (♀); dorsal marginal carina moderately developed, coarsely granular; digital carina weakly developed, granular (♂) or weakly developed to obsolete, granular (♀); dorsal secondary and external secondary carinae weakly developed (♂) or obsolete to weakly developed (♀), granular; ventroexternal carina weakly developed, granular, becoming obsolete proximally; ventromedian carina strongly developed, crenulate proximally, granular medially, becoming obsolete distally, directed toward midpoint of movable finger articulation; ventrointernal carina weakly developed, granular; internodorsal, internomedian and internoventral carinae weakly developed, granular; internal surface with shallow longitudinal depression where chela rests against patella. Chela fixed finger curved; length equal (♂) or subequal (♀) to femur length; dorsal surface smooth and densely setose proximally; external surface flat; internal surface shallowly concave.

  • Legs: Legs I–IV femora and tibiae, prolateral surfaces shagreened; telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows (dextral/sinistral), 5/6 5/6: 5/6 5/6: 6/6 6/6: 6/7 6/7.

  • Pectines: Tooth count: 15–15 (♂; fig. 8A); 13–13 (♀).

  • Mesosoma: Tergites I–VI, pretergites smooth, posttergites shagreened. Sternites smooth; VII, dorsosubmedian and dorsolateral carinae weakly developed to obsolete, granular.

  • Metasoma: Metasomal segments I–V, dorsal intercarinal surfaces smooth; lateral intercarinal surfaces finely granular to smooth; ventral intercarinal surfaces smooth. Segments I–IV, dorsolateral carinae weakly developed, granular; lateral supramedian carinae weakly to moderately developed, granular; lateral inframedian carinae weakly developed, granular on I–III; weakly developed to obsolete, granular on IV; ventrolateral carinae strongly developed, granular on I and II; moderately to weakly developed, granular on III and IV; ventrosubmedian carinae strongly developed, granular on I and II; moderately developed, granular on III and IV. Segment V length: pedipalp femur length ratio, 1.26 (♂), 1.18 (♀); dorsolateral carina moderately developed, granular to serrate (♂), or weakly developed, granular (♀); lateral inframedian carina weakly developed to obsolete, granular to smooth; ventrolateral carinae moderately developed, granular to serrate; ventromedian carina strongly developed, granular with subspiniform granules; ventral transverse carina strongly developed, comprising eight subspiniform granules; anal arch semicircular; anal subterminal carina strongly developed, comprising 13 subspiniform granules; anal terminal carina moderately developed, granular.

  • Telson: Telson, width: length ratio, 0.53 (♂), 0.67 (♀). Vesicle, lateral surfaces smooth; ventral surface granular anteriorly. Subaculear tubercle stout, subconical. Aculeus, 1.4 length of subaculear tubercle, strongly curved.

  • Hemispermatophore: Lamelliform, weakly sclerotized (fig. 9A); total length, 6.5 mm; distal lamella, length, 3.4 mm; capsular region, width, 1.4 mm; median lobe narrow, margin entire.

  • REMARKS: The original description of D. formosus was based on 4 adult males, 38 adult females, 3 immature males and 1 immature female from Tehuantepec, Oaxaca. Armas and Martín-Frías (2003) compared D. formosus with D. hoffmanni, D. keyserlingii, D. mitlae, and D. rectimanus and placed it in the penultimate couplet of Francke's (1977) key, i.e., in the keyserlingii group, comprising species with the pedipalp femur higher than wide. Armas (2006) synonymized D. formosus with Diplocentrus tehuano Francke, 1977, a species of the mexicanus group in which the pedipalp femur is wider than high, without any formal justification. Based on the original descriptions and an examination of the paratypes of D. tehuano, the two species are distinct and may be separated as follows. The pedipalp femur is higher than wide, its dorsal surface convex in D. formosus, whereas the femur is wider than high, its dorsal surface flat in D. tehuano, as in the other members of the mexicanus group. As the description of D. tehuano was based on 13 adult males and 15 adult females, the variation in spiniform macrosetal counts on the leg telotarsi can be satisfactorily assessed for the two species (4/5:5/5:5/6:6/6 in D. tehuano compared with 5/6:5-6/6:6/6:6-7/7 for D. formosus) lending further support for their differentiation. Based on the evidence, D. formosus is hereby reinstated as a valid species.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus jormosus is known from the Tehuantepec district in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, southern Oaxaca (fig. 3A).

  • ECOLOGY: According to Armas and Martín-Frías (2003), the type series of D. formosus was collected mostly from burrows in a lowland area of thorny forest mixed with tropical deciduous vegetation. The personally collected material reported here was excavated from burrows in riparian vegetation. Burrows, constructed almost horizontally in sandy soil, were ca. 40 cm long, and mostly straight, except when turning around stones in the soil matrix. Centruroides nigrimanus (Pocock, 1898) and an undetermined species of Vaejovis C.L. Koch, 1831, related to Vaejovis occidentalis Hoffmann, 1931, were collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. formosus are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 7.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, carapace, dorsal aspect. A. Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, ♂ (CNAN). B. Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). C. Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). D. Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). Scale bars = 1 mm.

    f07_01.jpg

    Table 2.

    Telotarsal spiniform macrosetal count (number of macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows of telotarsi on legs I–IV) in species of the Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, given as number of legs observed with corresponding proventral (p) and retroventral (r) setal count, including data from the original descriptions of Diplocentrus Formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977, and Diplocentrus tenango Santibáñez-Lopez and Francke, 2008.

    t02_01.gif

    FIGURE 8.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, sternum, genital operculum, and pectines, ventral aspect. A. Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, ♂ (CNAN). B. Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). C. Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). D. Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). Scale bars = 1 mm.

    f08_01.jpg

    FIGURE 9.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, sinistral hemispermatophore, dorsal aspect. A. Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, ♂ (CNAN). B. Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). C. Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). D. Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). Scale bars = 1 mm.

    f09_01.jpg

    Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977
    Figures 1C, 4B; tables 1, 2

  • Diplocentrus hoffmanni Francke, 1977: 150, 185–191, 194, 198, figs. 7, 14, 22, 51–54; Sissom, 1991: 156; Sissom and Walker, 1992: 130; Sissom, 1994: 257, 264, 265, figs. 20–22; Kovařík, 1998: 130; Beutelspacher and Trujillo-Olvera, 1999: 8; Beutelspacher, 2000: 29; Sissom and Fet, 2000: 338; Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003: 74; Francke and Ponce-Saavedra, 2005: 52.

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE ETLA: Municipio de Santiago Tenango: Holotype ♂, paratype ♀ (AMNH), near Tejocote [17°14′N 97°00′W], 7800 ft, summer 1963, C.M. Bogert, under logs; paratype ♂ (AMNH), Tejocote, 31 mi. NW Oaxaca city, 7600 ft, 9.ix.1962, M.R. Bogert. Municipio de San Francisco Telixtlahuaca: Paratype ♂ (AMNH), Telixtlahuaca, 6 mi. N [17°17.667′N 96°54.25′W], 7050 ft, 26.vii.1966, C.M. Bogert, under rocks in moderately dry area with oak and juniper.

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE ETLA: Municipio de San Francisco Telixtlahuaca: Telixtlahuaca, 6 km N, 17°20.367′N 96°56.121′W, 1915 m, 22.vii.2002, O. Francke, E. González and J. Ponce, SE slope, dry scrub, 1 ♂, 1 ♀ (AMCC [LP 2036]), 1 ♂ (CNAN). DISTRITO DE ZIMATLAN: Municipio de Magdalena Mixtepec: Magdalena Mixtepec, 16°52.824′N 96°51.056′W, 1710 m, 19–20.vi.2006, O. Francke, G. Villegas, H. Montaño, C. Santibáñez and A. Valdez, 1 ♂, 4 ♀ , 4 subad. ♀, 2 juv. (AMNH), 2 ♂, 3 ♀,4 subad. ♀, 2 juv. (CNAN), 2 ♀ (AMCC [LP 6599]). DISTRITO DE TLACOLULA: Mitla, 15 km E, 16°56.606′N 96°17.114′W, 2081 m, 18.vii.2007, O. Francke, H. Montaño, A. Valdez, A. Ballesteros, and C. Santibáñez, pine-oak woodland, 1 ♂ (CNAN), 1 ♂ (AMCC [LP 7615])

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination, updated from Francke (1977), is diagnostic for D. hoffmanni. Total length (adult), up to 55 mm. Base coloration (adult) reddish brown to orange-brown. Carapace anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped; frontal lobes and interocular surface moderately granular. Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface sparsely and moderately granular. Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina strongly developed, crenulate (♂); dorsoexternal carina weakly to moderately developed, coarsely granular to crenulate (♂); externomedian carina weakly developed, granular (♂); ventromedian carina obsolete to weakly developed, slightly granular (♂, ♀ ). Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface sparsely granular, surface between dorsal secondary and digital carinae sparsely granular and slightly reticulate (♂) or weakly reticulate (♀); digital and dorsal secondary carinae moderately to weakly developed, granular (♂ ; fig. 4B) or obsolete, smooth (♀); fingers gently curved. Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 5/5:5/5-6:6/6:6/6-7 (variation in table 2). Pectinal tooth count, 9–11, mode = 11 (♂) or 7–9, mode = 8(♀) (variation in table 1).

  • Diplocentrus hoffmanni resembles D. keyserlingii, D. kraepelini, n. sp., and D. sissomi, n. sp., in adult size and coloration but can be distinguished as follows. The pedipalp patella ventromedian carina (♂) is weakly developed to obsolete, the pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface (♀) weakly reticulate, and the digital carina (♂) granular to smooth in D. hoffmanni, whereas the pedipalp patella ventromedian carina (♂) is strongly developed, smooth to granular, the pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface (♀) smooth, and the digital carina (♂) smooth to crenulate in D. kraepelini, n. sp., and D. sissomi, n. sp. The pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface (♂) is slightly granular in D. hoffmanni but markedly reticulate in D. keyserlingii, and the counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs III and IV are higher in D. hoffmanni (6/6:6/6-7) than in D. keyserlingii (5/5:5/6).

  • DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus hoffmanni is known from the central valleys and adjacent mountains of Oaxaca in the following municipalities: Magdalena Mixtepec, San Francisco Telixtlahuaca, and Santiago Tenango (fig. 3A).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was observed doorkeeping at burrow entrances at night with UV detection, and was excavated during the daytime. Burrows, constructed in sandy soil at an angle of ca. 30°–40° to the ground surface, were ca. 20–30 cm long, with turns in places due to the presence of stones in the soil matrix (fig. 1A). The area where this species was collected was heavily disturbed, but there were remnants of oak forest. The habitat and habitus of D. hoffmanni are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 10.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, dextral pedipalp femur, dorsal aspect. A. Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, ♂ (CNAN). B. Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). C. Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). D. Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). Scale bars = 1 mm.

    f10_01.jpg

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii Karsch, 1880
    Figure 5A; tables 1, 2

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingii Karsch, 1880: 57; Stahnke, 1981: 34–44; Sissom, 1991: 156; Sissom and Walker, 1992: 130; Sissom, 1994: 257–261; Kovařík, 1998: 130; Sissom and Jackman, 1997: 151; Beutelspacher and Trujillo-Olvera, 1999: 9 (part); Beutelspacher, 2000: 29; Sissom and Fet, 2000: 338; Stockwell and Baldwin, 2001: 304 (part); Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003: 74.

  • Diplocentrus whitei: Kraepelin, 1894: 13–15 (part, misidentification).

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingi: Kraepelin, 1899: 102 (part); Banks, 1910: 185, 188; Herrera, 1917: 270; 1921: 159, figs. 30–33 (part); Ewing, 1928: 5; Gertsch, 1939: 17; Pelaez, 1962: 72 (part); Stahnke, 1970a: 25; Bücherl, 1971: 324; Guijosa, 1973: 145; Rowland and Reddell, 1976: 5; Moritz and Fischer, 1980: 316; Francke and Ponce-Saavedra, 2005: 49, 52.

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingi keyserlingi (not conspecific): Hoffmann, 1931: 313–317; 1938: 317.

  • Didymocentrus keyserlingii: Werner, 1934: 275.

  • Diplocentrus moritzi: Stahnke, 1981: 44, figs. 3, 4 (synonymized by Sissom, 1991: 156).

  • Diplocentrus reticulatus Francke, 1977: 150, 191–194, 198, figs. 8, 13, 24, 55–58 (synonymized by Sissom, 1991: 156); Beutelspacher and Trujillo-Olvera, 1999: 8; Beutelspacher, 2000: 33.

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: Lectotype ♂, paralectotype ♂ (ZMB 3248) [designated by Stahnke, 1981: 34; not examined]. DISTRITO DE ETLA: Municipio de Santiago Ten- ango: Holotype ♂, paratype ♂ [Diplocentrus reticulatus] (AMNH), near Tejocote [17°14′N 97°00′W], 7800 ft, summer 1963, C.M. Bogert, under logs. DISTRITO DE IXTLÁN DE JUÁREZ: Municipio de Santa Catarina Ixtepeji: Paratype ♂ [Diplocentrus reticulatus] (AMNH), El Punto, road to Ixtlán de Juarez [17°13.30′N 96°35.03′W], 19.viii.1961, C.M. and M.R. Bogert.

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE ETLA: Municipio de Santa María Peñoles: Santa Catarina Estetla, 17°01.6′N 97°05.766′W, 20.ix.2007, P. Lara, 1 ♂ (CALA). DISTRITO DE ZAACHILA: Municipio de Santa Inés del Monte: Santa Inés del Monte, 3 km E, 16°56.445′N 96°51.6312′W, 2665 m, 12.xii.2005, O. Francke, H. Montaño, C. Santibáñez, and A. Valdez, 1 ♂, 1 ♀ (CNAN), 2 ♀ (AMNH), 1 ♀ (AMCC [LP 6517]); Santa Inés del Monte, 16°56.442′N 96°51.629′W, 2270 m, 19.ix.2009, R. Paredes, C. Santibáñez, A. Valdez, and J. Cruz, 1 ♂, 5 juv. (CNAN), 1 juv. [leg] (AMCC [LP 11052]).

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination, updated from Francke (1977), is diagnostic for D. keyserlingii. Total length (adult), ca. 45 mm. Base coloration (adult) reddish brown to brown. Carapacial anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped; frontal lobes and interocular surface moderately granular, other surfaces finely granular. Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface moderately granular. Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina strongly developed, crenulate to smooth (♂); dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂); externomedian carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (♂); ventromedian carina obsolete to weakly developed, slightly granular (♂, ♀). Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface markedly reticulate (♂; fig. 5A) or smooth (♀); digital carina strongly developed, smooth (♂) or obsolete, smooth (♀); dorsal secondary carina moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate; fingers gently curved (fig. 5A). Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 4/5:5/5:5/5:5/6 (variation in table 1). Pectinal tooth count, 7–9, mode = 7 (♂) or 6–8, mode = 7(♀) (variation in table 2).

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingii resembles D. kraepelini, n. sp., D. rectimanus, and D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., in adult size and coloration but can be distinguished as follows. The counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs III and IV are lower in D. keyserlingii (5/5:5/6) than in D. kraepelini, n. sp. (6/6:6/6), D. rectimanus (6/6:6/6), and D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. (6/6:6/6). The pectinal tooth count (♂) is lower in D. keyserlingii (7–9) than in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. (9–12). The pedipalp chela manus (♂) is rounded, the fingers shorter than the manus, in D. keyserlingii, but slender, the fingers longer than the manus, in D. rectimanus, and the manus, dorsal surface (♀) is smooth in D. keyserlingii but granular in D. rectimanus.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus keyserlingii is known only from the central valleys and adjacent mountains (part of the Sierra Norte) of Oaxaca in the following municipalities: Santa Catarina Ixtepeji, Santa Inés del Monte, Santa María Peñoles, and Santiago Tenango (fig. 3B).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was collected under logs and stones, and excavated from burrows constructed at an angle of ca. 20° to the ground surface, ca. 20 cm deep and fairly straight with some turns due to the presence of stones in the soil matrix. The dominant vegetation in the area was oak forest. Centruroides nigrovariatus (Pocock, 1898) was collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. keyserlingii are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 11.

    Diplocentrus keyserlingii group, dextral pedipalp patella, external aspect. A. Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, ♂ (CNAN). B. Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). C. Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). D. Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., paratype ♂ (AMNH). Scale bars = 1 mm.

    f11_01.jpg

    Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp.
    Figures 7B, 8B, 9B, 10B, 11B, 14, 15; tables 13

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE COIXTLAHUACA: Municipio de San Cristóbal Suchixtlahuaca: Holotype ♂ (CNAN-T0671), 2 ♂, 3 ♀, 2 subad. ♀, 2 juv. paratypes (AMNH), 1 ♂, 3 ♀,1 subad. ♂, 2 juv. paratypes (CNAN-T0672), 1 ♀ paratype (AMCC [LP 6426]), Km 2 road San Cristóbal Suchixtlahuaca-Santiago Tejupan, 17°42.240′N 97°23.667′W, 2290 m, 28.vi.2006, O. Francke, G. Villegas, H. Montaño, and A. Valdez; 1 subad. ♀ paratype (CNAN), 1 subad. ♀ paratype [leg] (AMCC [LP 10973]), Suchixtlahuaca, 8 km NE, 17°42.124′N 97°23.776′W, 2030 m, 25.iii.2010, O. Francke, A. Valdez, C. Santibáñez, and J. Cruz, oak forest, under rock, daytime rock rolling.

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE TEPOSCOLULA: Municipio San Bartolo Soyaltepec: Caballo Blanco [17°35.432′N 97°18.414′W], 12.vii.1963, G. Sludder, under logs, 1 ♂ (AMNH).

  • ETYMOLOGY: This species is dedicated to Karl Kraepelin for his contributions to scorpiology.

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination is diagnostic for D. kraepelini, n. sp. Total length (adult), 50–55 mm. Base coloration (adult) brown to orange-brown. Carapace anteromedian notch moderately deep, U-shaped (fig. 7B). Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface finely and sparsely granular medially (fig. 9B). Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina moderately developed, crenulate (♂); dorsoexternal carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂); externomedian carina weakly developed, smooth (♂; fig. 11B); ventromedian carina moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂, ♀). Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface markedly reticulate (♂; fig. 14A) or smooth (♀; fig. 14B); digital carina strongly developed, smooth to crenulate (♂) or weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (♀); dorsal secondary carina moderately to weakly developed, smooth (♂) or weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (♀); fingers markedly curved. Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 4/5:5/5:6/6:6/6 (variation in table 2). Pectinal tooth count, 9–11, mode = 10 (♂) or 7–9, mode = 8(♀) (variation in table 1).

  • Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., D. keyserlingii and D. rectimanus possess similar counts of pectinal teeth and telotarsal spiniform macrosetae, but may be distinguished as follows. The pedipalp chela movable finger length is greater than the length of the carapace or metasomal segment V in D. kraepelini, n. sp., and D. rectimanus, but less than or subequal to the length of the carapace or metasomal segment V in D. keyserlingii. The counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs I and II are lower (4/5) in D. kraepelini, n. sp., than in D. rectimanus (5/5), whereas the counts on the telotarsi of legs III and IV are higher (6/6:6/6) in D. kraepelini, n. sp., than in D. keyserlingii (5/5:5/6). The ventromedian carina is moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate in D. kraepelini, n. sp., but obsolete in D. rectimanus. The pedipalp chela fingers are markedly curved in D. kraepelini, n. sp., but straight to gently curved in D. rectimanus. The pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface (♀) is smooth in D. kraepelini, n. sp., but granular in D. rectimanus.

  • Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., resembles D. mitlae in size and coloration, but may be distinguished from the latter as follows. The pedipalp chela manus (♂), dorsal and external surfaces are reticulate and the digital carina strongly developed in D. kraepelini, n. sp., whereas the dorsal and external surfaces are smooth and the digital carina weakly developed in D. mitlae. The count of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs I and II is higher in D. kraepelini, n. sp. (6/6), than in D. mitlae (5/5).

  • DESCRIPTION: Based on holotype ♂ and paratype ♂ (fig. 15A, B) with differences in paratype ♀ (fig. 15C, D) noted. Measurements in table 3.

  • Coloration: Carapace brown to orange; moderately infuscate throughout, uniformly so around median ocelli, variegated elsewhere. Coxosternum pale orange. Pedipalps orange to reddish brown, carinae darker. Legs pale brown to pale orange, uniformly infuscate. Mesosoma brown; tergites brown (♂) or pale brown (♀), densely infuscate; sternites pale orange. Metasoma pale orange to brown; carinae weakly to moderately infuscate. Telson orange to reddish, uniformly infuscate.

  • Carapace: Anterior margin moderately setose; anteromedian notch moderately deep, U-shaped (fig. 7B). Frontal lobes and interocular surface moderately granular; other surfaces sparsely granular or shagreened. Three pairs of subequal lateral ocelli.

  • Pedipalps: Orthobothriotaxic, type C. Femur height greater than width (fig. 10B); dorsal intercarinal surface shallowly convex, finely and sparsely granular medially; external intercarinal surface smooth; ventral intercarinal surface flat, smooth; internal intercarinal surface coarsely and densely granular; dorsointernal carina strongly developed, granular; dorsoexternal carina weakly developed, granular proximally and smooth distally; ventroexternal carina obsolete to weakly developed; ventrointernal carina moderately developed, granular proximally, becoming obsolete distally. Patella, dorsal intercarinal surfaces slightly reticulate (♂) or smooth (♀); external and ventral intercarinal surfaces slightly reticulate (fig. 11B); internal intercarinal surface smooth; proximal tubercle moderately developed, bifurcate; dorsointernal carina weakly developed to obsolete; dorsomedian carina moderately developed, crenulate (♂) or weakly developed, smooth (♀); dorsoexternal carina weakly developed, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂) or obsolete, smooth (♀); externomedian weakly developed, smooth; ventroexternal carinae weakly to moderately developed, smooth; ventromedian carina moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate; ventrointernal carina strongly developed, comprising large granules. Chela manus, slender, height subequal to width (♂) or rounded, height greater than width (♀), densely (♂) or sparsely (♀) setose; dorsal intercarinal surface moderately reticulate (♂; fig. 14A) or smooth (♀; fig. 14B); external intercarinal surface smooth; dorsal marginal carina moderately developed, coarsely granular; digital carina strongly developed (♂) or obsolete to weakly developed (♀), smooth; dorsal secondary and external secondary carinae weakly to moderately developed (♂) or obsolete to weakly developed (♀), smooth; ventroexternal carina weakly developed, smooth distally, becoming obsolete proximally; ventromedian carina strongly developed, smooth proximally, becoming obsolete distally, directed toward midpoint of movable finger articulation; ventrointernal carina weakly to moderately developed, smooth; internodorsal carina weakly developed, granular; internomedian and internoventral carinae weakly developed, smooth; internal surface with shallow longitudinal depression where chela rests against patella. Chela fixed finger curved; length equal (♂) or subequal (♀) to femur length and patella length; dorsal surface smooth and densely setose proximally; external surface flat; internal surface shallowly concave.

  • Legs: Legs I–IV femora and tibiae, prolateral surfaces shagreened; telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows (dextral/sinistral), 4/5 4/5: 5/5 5/5: 6/6 6/6: 6/6 6/6.

  • Pectines: Tooth count: 10–10 (♂; fig. 8B); 8–9 (♀).

  • Mesosoma: Tergites I–VI, pretergites smooth, posttergites granular; VII granular. Sternites smooth; VII, dorsosubmedian and dorsolateral carinae weakly developed, crenulate.

  • Metasoma: Metasomal segments I–V, dorsal intercarinal surfaces weakly reticulate on segments I–IV, smooth on V; lateral intercarinal surfaces reticulate; ventral intercarinal surfaces smooth on I–III, sparsely granular on IV and V. Segments I–IV, dorsolateral carinae moderately developed (♂) to weakly developed (♀), granular; lateral supramedian carinae weakly to moderately developed on I, moderately developed, slightly granular to crenulate on II–IV; lateral inframedian carinae moderately developed, slightly granular to crenulate on I and II, weakly to moderately developed, slightly granular on III and IV; ventrolateral carinae moderately developed, crenulate to smooth on I–III, weakly developed, slightly granular on IV; ventrosubmedian carinae moderately developed, slightly crenulate to smooth on I–III, weakly developed, slightly crenulate to smooth on IV. Segment V length:pedipalp femur length ratio, 1.27 (♂), 1.39 (♀); dorsolateral and lateral inframedian carinae weakly to moderately developed, crenulate; ventrolateral carinae moderately developed, crenulate; ventromedian carina moderately developed, granular, with subspiniform granules posteriorly; ventral transverse carina moderately developed, comprising six subspiniform granules; anal arch semicircular; anal subterminal carina strongly developed, comprising 10 subspiniform granules; anal terminal carina moderately developed, granular.

  • Telson: Telson, width:length ratio, 0.56 (♂), 0.70 (♀). Vesicle, lateral surfaces smooth; ventral surface granular anteriorly. Subaculear tubercle stout, subconical. Aculeus, 1.5 length of subaculear tubercle, strongly curved.

  • Hemispermatophore: Lamelliform, weakly sclerotized (fig. 9B); total length, 6.5 mm; distal lamella, length, 3.5 mm; capsular region, width, 1.6 mm; median lobe narrow, margin entire. DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., is known only from the type locality in the San Cristóbal Suchixtlahuaca municipality of Oaxaca (fig. 3A).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was observed doorkeeping at burrow entrances at night with UV detection, and was excavated during the daytime. The burrows, constructed at an angle of ca. 30° to the ground surface, were ca. 30 cm long, and mostly straight with some turns around stones in the soil matrix. The dominant vegetation in the area was oak forest. An undetermined species of Centruroides Marx, 1890, related to C. nigrovariatus, Vaejovis dzahui SantibáñezLóopez and Francke, 2010, and an undetermined species of Vaejovis were collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. kraepelini, n. sp., are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 12.

    Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, dextral pedipalp chela, dorsoexternal aspect. A. ♂ (CNAN). B. ♀ (CNAN). Scale bar = 1 mm.

    f12_01.jpg

    Table 3.

    Measurements (mm) of male and female type specimens of Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., and Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., from Oaxaca, Mexico, in the CNAN.

    t03_01.gif

    FIGURE 13.

    Diplocentrus formosus Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003, habitus, dorsal (A, C) and ventral (B, D) aspect. A, B. ♂ (CNAN). C, D. ♀ (CNAN). Scale bars = 10 mm.

    f13_01.jpg

    Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977
    Figures 1D, 5B; tables 1, 2

  • Diplocentrus mitlae Francke, 1977: 150, 194–198, figs. 4, 16, 23, 59–62; Beutelspacher and Trujillo-Olvera, 1999: 9; Beutelspacher, 2000: 33; Sissom and Fet, 2000: 341; Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003: 74.

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE TLACOLULA: Municipio de San Pablo Villa de Mitla: Holotype ♂ (AMNH), Mitla, 6 mi. N [16°55.252′N 96°21.997′W], 1889 m, 1. ix.1962, M.R. Bogert.

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE TLACOLULA: Municipio de San Pablo Villa de Mitla: San José del Paso, 1 km N, 16°55.935′N 96°17.220′W, 1880 m, 17.1.2007, C. Santibáñez and N. Gomez, 2 ♀,1 juv. (CNAN); San José del Paso, 2 km N, 16°55.735′N 96°17.867′W, 1937 m, 15.ix.2009, R. Paredes, C. Santibáñez, and A. Valdez, 2 ♂, 2 juv. (CNAN), 1 subad. ♂ [leg] (AMCC [LP 11034]), 1 ♂ [leg] (AMCC [LP 11465]).

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination, updated from Francke (1977), is diagnostic for D. mitlae. Total length (adult), 50–60 mm. Base coloration (adult) reddish to copper red (fig. 1D). Carapace anteromedian notch shallow, V-shaped. Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface sparsely granular (♂) or smooth (♀). Pedipalp patella (♂, ♀), dorsomedian, dorsoexternal, externomedian and ventromedian carinae weakly developed to obsolete, smooth. Pedipalp chela manus (♂, ♀) slender, dorsal surface smooth; digital and dorsal secondary carinae weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (fig. 5B); fingers longer than manus. Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 4/4:4/5:5/5:5/5 (variation in table 2). Pectinal tooth count, 7–10, mode = 9 (♂) or 7–8, mode = 8(♀) (variation in table 1).

  • Diplocentrus mitlae resembles D. rectimanus and D sagittipalpus, n. sp., in adult size and coloration but can be distinguished as follows. The pedipalp chela dorsal surface is smooth (♂, 2) in D. mitlae but reticulate (♂) or granular (♀) in D. rectimanus, and granular-reticulate (♂) or granular (♀) in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. The pedipalp chela digital carina (♂) is weakly developed in D. mitlae but strongly developed in D. rectimanus and D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. The counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs III and IV are lower (5/5:5/5) in D. mitlae than in D. rectimanus and D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. (6/6:6/6).

  • DESCRIPTION OF THE FEMALE: The original description of D. mitlae was based on the holotype male, and the female remained unknown until now.

  • Coloration: Carapace brown to reddish orange; moderately infuscate throughout, uniformly so around median ocelli, variegated elsewhere. Coxosternum pale yellow. Pedipalps orange to reddish brown, carinae darker. Legs pale brown to pale orange, uniformly infuscate. Mesosoma brown to reddish brown; tergites brown, densely infuscate; sternites pale yellow. Metasoma pale brown to reddish brown; carinae weakly to moderately infuscate. Telson orange to reddish, uniformly infuscate.

  • Carapace: Anterior margin moderately setose; anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped. Frontal lobes and interocular surface weakly granular; other surfaces sparsely granular or shagreened. Three pairs of subequal lateral ocelli.

  • Pedipalps: Orthobothriotaxic, type C. Femur height greater than width; dorsal intercarinal surface markedly convex, sparsely granular medially; external intercarinal surface smooth; ventral intercarinal surface flat, smooth; internal intercarinal surface finely and sparsely granular; dorsointernal carina moderately developed, granular; dorsoexternal carina weakly developed, granular proximally and smooth distally; ventroexternal carina obsolete to weakly developed; ventrointernal carina moderately developed, granular proximally, becoming obsolete distally. Patella, all intercarinal surfaces smooth; proximal tubercle moderately developed; dorsointernal carina weakly developed to obsolete; dorsomedian carina weakly developed, smooth; dorsoexternal carina obsolete; externomedian obsolete; ventroexternal carinae obsolete; ventromedian carina obsolete; ventrointernal carina obsolete. Chela manus, rounded, height greater than width, sparsely setose; dorsal and external intercarinal surfaces smooth; dorsal marginal carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth; digital carina obsolete; dorsal secondary and external secondary carinae obsolete; ventroexternal carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth distally, becoming obsolete proximally; ventromedian carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth proximally, becoming obsolete distally, directed toward midpoint of movable finger articulation; ventrointernal carina weakly developed to obsolete, smooth; internodorsal, internomedian and internoventral carinae weakly developed to obsolete, smooth; internal surface with shallow longitudinal depression where chela rests against patella. Chela fixed finger curved; length subequal to femur length and patella length; dorsal surface smooth and moderately setose proximally; external surface flat; internal surface shallowly concave.

  • Legs: Legs I–IV femora and tibiae, prolateral surfaces shagreened; telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows (dextral/sinistral), 4/4 4/4: 4/5 4/5: 5/5 5/5: 5/5 5/5. Pectines: Tooth count: 7–8.

  • Mesosoma: Tergites I–VI, pretergites smooth to shagreened, posttergites granular; VII granular. Sternites smooth; VII, dorsosubmedian and dorsolateral carinae weakly developed, crenulate to granular.

  • Metasoma: Metasomal segments I–V, dorsal intercarinal surfaces minutely granular distally on segments I and II; smooth on III and V; lateral intercarinal surfaces smooth; ventral intercarinal surfaces smooth on I–V. Segments I–IV, dorsolateral carinae weakly developed, granular on I and II; weakly developed to obsolete, smooth on III and IV; lateral supramedian carinae moderately developed, crenulate to slightly granular on I and II, moderately developed, smooth on III and IV; lateral inframedian carinae moderately developed, slightly granular to crenulate on I–III, weakly developed, smooth on IV; ventrolateral carinae moderately to strongly developed, granular on I and II, weakly developed, slightly granular to crenulate on III and IV; ventrosubmedian carinae moderately to strongly developed, granular to slightly crenulate on I and II, weakly developed, slightly crenulate to smooth on III and IV. Segment V length:pedipalp femur length ratio, 1.48; dorsolateral and lateral inframedian carinae weakly developed to obsolete, smooth; ventrolateral carinae moderately developed, granular; ventromedian carina moderately developed, granular, with subspiniform granules posteriorly; ventral transverse carina moderately developed, comprising six subspiniform granules; anal arch semicircular; anal subterminal carina strongly developed, comprising 12 granules; anal terminal carina moderately developed, granular.

  • Telson: Telson, width:length ratio, 0.62. Vesicle, lateral surfaces smooth; ventral surface granular anteriorly. Subaculear tubercle stout, subconical. Aculeus, 1.4 length of subaculear tubercle, strongly curved.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus mitlae is known only from the central valleys and adjacent mountains of Oaxaca in the San Pablo Villa de Mitla municipality (fig. 3B).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was collected under stones and from burrows, ca. 20 cm long, at the base of stones, in an area where the dominant vegetation was oak forest. Centruroides nigrimanus and Vaejovis oaxaca Santibáñez-López and Sissom, 2010, were collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. mitlae are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • Diplocentrus rectimanus Pocock, 1898
    Figures 1E, 6A; tables 1, 2

  • Diplocentrus rectimanus Pocock, 1898: 390, 391; Francke, 1977: 150, 179–185, 190, 194, 198, figs. 6, 15, 21, 45–50; Sissom, 1991: 156; Sissom and Walker, 1992: 130; Sissom, 1994: 257, 262–264, figs. 18, 19, 28, 30; Kovařík, 1998: 131; Beutelspacher and Trujillo-Olvera, 1999: 8; Beutelspacher, 2000: 33; Sissom and Fet, 2000: 342; Armas and Martín-Frías, 2003: 74; Francke and Ponce-Saavedra, 2005: 52; Santibáñez-López and Francke, 2008: 59.

  • Diplocentrus keyserlingi: Kraepelin, 1899: 102 (part); Pocock, 1902: 4, fig. 4a–c; Herrera, 1917: 270; 1921: 159, figs. 30–33 (part); Hoffmann, 1931: 312, 313 (part); Pelaez, 1962: 72 (part).

  • Diplocentrus moritzi Stahnke, 1981: 44, figs. 3, 4 (synonymized by Sissom, 1991: 156).

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: Holotype ♂, paratype ♂ [Diplocentrus moritzi] (ZMB 3248) [not examined]. DISTRITO DE ETLA: Municipio de San Felipe Tejalapam: Holotype ♂ (BMNH), Jalapa del Valle [17°06.274′N 96°50.357′W], 1640 m [not examined].

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: Oaxaca, 19.vi.1947, B. Malkin, 1 ♀ (AMNH). DISTRITO CENTRO: Municipio de Oaxaca de Juárez: Ejido Guadalupe Victoria, 17°04.006′N 96°43.20′W, 1700 m, 12.vii.2009, J. Cruz, 1 ♂ (CNAN). Municipio de Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán: Monte Albán, [17°02.639′N 96°46.048′W], 30.i.1940, 1 ♂, 3 ♀ (CNAN). Municipio de Soledad Etla: San Gabriel, 7 km N [17°13.65′N 96°44.697′W], 2125 m, 22.vii.2002, O. Francke, E. González and J. Ponce, SW facing slopes with oaks, in burrows in open ground, 2 ♂, 3 2 (AMCC [LP 2032]), 1 ♂, 2 ♀ (CNAN); San Miguel Etla, 9.3 km N (road to las Guacamayas), 17°13.438′N 96°44.301′W, 2196 m, 15.xi.2005, O. Francke, M. Córdova, A. Jaimes, G. Montiel, and C. Santibáñez, 5 ♀ (AMNH), 1 ♀, 2 juv. (AMCC [LP 6540]); San Miguel Etla, 9 km N, 17°13.486′N 96°44.315′W, 2197 m, 26.iii.2010, O. Francke, J. Cruz, C. Santibáñez, and A. Valdez, pine forest, under rocks, daytime rock rolling, 1 ♂, 1 ♀ (CNAN), 1 ♀ [leg] (AMCC [LP 11036]). DISTRITO DE TLACOLULA: Municipio de Santiago Matatlán: San Pablo Guila, 16°48.1′N 96°26.4′W, E. Luna, 1 ♂ (CALA). Municipio de San Lorenzo Albarradas: Cerro Guirone, N slope [16°54.383′N 96°16.567′W], 7200–7500 ft, 12.vi.1970, M.R. Bogert, 1 ♀ (AMNH); Mitla, 4.5 km E, 17°15.642′N 96°32.427′W, 23.vii.2002, J. Ponce, in burrow under stone, 1 ♀ (AMCC [LP 2030]).

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination, updated from Francke (1977), is diagnostic for D. rectimanus. Total length (adult), 45–69 mm. Base coloration (adult) dark reddish (fig. 1E). Carapace anteromedian notch shallow, V-shaped. Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface sparsely granular. Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina moderately developed, crenulate (♂); dorsoexternal and externomedian carinae weakly developed to obsolete, smooth (♂); ventromedian carina obsolete (♂, ♀ ). Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface reticulate (♂) or granular (♀); digital carina strongly developed, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂); fingers straight to gently curved (fig. 6A). Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 5/5:5/5:6/6:6/6 (variation in table 2). Pectinal tooth count, 9–12, mode = 10 (♂) or 8–9, mode = 8(♀) (variation in table 1).

  • Diplocentrus rectimanus resembles D. mitlae and D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., in adult size and coloration but can be distinguished as follows. The pedipalp chela dorsal surface is reticulate (♂) or granular (♀) in D. rectimanus but smooth (♂, ♀) in D. mitlae, and the counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs III and IV are higher (6/6) in D. rectimanus than in D. mitlae (5/5). The base coloration is brown to pale brown in D. rectimanus but reddish to ferruginous in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., and the pedipalp patella dorsoexternal carina is obsolete in D. rectimanus but moderately developed and crenulate to weakly granular in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp.

  • REMARKS: Pocock (1898, 1902) listed the type locality as “Jalapa,” but there is more than one locality in Mexico by that name. Hoffmann (1931) assumed that the type locality was Jalapa, Veracruz. However, Francke (1977) concluded that the type locality is probably Jalapa del Valle (16 km W of Oaxaca City), based on the collection of conspecific specimens from several localities in the central valleys of Oaxaca, in the vicinity of this locality. DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus rectimanus is known only from the central valleys and adjacent mountains of Oaxaca in the following municipalities: Oaxaca de Juárez, Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán, San Felipe Tejalapam, Santiago Tenango, San Lorenzo Albarradas, San Bartolo Soyaltepec, San Pablo Villa de Mitla, and Soledad Etla (fig. 3B).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was collected from burrows under rocks, ca. 20 cm long and with many turns due to the presence of small stones in the soil matrix, in an area where the dominant vegetation was pine-oak forest. Centruroides nigrovariatus was collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. rectimanus are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 14.

    Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., dextral pedipalp chela, dorsoexternal aspect. A. Paratype ♂ (AMNH). B. Paratype ♀ (AMNH). Scale bar = 1 mm.

    f14_01.jpg

    Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp.
    Figures 7C, 8C, 9C, 10C, 11C, 16, 17; tables 13

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE IXTLÁN DE JUÁREZ: Municipio de Santa Maria Jaltianguis: Holotype ♂ (CNAN-T0676), 9 ♂, 1 ♀ paratypes (CNAN-T0677), 5 ♂ paratypes (AMNH), Campamento las Flores, 17°21.036′N 96°31.829′W, 2309 m, 16.vi.2007, C. Santibáñez and A. Valdez; paratype ♀ (CNAN), paratype 2 [leg] (AMCC [LP 10975]), Campamento las Flores, 17°21.0564′N 96°31.8732′W, 2320 m, 22.iv.2010, A. Valdez, C. Santibánez, J. Cruz, and D. Barrales, pine-oak forest, on the ground, UV light detection. Municipio de Santa Catarina Ixtepeji: 2 ♀, 6 juv. paratypes (AMCC [LP 2029]), 7 juv. paratypes (CNAN), Highway 175, S of Ixtlán, 17°15.642′N 96°32.427′W, 2075 m, 21.vii.2002, L. Prendini, E. González, O. Francke, and J. Ponce, in burrows under stones; paratype ♀ (CNAN), 1 juv. paratype (AMCC [LP 11466]), Ixtepeji, 8.4 km del Punto, 17°16.059′N 96°35.275′W, 4.Vii.2008, O. Francke, A. Quijano, and C. Santibáñez.

  • ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE IXTLÁN DE JUÁREZ: Municipio de Santa Catarina Ixtepeji: El Cumbre, on ridge E Cerro San Felipe, road to Ixtlán de Juárez [17°14.336′N 96°29.486′W], 8000–9000 ft, 28.ix.1961, C.M. and M.R. Bogert, 1 ♂ (AMNH); El Punto, road to Ixtlán de Juárez [17°12.779′N 96°35.176′W], 19.viii.1961, C.M. and M.R. Bogert,4 ♂ (AMNH); El Punto, 1–5 mi. NE, road to Ixtlán de Juárez [17°12.779′N 96°35.176′W], 7500 ft, 3.1X.1961, Miller and Bogert, 1 ♂ (AMNH); Ixtlán de Juárez, 2 mi. E [17°19.929′N 96°29.486′W], 7600 ft, 20.vii.1963, G. Sludder, 1 ♂ (AMNH).

  • ETYMOLOGY: The specific epithet describes the arrow-shaped pedipalp, characteristic of this species.

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination is diagnostic for D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. Total length (adult), 45–55 mm. Base coloration (adult) reddish brown to dark brown. Carapace, anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped, and granular (fig. 7C). Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface finely and sparsely granular (fig. 9C). Patella dorsomedian and dorsoexternal carinae moderately developed, crenulate to weakly granular (♂); externomedian carina weakly to moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂; fig. 11C); ventromedian carina weakly developed, granular (♂, ♀). Pedipalp chela, dorsal surface granular-reticulate (♂) or granular (♀); digital carina strongly developed, smooth (♂; fig. 16A) or granular (♀ ; fig. 16B); fingers straight (♂). Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 5/5:5/5:6/6:6/6 (variation in table 1). Pectinal tooth count, 9–12, mode = 10 (♂) or 8–9, mode = 8(♀) (variation in table 2).

  • Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., resembles D. kraepelini, n. sp., and D. rectimanus in size and coloration but can be distinguished as follows. The pedipalp patella dorsoexternal carina is moderately developed, crenulate to weakly granular in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., but weakly developed and smooth in D. kraepelini, n. sp., and D. rectimanus. The pedipalp chela manus ( ♀ ), dorsal surface is reticulate and the digital carina granular in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., whereas the dorsal surface and digital carina are smooth in D. kraepelini, n. sp. The pedipalp chela fingers are curved in D. kraepelini, n. sp., but straight in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. The base coloration (adult) is reddish to ferruginous, with the pedipalps and carapace similar in coloration, in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., but brown to pale brown, with the pedipalps paler than the carapace, in D. rectimanus. The pedipalp patella dorsal external carina ( ♂ ) is moderately developed and crenulate to weakly granular in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., but obsolete in D. rectimanus. The pedipalp chela fingers (♂) are straight in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., but gently curved in D. rectimanus. The distal lamella of the hemispermatophore is broad in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., and in D. rectimanus (see Sissom, 1994: fig. 18), whereas it is slender with a curved tip in D. kraepelini, n. sp.

  • DESCRIPTION: Based on holotype ♂ and paratype ♂ (fig. 17A, B) with differences in paratype ♀ (fig. 17C, D) noted. Measurements in table 3.

  • Coloration: Carapace reddish brown to orange (♂) or dark reddish (♀); moderately infuscate throughout, uniformly so around median ocelli, variegated elsewhere. Coxosternum pale orange. Pedipalps orange to pale brown, patella slightly infuscate, chela reddish orange to pale brown (♂) or dark reddish (♀), carinae darker. Legs brown to reddish brown, uniformly and faintly infuscate. Mesosoma pale orange to brown ( ♂ ) or dark brown to brown ( ♀ ); tergites moderately (♂) to densely (♀) infuscate; sternites pale yellow to orange. Metasoma light orange to reddish brown. Telson pale orange to brown, uniformly infuscate.

  • Carapace: Anterior margin moderately setose; anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped (fig. 7C). Frontal lobes and interocular surface moderately to densely granular; surfaces around median ocular tubercle shagreened; other surfaces uniformly finely granular. Three pairs of subequal lateral ocelli.

  • Pedipalps: Orthobothriotaxic, type C. Femur height greater than width (fig. 10C); dorsal intercarinal surface moderately convex, finely and sparsely granular; external intercarinal surface smooth; ventral intercarinal surface flat, shagreened; internal intercarinal surface coarsely and densely granular; dorsointernal carina strongly developed, comprising several spiniform granules; dorsoexternal carina weakly developed, comprising few spiniform granules; ventroexternal carina obsolete; ventrointernal carina moderately developed, comprising large spiniform granules. Patella, dorsal and external intercarinal surfaces slightly granular-reticulate (fig. 11 C); ventral intercarinal surface granular between ventrointernal and ventromedian carinae, smooth to slightly reticulate between ventromedian and ventroexternal carinae (♂) or entirely smooth (♀); internal intercarinal surface finely and sparsely granular; proximal tubercle strongly developed, comprising three large granules; dorsointernal carina obsolete; dorsomedian carina moderately developed, slightly granular to crenulate; dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, slightly granular to crenulate (♂) or obsolete to weakly developed, smooth (♀); externomedian and ventroexternal carinae weakly to moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate; ventromedian carina weakly developed, granular (♂) or obsolete to weakly developed, smooth (♀); ventrointernal carina weakly to moderately developed, granular. Chela manus, slender (♂) or rounded (♀), height greater than width, densely (♂) or sparsely (♀) setose; dorsal intercarinal surface granular-reticulate (♂) or granular (♂); external intercarinal surface granular (fig. 16B); dorsal marginal carina moderately developed, coarsely granular (♂), often with large subspiniform granules (♀); digital carina strongly developed, crenulate (♂) or moderately developed, granular (♀); dorsal secondary carina weakly to moderately developed, crenulate (♂) or granular (♀); external secondary carina weakly developed, smooth to crenulate (♂) or weakly to moderately developed, granular (♀); ventroexternal carina weakly to moderately developed, crenulate; ventromedian carina obsolete to weakly developed, crenulate, directed toward midpoint of movable finger articulation; ventrointernal carina obsolete to weakly developed, smooth to slightly crenulate; internoventral, internomedian and internodorsal carinae weakly developed, smooth to slightly granular; internal surface with shallow longitudinal depression where chela rests against patella. Chela fixed finger straight (♂) or curved (♀); length equal to (♂) or less than (♀) femur length and patella length; dorsal surface smooth and densely setose proximally; external surface flat; internal surface flat to shallowly concave.

  • Legs: Legs I–IV femora and tibiae, prolateral surfaces shagreened; telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows (dextral/sinistral), 5/5 5/5:5/5 5/5:5/6 5/6:6/6 6/6.

  • Pectines: Tooth count: 10–11 (♂; fig. 8C); 8–9 (♀).

  • Mesosoma: Tergites I–VI, smooth, VII granular (♂) or coarsely granular (♀). Sternites smooth; VII, dorsosubmedian carinae obsolete to weakly developed, smooth in anterior half of segment, dorsolateral carinae weakly to moderately developed, smooth, extending three quarters of segment length.

  • Metasoma: Metasomal segments I–V, dorsal intercarinal surfaces moderately to weakly granular anteriorly on segments I–III, weakly granular to smooth on IV and V; lateral intercarinal surfaces moderately to weakly granular on I–III, moderately granular or granular-reticulate on IV and V; ventral intercarinal surfaces smooth to shagreened on I–IV, sparsely granular on V. Segments I–IV, dorsolateral carinae obsolete to weakly developed, granular (♂) or weakly granular (♀); lateral supramedian carinae weakly to moderately developed, granular on I–III, weakly developed, granular on IV; lateral inframedian carinae weakly to moderately developed, granular to slightly crenulate on I–III, weakly developed, granular on IV; ventrolateral carinae strongly developed, granular to crenulate on I–III, weakly to moderately developed, granular to crenulate on IV; ventrosubmedian carinae strongly developed, granular to crenulate on I–III, weakly to moderately developed, slightly granular to crenulate on IV. Segment V length:pedipalp femur length ratio, 1.28 (♂), 1.11 (♀); dorsolateral carinae weakly developed, slightly granular to smooth; lateral median carinae obsolete to weakly developed, smooth; ventrolateral carinae moderately developed, granular, with few subspiniform granules contiguous with transverse carina; ventromedian carina strongly developed, granular, with subspiniform granules; ventral transverse carina comprising four large subspiniform granules; anal arch semicircular; anal subterminal carina moderately developed, comprising 12 granules; anal terminal carina obsolete, weakly granular. Telson: Telson, width:length ratio, 0.54 (♂), 0.78 (♀).

  • Vesicle, lateral surfaces shagreened. Subaculear tubercle stout, subconical. Aculeus length twice that of subaculear tubercle, strongly curved.

  • Hemispermatophore: Lamelliform, weakly sclerotized (fig. 9C); total length, 7.5 mm; distal lamella, length, 3.9 mm; capsular region, width, 1.6 mm; median lobe narrow, margin crenulate.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., is known from six localities in the Sierra Norte of Oaxaca (fig. 3A).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was collected with UV light detection at night on short grass plains in a deforested area surrounded by pine-oak forest. No burrows were observed. An undescribed species of Vaejovis was collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 15.

    Diplocentrus kraepelini, n. sp., habitus, dorsal (A, C) and ventral (B, D) aspect. A, B. Paratype ♂ (AMNH). C, D. Paratype ♀ (AMNH). Scale bars = 10 mm.

    f15_01.jpg

    FIGURE 16.

    Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., dextral pedipalp chela, dorsoexternal aspect. A. Paratype ♂ (AMNH). B. Paratype ♀ (AMNH). Scale bar = 1 mm.

    f16_01.jpg

    FIGURE 17.

    Diplocentrus sagittipalpus, n. sp., habitus, dorsal (A, C) and ventral (B, D) aspect. A, B. Paratype ♂ (AMNH). C, D. Paratype ♀ (AMNH). Scale bars = 10 mm.

    f17_01.jpg

    Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp.
    Figures 1B, F, 7D, 8D, 9D, 10D, 11D, 18, 19; tables 13

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE MIAHUATLÁN: Municipio de San Cristóbal Amatlán: Holotype ♂ (CNAN-T0678), 3 ♂, 8 ♀, 3 juv. paratypes (CNAN-T0679), 3 ♂, 7 ♀, 2 subad. ♀, 5 juv. paratypes (AMNH), 1 ♀, 22 juv. paratypes (AMCC [LP 6531]), 1 ♀, 18 juv. paratypes (AMCC [LP 6538]), 1 ♀, 12 juv. paratypes (AMCC [LP 6539]), 1 ♀,2 juv. paratypes (AMCC [LP 6541]), San Lorenzo Mixtepec, 1 km N, 16°17.493′N 96°20.910′W, 2120 m, 23.vi.2006, O. Francke, G. Villegas, H. Montaño, A. Valdez, and C. Santibáñez. Municipio de San Juan Mixtepec: San Juan Mixtepec, 16°16.6′N 96°17.95′W, April, 2002, E. Aldasoro, 2 ♂ paratypes (CALA).

  • ETYMOLOGY: This species is dedicated to W. David Sissom, West Texas A&M University, in recognition of his contributions to the systematics of Diplocentrus.

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination is diagnostic for D. sissomi, n. sp. Total length (adult), 47–60 mm. Base coloration (adult) red to reddish orange (fig. 1B, F). Carapace anteromedian notch shallow, V-shaped; frontal lobes and interocular surface moderately granular (fig. 7D). Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface sparsely granular (fig. 9D). Pedipalp patella, dorsomedian carina moderately developed, smooth (♂); dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, crenulate (♂); externomedian carina weakly to moderately developed, smooth to weakly crenulate (♂; fig. 11D); ventromedian carina weakly developed, smooth to weakly granular (♂, ♀). Pedipalp chela, dorsal surface reticulate (♂) or smooth (♀); digital carina strongly developed (♂) or weakly developed (♀), smooth; fingers straight (♂; fig. 18A) or curved (♀; fig. 18B). Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 5/5:5/6:6/6:6/6 (variation in table 1). Pectinal tooth count, 8–10, mode =10 (♂) or 6–10, mode =8 (♀) (variation in table 2).

  • Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., resembles D. kraepelini, n. sp., D. rectimanus, and D. sagittipalpus, n. sp., in adult coloration, and the counts of pectinal teeth and telotarsal spiniform macrosetae, but differs from these species as follows. The carapace anteromedian notch is shallow and V-shaped in D. sissomi, n. sp., but moderately deep and U-shaped in D. kraepelini, n. sp. The counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs I and II are higher (5/5:5/6) in D. sissomi, n. sp., than in D. kraepelini, n. sp. (4/5:5/5). The pedipalp patella dorsoexternal carina is moderately developed and crenulate in D. sissomi, n. sp., but weakly developed to obsolete and smooth in D. kraepelini, n. sp., and D. rectimanus. The pedipalp chela fixed finger is moderately curved (♂) and the chela manus digital carina smooth (♀) in D. sissomi, n. sp., whereas the fixed finger is straight (♂) and the digital carina granular (♀) in D. rectimanus and D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. The distal lamella of the hemispermatophore is slender in D. sissomi, n. sp., and D. kraepelini, n. sp., but broad in D. rectimanus and D. sagittipalpus. The total length: hemispermatophore length ratio is 5.51 in D. sissomi, n. sp. (paratype), 6.94 in D. sagittipalpus, n. sp. (paratype), and 7.67 in D. kraepelini, n. sp. (paratype).

  • DESCRIPTION: Based on holotype ♂ and paratype ♂ (fig. 19A, B) with differences in paratype ♀ (fig. 19C, D) noted. Measurements in table 3.

  • Coloration: Carapace brown (♂) or pale brown (♀); moderately infuscate throughout, uniformly so around median ocelli, variegated elsewhere. Coxosternum cream to pale orange. Pedipalps brown to reddish brown, carinae darker; patella faintly infuscate; chela, carinae, and fingers infuscate. Legs pale brown to yellow, uniformly infuscate. Mesosoma orange (♂) or pale orange (♀); tergites moderately (♂) to densely (♀) infuscate; sternites orange to pale orange. Metasoma pale brown. Telson brownish orange, uniformly infuscate.

  • Carapace: Anterior margin moderately setose; anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped (fig. 7D). Frontal lobes and interocular surface moderately granular; other surfaces shagreened. Three pairs of subequal lateral ocelli.

  • Pedipalps: Orthobothriotaxic, type C. Femur height greater than width (fig. 10D); dorsal intercarinal surface shallowly convex, sparsely granular; external intercarinal surface finely and sparsely granular; ventral intercarinal surface flat, shagreened; internal intercarinal surface coarsely and densely granular; dorsointernal carina strongly developed, granular; dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, granular proximally, crenulate distally; ventroexternal carina weakly developed, granular; ventrointernal carina strongly developed, granular. Patella, dorsal and external intercarinal surfaces weakly to moderately reticulate (fig. 11D); ventral intercarinal surface smooth to slighly reticulate along ventroexternal carina; internal intercarinal surface moderately granular; proximal tubercle moderately developed, bifurcate; dorsointernal carina weakly developed to obsolete; dorsomedian carina moderately developed, smooth; dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, crenulate (♂) or obsolete (♀); externomedian carina weakly to moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂) or obsolete (♀); ventroexternal carina moderately developed, crenulate; ventromedian carina weakly to moderately developed, smooth to slightly granular; ventrointernal carina strongly developed, comprising large granules. Chela manus slender, height subequal to width (♂) or rounded, height greater than width (♀), densely (♂) or sparsely (♀) setose; dorsal intercarinal surface markedly reticulate (♂) or smooth (♀); external intercarinal surface slightly reticulate (♂) or smooth to slightly shagreened (♀; fig. 18A); dorsal marginal carina weakly to moderately developed, granular; digital carina strongly developed (♂) or weakly developed (♀), smooth; dorsal secondary carina weakly to moderately developed, smooth to slightly crenulate (♂) or obsolete (♀ ; fig. 18B); external secondary carina moderately developed, crenulate (♂) or obsolete (♀); ventroexternal and ventromedian carinae strongly developed, crenulate; ventromedian carina directed toward midpoint of movable finger articulation; ventrointernal carina strongly developed, granular; internoventral, internomedian, and internodorsal carinae moderately developed, granular; internal surface with shallow longitudinal depression where chela rests against patella. Chela fixed finger moderately curved; length less than femur length and patella length; dorsal surface smooth and densely setose proximally; external surface flat; internal surface shallowly concave.

  • Legs: Legs I–IV femora and tibiae, prolateral surfaces shagreened; telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows (dextral/sinistral), 5/5 5/5:5/6 5/6:6/6 6/6:6/6 6/6. Pectines: Tooth count: 10–10 (♂; fig. 8D); 8–9 (♀).

  • Mesosoma: Tergites I–VI, pretergites smooth, posttergites granular, VII granular. Sternites smooth; VII, dorsosubmedian and dorsolateral carinae obsolete anteriorly, more strongly developed and crenulate posteriorly.

  • Metasoma: Metasomal segments I–V, dorsal and lateral intercarinal surfaces shagreened; ventral intercarinal surfaces smooth on I and II, shagreened on IV and V. Segments I–IV, dor- solateral carinae obsolete to weakly developed, granular on I, weakly developed, granular on II, weakly to moderately developed, granular on III and IV; lateral supramedian carinae strongly developed, granular to crenulate on I, strongly developed, granular on II–IV; lateral inframedian carinae moderately developed, slightly serrate to crenulate on I, crenulate on II, slightly crenulate to granular on III and IV; ventrolateral carinae moderately developed, serrate to crenulate (♂) or granular to slightly crenulate (♀) on I and II, strongly developed, crenulate (♂) or moderately developed, granular to slighty crenulate (♀) on III, moderately developed, granular on IV; ventrosubmedian carinae moderately developed, crenulate (♂) or granular to slightly crenulate (♀) on I–III, weakly developed, granular to slightly crenulate on IV Segment V length:pedipalp femur length ratio, 1.40 (♂), 1.25 (♀); dorsolateral carinae moderately developed, granular to slightly serrate; lateral inframedian carinae moderately developed, granular; ventromedian carina strongly developed, granular, with subspiniform granules; ventral transverse carina moderately developed, incomplete, comprising four large, subspiniform granules; anal arch semicircular; anal subterminal carina moderately developed, comprising 11 granules; anal terminal carina moderately developed, granular.

  • Telson: Telson, width:length ratio, 0.5 (♂), 0.69 (♀). Vesicle, lateral surfaces shagreened; ventral surface granular anteriorly. Subaculear tubercle stout, subconical. Aculeus, 1.5 length of subaculear tubercle, strongly curved.

  • Hemispermatophore: Lamelliform, weakly sclerotized (fig. 9D); total length, 8.5 mm; distal lamella, length, 4.6 mm; capsular region, width, 1.7 mm; median lobe narrow, margin crenulate.

  • DISTRIBUTION : Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., is known only from the type locality in the San Cristóbal Amatlán municipality of Oaxaca (fig. 3B).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was collected during daytime, under logs and in burrows, ca. 30–40 cm long by 20–25 cm deep, and often curved due to the presence of small stones in the soil matrix (fig. 1B, F), in an area where the dominant vegetation was mixed pine-oak forest. Vaejovis oaxaca was collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. sissomi, n. sp., are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 18.

    Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., dextral pedipalp chela, dorsoexternal aspect. A. Paratype ♂ (AMNH). B. Paratype ♀ (AMNH). Scale bar = 1 mm.

    f18_01.jpg

    Diplocentrus tenango Santibáñez-López and Francke, 2008
    Figure 6B; tables 1, 2

  • Diplocentrus tenango Santibáñez-López and Francke 2008: 54–59.

  • TYPE MATERIAL: MEXICO: OAXACA: DISTRITO DE TEHUANTEPEC: Municipio de San Miguel Tenango: Holotype ♂ (CNAN-T0273), 2 ♀ paratypes (CNAN-T0274, 275), 2 juv. paratypes (CNAN-T0276, 277), 2 ♀,1 juv. paratypes (AMNH), 1 ♀,1 subad. ♀, 3 juv. ♀ paratypes (AMCC [LP 3693]), San Miguel Tenango, 0.5 km W, 16°15.515′N 95°35.9533′W, 1571 m, 2. xi.2004, O. Francke, G. Villegas, and R. Paredes, UV light detection at night.

  • DIAGNOSIS: The following character combination, updated from Santibáñez-López and Francke (2008), is diagnostic for D. tenango. Total length (adult), 40–50 mm. Base coloration (adult) dark brown to reddish brown. Carapace anteromedian notch moderately deep, V-shaped; margins weakly granular. Pedipalp femur, dorsal surface sparsely granular, especially medially. Patella dorsomedian carina strongly developed, crenulate (♂); dorsoexternal carina moderately developed, smooth to crenulate (♂); externomedian carina weakly to moderately developed, smooth to crenulate (♂); ventromedian carina strongly developed, crenulate (♂) or weakly developed, smooth (♀). Pedipalp chela manus, dorsal surface reticulate (♂ ; fig. 6B) or weakly reticulate (♀); digital carina strongly developed, smooth (♂) or moderately developed, smooth to crenulate (♀). Legs I–IV telotarsi, counts of spiniform macrosetae in pro- and retroventral rows, 6/6:6/6:7/7:7/7 (variation in table 1). Pectinal tooth count, 12–13, mode = 13 (♂) or 10–11, mode =11(♀) (variation in table 2).

  • Diplocentrus tenango is most similar to D. keyserlingii, D. rectimanus, and D. sissomi, n. sp., from which it may be distinguished as follows. The pedipalp patella ventromedian carina (♂, ♀ ) is strongly developed and crenulate in D. tenango, obsolete in D. keyserlingii and D. rectimanus, and weakly developed and smooth to slightly granular in D. sissomi sp. n. The pedipalp chela manus (♂) is rounded, with short, curved fingers in D. tenango but slender, with long, straight fingers in D. rectimanus. The counts of spiniform macrosetae on the telotarsi of legs III and IV are higher (7/7:7/7) in D. tenango than in D. keyserlingii (5/5:5/6), D. rectimanus (6/6:6/6), and D. sissomi, n. sp. (5/5:5/6). The pectinal tooth count is higher in D. tenango (♂: 12–13; ♀: 10–11) than in D. keyserlingii (♂: 7–9; ♀: 6–8) and D. sissomi, n. sp. (♂: 8–10; ♀: 6–10).

  • DISTRIBUTION: Diplocentrus tenango is known only from the type locality in the San Miguel Tenango municipality of Oaxaca (fig. 3B).

  • ECOLOGY: This species was collected from burrows in road cuts along a logging track in pine forest. Centruroides hoffmanni Armas, 1996, was collected in sympatry. The habitat and habitus of D. tenango are consistent with the pelophilous ecomorphotype (Prendini, 2001).

  • FIGURE 19.

    Diplocentrus sissomi, n. sp., habitus, dorsal (A, C) and ventral (B, D) aspect. A, B. Paratype ♂ (AMNH). C, D. Paratype ♀ (AMNH). Scale bars = 10 mm.

    f19_01.jpg

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    This publication is a requirement for the graduate training program of Carlos E. Santibáñez-López at the Posgrado en Ciencias Biológicas of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM). He acknowledges the Instituto de Biología (IBUNAM) and the Posgrado en Ciencias Biológicas of UNAM for the education received; the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT) for financially supporting his graduate studies; the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) for awarding a Collections Study Grant and a Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Grant to visit the AMNH in 2011 and 2012; Edmundo González and Ofelia Delgado for hospitality, generosity, and assistance during his visits to New York; Jesus Cruz, Hector Montaño, Griselda Montiel, Ricardo Paredes, Alejandro Valdez, and Gabriel Villegas for assistance with fieldwork in Mexico; and his family for financial and emotional support during his graduate studies. Special thanks to Steve Thurston (AMNH) for his assistance with preparing the plates for this contribution and Luis de Armas and José Ochoa for their comments on the manuscript. Fieldwork in Mexico was conducted under scientific permit FAUT-0175 from Semarnat to O.F. Francke, and partially supported by U.S. National Science Foundation grant DEB 0413453 to L. Prendini and a grant from the Instituto Bioclon to O.F. Francke.

    REFERENCES

    1.

    L.F. Armas 2006. Name-bearing types of scorpions deposited at the Institute of Ecology and Systematics, Havana, Cuba (Arachnida: Scorpiones). Euscorpius 33: 1–14. Google Scholar

    2.

    L.F. Armas , and E. Martín-Frías . 2000. Cuatro especies nuevas de Diplocentrus (Scorpiones: Diplocentridae) de México. Anales de la Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas 46: 25–40. Google Scholar

    3.

    L.F. Armas , and E. Martín-Frías . 2003. Dos nuevas especies de Diplocentrus Peters, 1861 (Scorpiones: Diplocentridae) de México. Revista Ibérica de Aracnología 7: 71–77. Google Scholar

    4.

    N. Banks 1910. The scorpions of California. Pomona College Journal of Entomology 2: 185–190. Google Scholar

    5.

    C.R. Beutelspacher 2000. Catálogo de los Alacranes de México. Morelia, Michoacán: Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, 175 pp. Google Scholar

    6.

    C.R. Beutelspacher and M. Trujillo-Olvera . 1999. Una especie nueva de Diplocentrus Peters (Scorpionida: Diplocentridae) de Chiapas, México. Revista Nicaragüense de Entomología 50: 1–11. Google Scholar

    7.

    [ A.A. Birula ] A.A Byalynitskii-Birulya . 1917a. Arachnoidea arthrogastra Caucasica. Pars I. Scorpiones. Zapiski Kavkazskogo Muzeya (Mémoires du Musée du Caucase). Tiflis, Georgia: Imprimerie de la Chancellerie du Comité pour la Transcaucasie A (5), 253 pp. [in Russian; published August 1917; English translation: 1964. Arthrogastric Arachnids of Caucasia. 1. Scorpions. Jerusalem: Israel Program for Scientific Translations, 170 pp.] Google Scholar

    8.

    [ A.A. Birula ] A.A. Byalynitskii-Birulya 1917b. Faune de la Russie et des pays limitrophes fondee principalement sur les collections du Musée Zoologique de l'Académie des Sciences de Russie. Arachnides (Arachnoidea). Petrograd [St. Petersburg]: Russian Academy of Sciences, Museum of Zoology 1 (1): xx, 227 pp. [in Russian; introduction dated October 1917; English translation: 1965. Fauna of Russia and Adjacent Countries. Arachnoidea. Vol. I. Scorpions. Jerusalem: Israel Program for Scientific Translations, xix, 154 pp.] Google Scholar

    9.

    W. Bücherl 1971. Classification, biology and venom extraction of scorpions. In W. Bücherl and E. Buckley (editors), Venomous animals and their venoms, vol. 3: 317–348. New York: Academic Press. Google Scholar

    10.

    L. di. Caporiacco 1938. Aracnida del Messico, di Guatemala e Honduras Brittanico. Atti della Società Italiana di Scienze Naturali 77 (3): 251–282. Google Scholar

    11.

    Comisión Nacional para el Conocimiento y Uso de la Biodiversidad (CONABIO) 2011. Geoinformación, metadatos y mapoteca digital. Internet resource ( http://www.conabio.gob.mx/informacion/gis/), accessed March 2011. Google Scholar

    12.

    H.E. Ewing 1928. The scorpions of the western part of the United States; with notes on those occurring in northern Mexico. Proceedings of the U.S. National Museum 73: 1–24. Google Scholar

    13.

    O.F. Francke 1977. Scorpions of the genus Diplocentrus from Oaxaca, Mexico (Scorpionida, Diplocentridae). Journal of Arachnology 4: 145–200. Google Scholar

    14.

    O.F. Francke 1978. Systematic revision of diplocentrid scorpions from circum-Caribbean lands. Special Publications of the Museum, Texas Tech University 14: 1–92. Google Scholar

    15.

    O.F. Francke 1985. Conspectus genericus scorpionorum 1758–1982 (Arachnida: Scorpiones). Occasional Papers of the Museum, Texas Tech University 98: 1–32. Google Scholar

    16.

    O.F. Francke 2007. Alacranes (Arachnida: Scorpiones) de Frontera Corozal, en la selva Lacandona, Chiapas, México, con la descripción de una nueva especie de Diplocentrus (Diplocentridae). Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 78: 69–77. Google Scholar

    17.

    O.F. Francke , and J. Ponce-Saavedra . 2005. A new species of Diplocentrus (Arachnida: Scorpiones) from Michoacán, Mexico. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 76: 49–53. Google Scholar

    18.

    O.F. Francke , and A. Quijano-Ravell . 2009. Una especie nueva de Diplocentrus (Scorpiones: Diplocentridae) del estado de Michoacán, México. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 80: 659–663. Google Scholar

    19.

    D.A. Fritts , and W.D. Sissom . 1996. Two new Diplocentrus (Scorpiones, Diplocentridae) from Mexico. Entomological News 107: 39–48. Google Scholar

    20.

    W.J. Gertsch 1939. Report on a collection of Arachnida from the Chisos Mountains. Contributions from the Baylor University Museum 24: 17–26. Google Scholar

    21.

    S. Guijosa 1973. Una nueva especie de Diplocentrus en México. Anales de la Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas 20: 145–156. Google Scholar

    22.

    A. Hadley 2008. CombineZM. Internet resource ( http://hadleyweb.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/), accessed September 2011. Google Scholar

    23.

    M. Herrera 1917. Los alacranes de México. Boletín de la Dirección de Estudios Biológicos 2: 265–275. Google Scholar

    24.

    M. Herrera 1921. Los escorpiones de México. Memorias y Revista de la Sociedad Científica ‘Antonio Alzate’ 39: 137–159. Google Scholar

    25.

    C.C. Hoffmann 1931. Monografias para la entomología médica de México. Monografia Num. 2, Los escorpiones de México. Primera parte: Diplocentridae, Chactidae, Vejovidae. Anales del Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 2: 291–408. Google Scholar

    26.

    C.C. Hoffmann 1938. Nuevas consideraciones acerca de los alacranes de México. Anales del Instituto de Biologia Universidad Nacional Autónoma de M éxico 9: 318–337. Google Scholar

    27.

    Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía e Informática (INEGI). 2011. Archivo Histórico de Localidades de México. Internet resource ( http://www.inegi.org.mx/geo/contenidos/geoestadistica/consulta_localidades.aspx), accessed March 2011. Google Scholar

    28.

    A. Jarvis , H.I. Reuter , A. Nelson , and E. Guevara . 2008. Hole-filled seamless SRTM data Ver. 4, International Centre for Tropical Agriculture. Internet resource ( http://srtm.csi.cgiar.org), accessed September, 2012. Google Scholar

    29.

    F. Karsch 1880. Arachnologische Blätter. X. Scorpionologische Fragmente. Zeitschrift für die Gesellschaft der Naturwissenschaften 53: 404–409. Google Scholar

    30.

    A. Kästner 1941. 1. Ordnung der Arachnida: Scorpiones. In T. Krumbach (editor), Handbuch der Zoologie 3 (1): 117–240. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. Google Scholar

    31.

    K. Kraepelin 1894. Revision der Scorpione. II. Scorpionidae und Bothriuridae. Beiheft zum Jahrbuch der Hamburgischen Wissenschaftlichen Anstalten 11: 1–248. Google Scholar

    32.

    K. Kraepelin 1899. Scorpiones und Pedipalpi. In F. Dahl (editor), Das Tierreich 8 (Arachnoidea): 1–265. Herausgegeben von der Deutschen Zoologischen Gesellschaft. Berlin: R. Friedländer und Sohn. Google Scholar

    33.

    F. Kovařík 1998. Štiři (Scorpions). Jihlava, Czech Republic: Madagaskar, 175 pp. Google Scholar

    34.

    B.H. Lamoral 1979. The scorpions of Namibia (Arachnida: Scorpionida). Annals of the Natal Museum 23: 497–784. Google Scholar

    35.

    M. Laurie 1896a. Notes on the anatomy of some scorpions, and its bearing on the classification of the order. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (6) 17: 185–193. Google Scholar

    36.

    M. Laurie 1896b. Further notes on the anatomy and development of scorpions, and their bearing on the classification of the order. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 18: 121–133. Google Scholar

    37.

    K.J. McWest 2009. Tarsal spinules and setae of vaejovid scorpions (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae). Zootaxa 2001: 1–126. Google Scholar

    38.

    O. Mello-Campos 1924. Os escorpiões brasilieros. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 17(2): 237–301. Google Scholar

    39.

    M. Moritz , and S.C. Fischer . 1980. Die Typen der Arachniden-Sammlung des Zoologischen Museums Berlin. III. Scorpiones. Mitteilungen aus dem Zoologischen Museum in Berlin 2: 309–326. Google Scholar

    40.

    A.B. Nenilin and V. Fet . 1992. Zoogeographical analysis of the world scorpion fauna (Arachnida: Scorpiones). Arthropoda Selecta 1: 3–31. [in Russian; English summary] Google Scholar

    41.

    W. Peters 1861. Ueber eine neue Eintheilung der Skorpione und ueber die von ihm in Mossambique gesammelten Arten von Skorpionen. Monatsberichte der Königlichen Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 1861: 507–516. Google Scholar

    42.

    D. Pelaez 1962. Hoffmanita mexicana gen. et sp. nov., Cheyletidae parásito de un alacrán del género Centruroides.Anales de la Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas 11: 71–78. Google Scholar

    43.

    R.I. Pocock 1893. Contributions to our knowledge of the arthropod fauna of the West Indies. Part I. Scorpiones and Pedipalpi, with a supplementary note upon the freshwater Decapoda of St. Vincent. Journal of the Linnean Society 24: 374–409. Google Scholar

    44.

    R.I. Pocock 1898. Descriptions of some new scorpions from Central and South America. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (7) 1: 384–394. Google Scholar

    45.

    R.I. Pocock 1902. Arachnida: Scorpiones, Pedipalpi and Solifugae. Biologia Centrali-Americana. London: Taylor and Francis, 71 pp. Google Scholar

    46.

    G.A. Polis 1990. Ecology. In G.A. Polis (editor), The biology of scorpions: 247–293. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Google Scholar

    47.

    L. Prendini 2000. Phylogeny and classification of the superfamily Scorpionoidea Latreille 1802 (Chelicerata, Scorpiones): an exemplar approach. Cladistics 16: 1–78. Google Scholar

    48.

    L. Prendini 2001. Substratum specialization and speciation in southern African scorpions: the Effect Hypothesis revisited. In V. Fet and P.A Selden (editors.), Scorpions 2001. In memoriam Gary A. Polis: 113–118. Burnham Beeches, UK: British Arachnological Society. Google Scholar

    49.

    L. Prendini , and W.C. Wheeler . 2005. Scorpion higher phylogeny and classification, taxonomic anarchy, and standards for peer review in online publishing. Cladistics 21: 446–494. Google Scholar

    50.

    L. Prendini , T.M. Crowe , and W.C. Wheeler . 2003. Systematics and biogeography of the family Scorpionidae (Chelicerata: Scorpiones), with a discussion on phylogenetic methods. Invertebrate Systematics 17: 185–259. Google Scholar

    51.

    A. Quijano-Ravell , O.F. Francke , J. Ponce-Saavedra , and M. Villaseñor-Ramos . 2012. Caracterización de las madrigueras de Hadrurus gertschi Soleglad (Scorpiones, Iuridae) en una localidad de Guerrero, México. Revista Ibérica de Aracnología 20: 45–55. Google Scholar

    52.

    J.M. Rowland , and J.R. Reddell . 1976. Annotated checklist of the arachnid fauna of Texas (excluding Acarida and Araneida). Occasional Papers of the Museum, Texas Tech University 38: 1–25. Google Scholar

    53.

    P.R. San Martín 1963. Una nueva especie de Bothriurus (Scorpiones, Bothriuridae) del Uruguay. Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle 35: 400–418. Google Scholar

    54.

    C.E. Santibáñez-López , and O.F. Francke . 2008. A new species of Diplocentrus (Arachnida: Scorpiones) from Oaxaca, Mexico. Zootaxa 1742: 53–60. Google Scholar

    55.

    C.E. Santibáñez-López , O.F. Francke , and M. Córdova-Athanasiadis . 2011. The genus Diplocentrus Peters (Scorpiones: Diplocentridae) in Morelos, Mexico. Revista Ibérica de Aracnología 19: 3–13. Google Scholar

    56.

    W.D. Sissom 1990. Systematics, biogeography and paleontology. In G.A. Polis (editor), The biology of scorpions: 64–160. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Google Scholar

    57.

    W.D. Sissom 1991. Studies on the genus Diplocentrus in the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico: a taxonomic conundrum. Bulletin of the Association of Southeastern Biologists 33: 156. Google Scholar

    58.

    W.D. Sissom 1994. Systematic studies on Diplocentrus keyserlingii and related species from Central Oaxaca, Mexico (Scorpiones, Diplocentridae). Mitteilungen aus dem Zoologischen Museum in Berlin 70: 257–266. Google Scholar

    59.

    W.D. Sissom , and V. Fet . 2000. Family Diplocentridae Karsch, 1880. In V. Fet , W.D. Sissom , G. Lowe , and M.E. Braunwalder , Catalog of the scorpions of the world (1758–1998): 329–354. New York: New York Entomological Society. Google Scholar

    60.

    W.D. Sissom , and J. Jackman . 1997. Order Scorpiones — Scorpions. In J. Jackman (editor), A field guide to spiders and scorpions of Texas: 148–155. Houston: Texas Monthly Field Guide Series, Gulf Publishing Corporation. Google Scholar

    61.

    W.D. Sissom , G.A. Polis , and D.D. Watt . 1990. Field and laboratory methods. In G.A. Polis (editor), The biology of scorpions: 445–461. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Google Scholar

    62.

    W.D. Sissom , and A.L. Walker . 1992. A new species of Diplocentrus from western Mexico. Southwestern Naturalist 37: 126–131. Google Scholar

    63.

    H.L. Stahnke 1970a. Diplocentrus spitzen, a new Arizona species of scorpion. Entomological News 81: 25–32. Google Scholar

    64.

    H.L. Stahnke 1970b. Scorpion nomenclature and mensuration. Entomological News 81: 297–316. Google Scholar

    65.

    H.L. Stahnke 1976. The determination of the type species of Diplocentrus (Scorpionida). Journal of the Arizona Academy of Sciences 11 (2): 58–60. Google Scholar

    66.

    H.L. Stahnke 1981. A study of the syntypes of Diplocentrus keyserlingii (Diplocentridae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 170: 34–45. Google Scholar

    67.

    S.A. Stockwell 1988. Six new species of Diplocentrus Peters from Central America (Scorpiones, Diplocentridae). Journal of Arachnology 16: 153–175. Google Scholar

    68.

    S.A. Stockwell 1992. Systematic observations on North American Scorpionida with a key and checklist of the families and genera. Journal of Medical Entomology 29 (3): 407–422. Google Scholar

    69.

    S.A. Stockwell , and A.S. Baldwin . 2001. A new species of Diplocentrus (Scorpiones, Diplocentridae) from Texas. Journal of Arachnology 29: 304–311. Google Scholar

    70.

    R. Teruel 2003. Un nuevo escorpión del género Diplocentrus Peters, 1861 (Scorpiones: Diplocentridae) del estado de Guerrero, México. Revista Ibérica de Aracnología 76: 49–53. Google Scholar

    71.

    T. Thorell 1876. On the classification of scorpions. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 4 (17): 1–15. Google Scholar

    72.

    M. Vachon 1952. Étude sur les Scorpions. Alger: Institut Pasteur d'Algérie, 482 pp. Google Scholar

    73.

    M. Vachon 1974. Étude des caractères utilisés pour classer les familles et les genres de scorpions (Arachnides). 1. La trichobothriotaxie en arachnologie, sigles trichobothriaux et types de trichobothriotaxie chez les scorpions. Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle 3: 857–958. Google Scholar

    74.

    F. Werner 1934. Scorpiones, Pedipalpi. In H.G. Bronns Klassen und Ordnungen des Tierreichs 5, IV, 8 (1–2) (Scorpiones): 1–316. Leipzig: Akademische Verlaggesellschaft. Google Scholar

    75.

    S.C. Williams , and W.E. Savary 1991. Uroctonites, a new genus of scorpion from western North America (Scorpiones: Vaejovidae). Pan-Pacific Entomologist 67: 272–287. Google Scholar
    © American Museum of Natural History 2013 ISSN 0003-0082
    Carlos E. Santibäñez-López, Oscar F. Francke, and Lorenzo Prendini "Systematics of the keyserlingii Group of DiplocentrusPeters, 1861 (Scorpiones: Diplocentridae), with Descriptions of Three New Species from Oaxaca, Mexico," American Museum Novitates 2013(3777), 1-48, (21 June 2013). https://doi.org/10.1206/3777.2
    Published: 21 June 2013
    KEYWORDS
    Diplocentridae
    Diplocentrus
    Mexico
    Nearctic
    Scorpiones
    systematics
    Back to Top