Alpiscorpius gamma is a species of scorpion found in parts of Central and Southern Europe. Its body reaches the length of 32 mm and is darkly pigmented, but is largely indistinguishable from closely related species with which it forms the »mingrelicus complex«. The animal is not considered aggressive and has mild venom, so it is not dangerous to humans.[1]

Alpiscorpius gamma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Scorpiones
Family: Euscorpiidae
Genus: Alpiscorpius
Species:
A. gamma
Binomial name
Alpiscorpius gamma
(Di Caporiacco, 1950)
Synonyms
  • Euscorpius germanus gamma Di Caporiacco, 1950
  • Euscorpius mingrelicus caprai Bonacina, 1980
  • Euscorpius gamma Di Caporiacco, 1950

Its known range includes Austria,[2] Italy, Slovenia and Croatia,[3] being commonly distributed in Slovenia.[4]

Alpiscorpius gamma inhabits humid habitats where it rests in crevices under tree bark, beneath rocks etc.[1]

Taxonomy

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The taxon was originally described as a subspecies of Euscorpius germanus based on samples collected in southwest Slovenia and eastern Italy.[2] At that time, Euscorpius germanus was thought to be distributed across large part of Europe, from Italy to Caucasus. However, a subsequent taxonomical revision split E. gamma's then parent species Euscorpius mingrelicus from E. germanus. The taxonomic status continued to be complicated due to frequent misidentification – the species can only be distinguished by microscopic morphological characters such as the distribution of sensory hairs on pedipalps, with the difference being apparent only after statistical analysis.[2] Then, in 2000, taxonomists proved that specimens of Euscorpius germanus gamma can be clearly distinguished from related populations by molecular characters, so the subspecies was elevated to the species rank. A female collected near the mouth of Rižana river in Slovene Istria and kept in the collection of La Specola museum (Florence, Italy) was named type specimen.[2] In 2019 the species was moved from Euscorpius to Alpiscorpius.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b Rein, Jan Ove (2000). "Euscorpius gamma Caporiacco, 1950". The Scorpion Files. Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet. Retrieved 2020-06-09.
  2. ^ a b c d Scherabon, B.; Gantenbein, B.; Fet, V.; Barker, M.; Kuntner, M.; Kropf, C.; Huber, D. (2000). "A new species of scorpion from Austria, Italy, Slovenia and Croatia: Euscorpius gamma Caporiacco, 1950, stat. nov. (Scorpiones: Euscorpiidae)". Ekológia (Bratislava). 19 (Suppl. 3): 253–262.
  3. ^ a b Kovařík, František; Štundlová, Jana; Fet, Victor; Šťáhlavský, František (September 2019). "Seven new Alpine species of the genus Alpiscorpius Gantenbein et al., 1999, stat. n. (Scorpiones: Euscorpiidae)". Euscorpius. 287: 1–29. doi:10.18590/euscorpius.2019.vol2019.iss287.1.
  4. ^ Sket, Boris; Gogala, Matija; Kuštor, Valika, eds. (2003). Živalstvo Slovenije. Ljubljana: Tehniška založba Slovenije. ISBN 86-365-0410-4.