Lipseuma is a genus of millipedes in the family Kashmireumatidae. This genus contains only two species, the type species L. josianae and its close relative L. bernardi.[1] Both species are troglobites found in caves in China.[2]

Lipseuma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Myriapoda
Class: Diplopoda
Order: Chordeumatida
Family: Kashmireumatidae
Genus: Lipseuma
Golovatch, Geoffroy & Mauries, 2006
Type species
Lipseuma josianae
Golovatch, Geoffroy & Mauries, 2006
Species

Discovery

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This genus and its two species were first described in 2006 by the myriapodologist Sergei Golovatch of the Russian Academy of Sciences and two myriapodologists at the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle in France, Jean-Jacques Geoffroy and Jean-Paul Mauriès. The original descriptions are based on specimens collected in 1999 by the biospeleologists Josiane and Bernard Lips, for whom the genus and its two species are named. The L. josianae holotype (a male) and seven paratypes (two males, one female, and four juveniles) were found in the Chuan Dong Zi cave in Banqiao in Hubei province in China. The L. bernardi holotype (a male) and two paratypes (one incomplete male and one subadult male) were found in the Three Eyes cave in Xinlong county in Sichuan province in China. All type specimens are deposited in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris.[2]

Description

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Both species in this genus are striking for the complete lack of pigment and the absence of eyes. These species also feature strongly elongated antennae, legs, and bristles on the outside of their bodies. These troglomorphic adaptations to life in the dark indicate that both species are troglobites, living their entire life cycles in caves.[2] As in most species in the family Kashireumatidae (all three species of Kashmireuma and two of three species of Vieteuma), the adults of both species of Lipseuma have only 28 segments (counting the collum as the first segment and the telson as the last) rather than the 30 segments usually found in adults the order Chordeumatida.[2][3][4] Thus, in this genus, the adult female has only 46 pairs of legs, and the adult male has only 44 pairs of walking legs, excluding the eighth and ninth pair, which become anterior and posterior gonopods.[2]

The species in this genus are also notable for featuring gonopods that are among the simplest in the order Chordeumatida. Both the anterior and posterior gonopods distinguish this genus from other genera in the family Kashmireumatidae. For example, the posterior gonopods in this genus feature only one segment where two or three segments are visible in the other two genera in this family.[2]

The two Lipseuma species are so similar as to be difficult to distinguish. The two species differ slightly in size: Male specimens of L. josianae range from 9.3 mm to 9.8 mm in length, while the only female specimen measures 10.1 mm long. The male specimens of L. bernardi are smaller, ranging from 6.8 mm (in the subadult) to 7.2 mm in length. Furthermore, the two species differ in minor details of the structure of their legs and gonopods.[2]

References

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  1. ^ "MilliBase - Lipseuma Golovatch, Geoffroy & Mauries, 2006". www.millibase.org. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Golovatch, Sergei I.; Geoffroy, Jean-Jacques; Mauries, Jean-Paul (2006). "Four new Chordeumatida (Diplopoda) from caves in China". Zoosystema. 28 (1): 75–92.
  3. ^ Shear, William A. (2002). "Five New Chordeumatidan Millipeds from China: New Species of Vieteuma (Kashmirieumatidae) and Nepalella (Megalotylidae)". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. 53 (6): 63–72 – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
  4. ^ Enghoff, Henrik; Golovatch, Sergei; Short, Megan; Stoev, Pavel; Wesener, Thomas (2015-01-01). "Diplopoda — taxonomic overview". Treatise on Zoology - Anatomy, Taxonomy, Biology. The Myriapoda, Volume 2: 363–453. doi:10.1163/9789004188273_017. ISBN 9789004188273.