10. Cryptops (T.) spinipes Pocock, 1891

Figs 50–53

Cryptops (T.) spinipes: Edgecombe, 2005: 322; Cryptops (T.) spinipes: Schileyko, 2007: 90;

Cryptops (T.) spinipes: Maurienne et al., 2011: 62 .

Material. Papua New Guinea, Western Province, [West Sepik Province], Bahrman Mts., from Finim Tel [Plateau] to the pass, 2260–2600 m, BSE [?], 1 ad, 1975, leg. PB & Ph . Chapman, No. 10 809 in NMNHS.

Description. The whole body covered by numerous setae of various size and length, legs and ultimate legs more setose than the body (Fig. 51).

Head capsule with complete paramedian sutures, its posterior margin covered by tergite 1. Clypeus with two setose clypeal plates (Fig. 52) delimited by sutures—larger anterior (with 2 setae inside, one of them lost) and much smaller posterior (with 1 lost seta inside)—and 5–6 setae around setose plates. Labrum with three teeth (Fig. 52).

Anterior margin of forcipular coxosternite with 6+6 marginal setae (some setae are lost but their sockets are well-recognizable) and 4+4 submarginal setae. Tarsungula very thin and long.

Tergite 1 with anterior transverse suture at very anterior margin and well-developed depression in the middle. Sternites with well-developed transverse ridge between the coxae (Fig. 53). Endosternites better visible in anterior sternites, trigonal sutures well recognizable at sternites 2–5(6). Katopleure not divided vertically (Fig. 50); spiracles definitely oval (not slit-like).

Legs 1–19 with undivided tarsus, 20 with definitely divided tarsus; accessory spines rudimentary (hardly recognizable at x87.5).

Coxopleural pore field bordered posteriorly by wide poreless area consisting of ca 50 pores of various sizes. Ultimate prefemur, femur, tibia and tarsus 1 with paired distal spinose processes (Fig. 51) which are better developed in tibia and tarsus 1. Femur of ultimate legs with a single well-developed saw tooth.

Range. Australia, Vietnam, E Indonesia, NW Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, Fiji, Solomon Islands (Schileyko (2007), updated).