identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
B3264F4BFF827041ADB9FD5EFBE4FD18.text	B3264F4BFF827041ADB9FD5EFBE4FD18.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tityus (Atreus) C. L. Koch 1836	<div><p>Tityus (Atreus): Lourenço (2006): 56 –58, 61.</p><p>Type species. Scorpio (Atreus) forcipula Gervais, 1843 designated by Fet &amp; Lowe (2000).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B3264F4BFF827041ADB9FD5EFBE4FD18	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo;Cabra-García, Jimmy	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo, Cabra-García, Jimmy (2022): On the Tityus forcipula species group: redescription of Tityus forcipula (Scorpiones, Buthidae), description of a new Andean species, and notes on the taxonomy of the group. Zootaxa 5155 (2): 151-186, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5155.2.1
B3264F4BFF827041ADB9FE4BFD23FE55.text	B3264F4BFF827041ADB9FE4BFD23FE55.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tityus C. L. Koch 1836	<div><p>Tityus C. L. Koch 1836: 33 .</p><p>Type species. Scorpio bahiensis Perty, 1833 by monotypy.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B3264F4BFF827041ADB9FE4BFD23FE55	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo;Cabra-García, Jimmy	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo, Cabra-García, Jimmy (2022): On the Tityus forcipula species group: redescription of Tityus forcipula (Scorpiones, Buthidae), description of a new Andean species, and notes on the taxonomy of the group. Zootaxa 5155 (2): 151-186, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5155.2.1
B3264F4BFF82704EADB9FCD7FA5FFBFC.text	B3264F4BFF82704EADB9FCD7FA5FFBFC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tityus forcipula (Gervais 1843)	<div><p>Tityus forcipula species group</p><p>References after Fet &amp; Lowe (2000: 230). Armas et al. (2002): 166 [in part]; Lourenço &amp; Leguin (2008): 3; Teruel &amp; García (2008): 1; Kovařík et al. (2013): 8 [in part]; Lourenço &amp; Ythier (2013): 3; Brito &amp; Borges (2015): 7, 8, 9, 14 [in part], fig. 4G; Flórez (2015): 85; Lourenço (2016): 7 [in part]; Miranda et al. (2020): 197, fig. 27.</p><p>Included species. Tityus crassicauda, Tityus cuellari, Tityus forcipula, Tityus fuhrmanni, and Tityus moralensis sp. nov.</p><p>Excluded species. Tityus dasyurus fulvipes, Tityus festae, Tityus florezi, Tityus jaimei, Tityus macrochirus, Tityus metuendus, and Tityus pachyurus are here transferred to the Tityus obscurus species group. Tityus dasyurus dasyurus is excluded from the Tityus forcipula species group, but not assigned to any species group, until additional morphological evidence is gathered.</p><p>Amended diagnosis. The Tityus forcipula species group is more similar to the Tityus bahiensis, Tityus trivittatus, and Tityus stigmurus species groups, and differs from Tityus androcottoides, Tityus bolivianus, Tityus clathratus, and Tityus obscurus species groups. The Tityus forcipula, Tityus bahiensis, Tityus trivittatus, and Tityus stigmurus species groups share ventral macrosetae of telotarsi I–IV distributed in two submedian rows (type II). Whereas, the Tityus androcottoides, Tityus bolivianus, Tityus clathratus, and Tityus obscurus species groups exhibit ventral setae of telotarsi I–IV irregularly distributed in a tuft (type I).</p><p>On the other hand, the Tityus forcipula species group differs from the Tityus bahiensis, Tityus stigmurus and Tityus trivittatus species groups in the following character state combination: i) pectines strongly sclerotized and brown colored (Figures 2B, D, 3B, D, 9A–D); ii) basal middle lamellae of female pectines dilated and suboval shaped or ovoid (Figures 2D, 3D, 9B, D); iii) female pectinal basal piece without glandular region; iv) ventral macrosetae of telotarsi I–IV strongly sclerotized and stout; v) metasomal segments (moderately or strongly) widening towards segment V (Figures 12A–D, 13A–D) (except in Tityus fuhrmanni that exhibit a conspicuous thinning towards segment V); and vi) subaculear tubercle small to medium and coarse with a small gap between the dorsal margin of the subaculear tubercle and the base of the aculeus (Figure 15A–D). Whereas, Tityus bahiensis, Tityus stigmurus and Tityus trivittatus species groups present i) pectines moderately sclerotized and white colored; ii) basal middle lamellae of female pectines not dilated; iii) female pectinal basal piece with a moderate to large glandular region; iv) ventral setae of telotarsi I–IV moderately sclerotized and fine; v) metasomal segments of similar wide or with an inconspicuous widening towards segment V, and vi) subaculear tubercle small and acute with a moderate gap between the dorsal margin of the subaculear tubercle and the base of the aculeus.</p><p>Taxonomic remarks. The Tityus forcipula species group was previously merged with the Tityus obscurus species group (previously referred as T. asthenes, see Lourenço et al. (2019)). However, based on a unique combination of phenotypic characters here is revalidated and separated from the Tityus obscurus species group. In order to set the boundaries of the Tityus forcipula species group we examined all the species that belong to this group, but Tityus crassicauda and T. dasyurus dasyurus .</p><p>In our morphological survey, we found that Tityus dasyurus fulvipes, Tityus festae, Tityus florezi, Tityus jaimei, Tityus macrochirus, Tityus metuendus, and Tityus pachyurus, exhibit ventral setae of telotarsi I–IV irregularly distributed in a tuft (type I). This character state together with the presence of pectines moderately sclerotized and white colored and basal middle lamellae of female pectines dilated and subcircular, exclude these taxa from the Tityus forcipula species group and locate them into the Tityus obscurus species group. Other characters such as a metasoma progressively widening towards segment V (club-like shaped metasoma) are shared by Tityus jaimei, T. metuendus, and T. pachyurus, as well as, species belonging to the Tityus forcipula species group. However, this character by itself is not enough to assign species to a given species group and must be used in combination with other characters with strong phylogenetic signal (e.g., Moreno-González et al. 2021).</p><p>Lourenço &amp; Ythier (2013) described Tityus crassicauda and mentioned that it is closely related to T. forcipula . Their description has a detailed enough description that allows us to identify most of the character states of the Tityus forcipula species group. For example, the authors described the presence of two ventrosubmedian rows in the telotarsi (type II), the metasoma widening towards segment V and the dilation and oval shape of the basal middle lamellae of female pectines. Also, they provided colorful habitus pictures of both sexes that clearly show the strongly sclerotized pectines and the absence of glandular regions in the pectinal basal piece of the female. The situation of Tityus dasyurus is, however, diametrically opposite.</p><p>Pocock (1897) described Tityus dasyurus based on a single female from “ Porto Rico ”. Nevertheless, some authors argued it corresponds to a mislabelling error and this female most probably comes from a locality in Central or South America (Armas 2020). Santiago-Blay (1985) examined and redescribed the female holotype of T. dasyurus dasyurus . In this description, we observed that the morphology of the subaculear tubercle and the basal middle lamellae shape are very different from other members of the Tityus forcipula species group. The subaculear tubercle is conical, small and acute and presents a moderate gap between the dorsal margin of the subaculear tubercle and the base of the aculeus (Santiago-Blay 1985: fig. 13), whereas the basal middle lamellae is dilated and subcircular shaped (Santiago-Blay 1985: fig. 10). Both characters are very common among the Tityus androcottoides and Tityus obscurus species group members. However, the examination of additional morphological characters is needed to confirm the species group membership of this enigmatic species.</p><p>Finally, Tityus fuhrmanni is particularly interesting. This species was assigned to an independent species group by Mello-Leitão (1945) given the particular morphology of its metasoma, which exhibits a conspicuous and progressive thinning towards segment V, but also presents a remarkable development of the DSM on the metasomal segment III. We also noted that the males of T. fuhrmanni do not exhibit a bulkier chela compared to female chela, both male and female chelae ratios are somewhat similar. In this contribution, we temporarily followed the Lourenço (1984) designation of T. fuhrmanni in the T. forcipula species group. This species shares some character states with this species group such as i) telotarsi macrosetae stout and distributed in two ventrosubmedian rows (type II), ii) sclerotized pectines brown colored, iii) basal middle lamellae dilated and soboval/ovoid shaped in the female pectines, and iv) absence of glandular regions in the basal pectinal piece of the female pectine. However, additional studies and samples are required for testing the membership of this species into the Tityus forcipula species group.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B3264F4BFF82704EADB9FCD7FA5FFBFC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo;Cabra-García, Jimmy	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo, Cabra-García, Jimmy (2022): On the Tityus forcipula species group: redescription of Tityus forcipula (Scorpiones, Buthidae), description of a new Andean species, and notes on the taxonomy of the group. Zootaxa 5155 (2): 151-186, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5155.2.1
B3264F4BFF8D7051ADB9FB73FC47F816.text	B3264F4BFF8D7051ADB9FB73FC47F816.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tityus forcipula (Gervais 1843)	<div><p>Tityus forcipula (Gervais, 1843)</p><p>Figures 1, 2A–D, 4A, B, 5A–D, 6A–D, 7A–C, 8A–C, 9A, B, 10A, B, 11A–C, 12A, B, 13A, B, 14A, B, 15A, B, 16; Tables 2, 4, 5, 6.</p><p>References after Fet &amp; Lowe (2000: 245). Tityus forcipula Gervais (1843): 130; Lourenço (1999): 4; Lourenço (2000): 454, 456, 458, 459, figs. 11, 13; Saldarriaga &amp; Otero (2000): 18, table 1; Flórez (2001): 28; Lourenço (2002b): 133; Lourenço (2005): 226; Lourenço (2006): 57, 58, 61; Botero-Trujillo &amp; Fagua (2007): 129, 133, figs. 11, 16, 17; Lourenço (2007): 382; Lourenço &amp; Leguin (2008): 1, 3; Lourenço et al. (2009): 423; Flórez (2011): 764, 765, table 56; González-Sponga (2011): 103; Lourenço &amp; Ythier (2013): 3, figs. 13, 18, table I; Brito &amp; Borges (2015): 2, 7, 9, 14, figs. 1, 4G; Lourenço &amp; Ythier (2017): 29; Ythier (2018): 20; Francke (2019): 24; Miranda et al. (2020): 197, 203, fig. 27; Dupré (2021): 52.</p><p>Type material. Holotype: COLOMBIA: adult male, Colombia (NHM 1846.20) . Paratype: unknow sex, unkwon locality (MNHN) .</p><p>Examined material. COLOMBIA: Valle del Cauca department: adult male, Cali, 18 Km highway to the sea, iv.1985 (MUSENUV-Ar 438); adult female, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">Cali</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">Villa Carmelo Pathway</a>, 1500 masl, 13.x.1982 (MUSENUV-Ar 436); adult female, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">Cali</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">Felidia Pathway</a>, vi.1979 (MUSENUV-Ar 434); adult female, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">Cali</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">El Pato Pathway</a>, 2000 masl, iii.1988, G. Salcedo (MUSENUV-Ar 418); adult female, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">Cali</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">El Saladito Pathway</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">San Antonio Forest</a>, highway to the sea, 3º29’34.22’’N 76º36’49.71’’W, 1813 masl, 21.i.2019, J. Cabra-García (MUSENUV-Ar 2116); adult female, La Cumbre, Bitaco Pathway, ii.2021, L. Flórez (MUSENUV-Ar 2103); adult female, La Cumbre, Chicoral Pathway, 28 Km highway to the sea, 1500 masl, iii.1988, C. Sepulveda (MUSENUV-Ar 409); adult female, Palmira, Panorama Farm, 2100 masl, 9.iii.2005 (MUSENUV-Ar 432); adult female, Yumbo, Dapa, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.43875&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.87975" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.43875/lat 3.87975)">Bocatoma del Acueducto</a>, 17–18.viii.2016, J. A. Moreno (IBALCC-RPDR 00256); three adult females and one adult male, Yotoco, Yotoco RNF, 3º52.785’N 76º26.325’W, 1644 masl, 2.xi.2019, D. Garrido &amp; B. Ospina (MUSENUV-Ar 2117); two adult females, same locality as the previous record, 1.xi.2019 (MUSENUV-Ar 2118); adult female, Tuluá, 1000 masl, xii.1984 (MUSENUV-Ar 437) . Risaralda department: three adult males and two adult females, Santuario, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.00733&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=5.126111" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.00733/lat 5.126111)">San Rafael Plains</a> Natural Regional Park [Parque Natural Regional Planes de San Rafael], 5°7’34”N 76°0’26.4’’W, 2158 masl, 17.x.2012, J. A. Moreno (MZSP) .</p><p>Diagnosis. Tityus forcipula share a metasoma widening towards segment V in both sexes (Figures 12A, B, 13A, B) and a male chela bulkier than female chela (Figures 7A, B, 8A, B) with Tityus cuellari, Tityus crassicauda, and Tityus moralensis sp. nov. . However, Tityus crassicauda, Tityus cuellari, and Tityus forcipula share the presence of strongly protruding spinoid granules on the DSM carinae of metasomal segments II–IV (Figure 14A, B), whereas, Tityus moralensis, present moderately protruding rounded granules on the DSM carinae of metasomal segments II–IV (Figure 14C, D).</p><p>On the other hand, Tityus forcipula and Tityus cuellari share the presence of metasomal segment V with DSM carinae composed of moderately to strongly protruding spinoid granules (e.g., Figure 14A, B), whereas Tityus crassicauda presents a metasomal segment V with DSM carinae composed of slightly protruding granules (Lourenço &amp; Ythier, 2013: figs 1–4). Finally, Tityus forcipula presents a medium-sized subaculear tubercle with a medium-sized dorsal area between the subaculear tubercle and the aculeus base (Figure 15A, B), whereas Tityus cuellari presents a small subaculear tubercle with a small dorsal area between the subaculear tubercle and the aculeus base.</p><p>Taxonomic remarks. As mentioned by Brito &amp; Borges (2015), Tityus spinatus was synonymized with Tityus forcipula by Lourenço (1984). However, in recent papers such as Lourenço &amp; Ythier (2013, 2017) T. spinatus is mentioned without any comments about its validity. In fact, Lourenço &amp; Ythier (2013) did not present any formal species revalidation and only provided a single drawing of the metasomal segments II–V + telson of the female holotype. For this reason, we followed Lourenço (1988) and Brito &amp; Borges (2015) and considered Tityus spinatus as a synonym of T. forcipula as proposed by Lourenço (1984), until additional evidence is presented and a formal species revalidation is published.</p><p>Description. Based on an adult male (MUSENUV-Ar 438) and an adult female (MUSENUV-Ar 436).</p><p>Total length. Male: 53.81 mm and female 61.73 mm (additional measurements in Table 5).</p><p>......continued on the next page</p><p>TABLE 5. (Continued)</p><p>Coloration. General pattern (in 70% ethanol) (Figure 2A–D) dark reddish-brown. Carapace (Figure 2A, C): dark reddish-brown with black variegated pigments; black stripe on anterior margin; lateral and median eyes, surrounded by black variegated pigments. Chelicerae (Figure 2A, C): coxa and hand dark yellow, with abundant black pigments over the hand surface; fingers, blackish-brown. Coxosternal region, Legs, Mesosoma, and Pedipalps (Figure 2A–D): all reddish-brown, covered with black variegated pigments (except for the coxosternal region and ventral areas of the pedipalp segments). Chela (Figure 2A–D) fingers blackish. Metasoma (Figure 2A–D): segments dark reddish-brown, progressively darker towards the telson; segments IV–V blackish-brown. Telson (Figure 2A–D): blackish-brown; aculeus dark reddish-brown.</p><p>Morphology. Body hirsute, covered with abundant microsetae, white colored under UV light. Carapace (Figure 4A, B): moderately covered with fine granulation and few coarse granules; anterior margin with deep median notch; anterior median carinae, central lateral, central median, lateral ocular, posterior, posterior median and superciliary carinae, all well-marked, and furrows (anterior median, anterior marginal, central transverse, lateral ocular, supercialiary, posterior transverse, posterior lateral and posterior marginal), all well-marked; ocular tubercle wellmarked, located on the anterior half of carapace; median eyes separated by about 0.6 ocular diameters; with three pairs of lateral eyes and two pairs of lateral micro-ocelli (ADMi and PDMi) (pattern 4A).</p><p>Chelicerae (Figure 4A, B). Dentition characteristic of the family Buthidae (Vachon 1963), densely covered with setae over the internal and ventral surfaces; anterior half of the manus with a transverse row of coarse granules.</p><p>Pedipalps. Chela, bulky in male (L/W= 3.71) or slender in female (L/W= 5.31). Trichobothriotaxic pattern Type A, alfa configuration (hand: Eb3:Eb1:Eb2:Esb:Est:Et, fixed finger: eb:esb:est:et:db:dt:it). Femur (Figure 5A–D) with five well-marked carinae: VI, DI, DE and VE crenulate, EM serratocrenulate and complete, with intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation and few coarse granules. Patella (Figure 6A–D) with seven wellmarked carinae: VI, DI, DE and EM, crenulate and complete; VE incomplete- only present on the distal half of the segment (female) or complete (male) and crenulate; DM crenulate and incomplete; IM serratocrenulate and complete, with a short spur near the segment base; with intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation. Chela (tibia) (Figures 7A–C, 8A–C) with eight well-marked carinae: VI, VE, D, DS, DMA, IM and ES, crenulate and complete; SA crenulate and incomplete, only present on the anterior half of the hand. Pedipalp movable and fixed fingers each with a basal concavity followed by a well-marked basal lobe (male) (Figure 8A) or movable and fixed fingers with obsolete basal concavities and an obsolete basal lobe only present on the movable finger (female) (Figure 7A). Oblique rows of granules: Movable finger with 16–16 (male) and 17–17 (female) rows.</p><p>Coxosternal region (Figure 9A, B). Sternum with posterior depression, outer ridge, and apical button, wellmarked; region covered with abundant coarse and fine granulation, and abundant microsetae; genital operculum longitudinally divided, composed of two sub-triangular plates. Male genital papillae are rounded and with sclerotized tips.</p><p>Pectines (Figure 9A, B). Pectines are strongly sclerotized and brownish, with white areas (less sclerotized) on the marginal plates (Figures 2B, D, 9A, B). Pectinal basal piece shield-like shaped, with a deep anteromedian notch and without glandular areas (Figure 9A, B); pectinal tooth counts of 18–17 (male) and 16–18 (female). Intermediate plate, marginal plate, and fulcra densely covered with microsetae (Figure 9A, B). Basal middle lamellae, not dilated (male) (Figure 9A) or dilated and oval shaped (female) (Figure 9B). Female basal middle lamellae with a distal glandular area, white colored (Figures 2D, 9B).</p><p>Legs. Carinae present; intercarinal areas with fine granulation; ventral telotarsi setae distributed in two rows of ventrosubmedian setae (type II), acute and stout; telotarsi, counts of ventral macrosetae in the left (L) and right (R) legs on prolateral (pro) and retrolateral (retro) rows from leg I to IV (L (pro/retro) R (pro/retro)): 6/5 6/6; 6/6 5/7; 6/7 6/7; -/- 7/8 (male) and 6/6 6/6; 6/6 7/7; 7/7 6/7; 6/7 7/7 (female). Claws short and symmetrical.</p><p>Mesosoma . Tergites I–VI (Figure 2A, C), moderately covered with coarse and fine granulation; pre-tergite well defined, with median carina visible on the posterior margin of the post-tergite; tergite VII with DSM and DL carinae complete and crenulate, and median carina composed of a crenulate anteromedian eminence present on the anterior half of the post-tergite. Sternites densely covered with coarse and fine granulation (Figure 10A, B); sternites III–VI with a pair of elliptic spiracles on the posterior half, which are progressively larger (Figure 10A, B); sternites III–VI with a median longitudinal hyaline suture; sternite V with a large (male) (Figure 10A) to medium-size (female) (Figure 10B) hyaline subtriangular area on the posterior margin; sternite VI with VSM carinae crenulate, present on posterior half; sternite VII with VSM and VL carinae crenulate, present on posterior 2/3 (Figure 10A, B).</p><p>Hemispermatophore (Figure 11A–C). Thin and sclerotized; pars reflexa, curved but not folded over itself (Figure 11A, B); foot narrow and flat (Figure 11A–C); pedal flexure inconspicuous (Figure 11A–C); body occupying more than 2/3 of the hemispermatophore total length (Figure 11A–C). Capsular region with a furrow connecting the internal lobe with the medial area of the region (Figure 11A); internal lobe with rounded tip forming an 80º angle (Figure 11B); median lobe inconspicuous (Figure 11B, C); external lobe thin and not overpassing the internal lobe level and with a translucent area between the middle of the basal lobe and the base of the internal lobe (Figure 11C); translucent area narrow but widened basally and distally; basal lobe bifurcate and with a vestigial projection subovate-shaped (in posterior and ventral views) (Figure 11A, C); basal lobe with no conspicuous visible surface in lateral view (Figure 11B); basal lobe without a “U”-like shaped curvature between its base and the body (in posterior and ventral views) (Figure 11A, C).</p><p>Metasoma (Figures 12A, B, 13A, B, 14A, B). moderately widening towards segment V (Figures 12A, B, 13A, B). Segments II–V short and robust (male- L/W ratio: II= 1.29; III= 1.38; IV= 1.39; V= 1.53/ female- L/W ratio: II= 1.32; III= 1.39; IV= 1.46; V= 1.53). Segments I–II (Figures 12A, B, 13A, B, 14A, B) with eight complete carinae, parallel and crenulate (paired DL, ML, VL and VSM) and two serratocrenulate (paired DSM); ML of segment II represented by coarse granules on posterior 2/3 and fine granule over the anterior third; intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation and moderately covered with coarse granulation; segments III–IV (Figures 12A, B, 13A, B, 14A, B) with six complete carinae, parallel and crenulate (paired DL, VL and VSM) and two serratocrenulate (paired DSM), intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation and moderately covered with coarse granulation; segment V (Figures 12A, B, 13A, B, 14A, B) with five complete carinae and crenulate (VM, paired VL and VSM carinae) and two serratocrenulate (paired DSM), intercarinal areas densely covered with coarse granulation and moderately covered with fine granulation. Segments II–V (Figure 14A, B) with DSM carinae, composed of strongly protruding spinoid granules that progressively increase distally, ending in an enlarged distoterminal granule (distoterminal granule not enlarged in segment V).</p><p>Metasomal macrosetation. Segments I–IV each with two pairs of VSM macrosetae (2/2): pair VSM1 located in the anterior 1/3, and pair VSM3 located near the posterior margin of the segment, and two pairs of VL macrosetae (2/2): pair VL1 located near the anterior margin, and pair VL2 located in the posterior 2/3 of the segment. Segment V with two pairs of VSM macrosetae (2/2), two pairs of VL macrosetae (2/2), and a single pair of ML macrosetae; pair VSM1 and VL1 located near the anterior margin of the segment; VL2 located on the posterior 2/3, and pair ML1 located dorsolaterally near the posterior margin (behind DSM carinae); anal arch with two pairs of setae on the intercrestal area, one pair of VSM macrosetae (1/1) and one pair of VL macrosetae (1/1).</p><p>Telson (Figure 15A, B). Covered with abundant microsetae, white colored under UV light (Figure 15A, B). Vesicle suboval, not elongated (L/H= 1.75 (male)/ L/W= 1.85 (female)), with dorsal surface smooth and a lateral longitudinal furrow on each side; with VM, paired VSM, VL, and DL carinae, vestigial and moderately marked. Subaculear tubercle small pyramidal, with a rounded apex directed to the middle portion of the aculeus (Figure 15A, B); subaculear tubercle with a ventral pair of small rounded granules, pointing to the basal portion of the aculeus; aculeus strongly curved, shorter than vesicle and with a ventral groove.</p><p>Variability. Morphometrics. Total length (including telson): 52.98–62.30 (female) (n= 4, mean= 57.53, standard deviation (SD)= 5.19) and 49.24–53.81 (male) (n= 4, mean= 51.99, SD= 1.95). Chela L/W ratio: 5.15–5.31 (female) (n= 4; mean= 5.02; SD= 0.30) and 3.61–3.71 (male) (n= 4; mean= 3.84; SD= 0.33). Metasomal segment I L/W ratio: 0.92–1.10 (female) (n= 4; mean= 1.02; SD= 0.08) and 1.05–1.15 (male) (n= 4; mean= 1.09; SD= 0.05). Metasomal segment V L/W ratio: 1.42–1.53 (female) (n= 4; mean= 1.48; SD= 0.05) and 1.36–1.53 (male) (n= 4; mean= 1.46; SD= 0.08). Telson vesicle L/H: 1.70–1.86 (female) (n= 4; mean= 1.80; SD= 0.08) and 1.68–1.85 (male) (n= 4; mean= 1.76; SD= 0.07). Counts. Pectinal tooth counts: females 14–18 (n= 8, mode= 16) and males 14–18 (n= 8, mode= 17). Number of movable finger oblique granule rows: females 15–17 (n= 8, mode= 16) and males 16–17 (n= 8, mode= 16). Metasomal macrosetae: The specimens from Risaralda department exhibit three pairs of VSM macrosetae in segments I–IV, instead of two pairs as the other examined specimens.</p><p>Natural history. Moreno-González &amp; Hazzi (2012) observed a female of this species feeding upon an adult female of Chactas vanbenedenii (Gervais, 1843) in Yotoco Forest Reserve, Yotoco, Valle del Cauca Department, Colombia. Seiter et al. (2020) studied life story aspects of T. forcipula and observed that specimens reared in captivity are unable to thrive under high temperatures. Only 10% of the specimens kept at 25–27°C reached adulthood, none reproduced. Among 43 specimens kept between 23–24°C, 21 females and 19 males reached maturity in the fifth instar, but one female and two males required an extra molt to reach maturity. The embryonic development took 208 days (with an average of 12 young per litter) and the postembryonic development took 463 days.</p><p>This species has been observed living in sympatry with Chactas vanbenedenii and Tityus parvulus Kraepelin, 1914 across several high-altitude (over 1600 masl) localities in the Cordillera Occidental in Valle del Cauca department, Colombia. The microhabitat that this species seems to prefer is underside rotten logs, inside leaf litter, or under rocks, and rarely it has been observed under tree bark over 1 m above the soil level. A strong association between adult specimens and low vegetation has never been observed, maybe this relationship is due to the particular telotarsi macrosetae structure that this species exhibit (Moreno-González, J. A., pers. obs.).</p><p>Distribution (Figure 16). We opted to follow a rather conservative approach. As such, we considered as doubtful records those specimens that we were not able to examine (i.e., Ecuadorian Andes and Central and Oriental Cordilleras from Colombia) (Figure 16). The exact type locality of T. forcipula is not precise, but there is consensus that the male holotype of this species came from Colombia (Lourenço 1984). Our redescription is based on specimens from the Cordillera Occidental of Cali, Valle del Cauca, Colombia, where Lourenço &amp; Flórez (1990) and Lourenço (1997) identified samples of this species.</p><p>Confirmed records. COLOMBIA: Valle del Cauca Department: Cali (Pichinde- Peñas Blancas), Restrepo (road Buga-Buenaventura), Yotoco ( Yotoco Forest Natural Reserve), and Yumbo ( Dapa). New Records. COLOMBIA: Risaralda department: Santuario ( San Rafael Plains Natural Regional Park). Valle del Cauca department: Cali (El Pato Pathway, El Saladito Pathway ( San Antonio Forest), Felidia Pathway, Villacarmelo Pathway and 18 Km Highway to the Sea), La Cumbre (Bitaco and Chicoral Pathways), Palmira (Panorama Farm), and Tuluá.</p><p>Doubtful records. COLOMBIA: Caldas Department: Manizales . Cundinamarca Department: La Vega (La Reserva) . Quindío Department: Armenia and Salento. Tolima Department: Ibagué (Cay Pathway). ECUADOR: Azuay province: Cuenca . Cotopaxi Province: Las Pampas. Pichincha Province: Alluriquin and Chiriboga. Santo Domingo de Tsáchilas Province: Santo Domingo de Los Colorados .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B3264F4BFF8D7051ADB9FB73FC47F816	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo;Cabra-García, Jimmy	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo, Cabra-García, Jimmy (2022): On the Tityus forcipula species group: redescription of Tityus forcipula (Scorpiones, Buthidae), description of a new Andean species, and notes on the taxonomy of the group. Zootaxa 5155 (2): 151-186, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5155.2.1
B3264F4BFF93705CADB9FA30FCF2FEE4.text	B3264F4BFF93705CADB9FA30FCF2FEE4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tityus moralensis Pinto-Da-Rocha & Cabra-García 2022	<div><p>Tityus moralensis sp. nov.</p><p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 27695CD6-6182-4C1A-8CB6-69468301DA46</p><p>Figures 1, 3A–D, 4C–D, 5E–H, 6E–H, 7D–F, 8D–F, 9C, D, 10C, D, 11D–F, 12C, D, 13C, D, 14C, D, 15C, D, 16, 17A, B; Tables 2, 4, 5, 6.</p><p>Type material. Holotype: COLOMBIA: Valle del Cauca department: adult male, El Cerrito municipality, Tenerife Pathway, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.07486&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.6783056" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.07486/lat 3.6783056)">El Moral Sidewalk</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-76.07486&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=3.6783056" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -76.07486/lat 3.6783056)">La Floresta Farm</a>, 3°40’41.9” N 76°04’29.5” W, 2154 masl, 12.vi.2021, A. Betancourt, S. Forero &amp; J. Cabra leg. (MUSENUV-Ar 2104) . Paratypes: two adult females (MUSENUV-Ar 2109, 2111) and one juvenile (MUSENUV-Ar 2110), same data as the holotype; one subadult female (MUSENUV-Ar 2107) and three adult females (ICN 1402, 1403, MUSENUV-Ar 2108), same locality as the holotype, 5.vii.2019, D. Garrido &amp; J. Cabra leg.</p><p>Etymology. Named after the El Moral Sidewalk, Cerrito municipality in the Colombian Central Andes where the type material was collected, using the Latin suffix -ensis denoting place of origin. The name was suggested by the owners of La Floresta Farm who detected the presence of the species under fallen logs decades ago.</p><p>Diagnosis. Tityus moralensis sp. nov. share with Tityus cuellari, Tityus crassicauda, and Tityus forcipula the presence of i) a metasoma widening towards segment V in both sexes (Figures 12C, D, 13C, D) and ii) a male chela bulkier than female chela (Figures 7D–F, 8D–F). However, Tityus moralensis sp. nov. can be readily distinguished by the presence of moderately protruding rounded granules on the DSM carinae of metasomal segments II–IV (Figure 14C, D). Whereas, in T. cuellari, T. crassicauda, and Tityus forcipula the DSM carinae of metasomal segments II–IV exhibit strongly protruding spinoid granules (Figure 14A, B).</p><p>Description. Based on adult male holotype (MUSENUV-Ar 2104) and an adult female paratype (ICN-1402).</p><p>Total length. Male holotype: 55.03 mm and female paratype: 57.99 mm (additional measurements in Table 5).</p><p>Coloration. General pattern (in 70% ethanol) (Figure 3A–D) dark reddish-brown. Carapace (Figure 3A, C): dark reddish-brown with black variegated pigments; black stripe on anterior margin; lateral and median eyes, surrounded by black variegated pigments. Chelicerae (Figure 3A, C): coxa and hand dark yellow, with abundant black pigments over the hand surface; fingers, blackish-brown. Coxosternal region, Legs, Mesosoma, and Pedipalps (Figure 3A–D): all reddish-brown, covered with black variegated pigments (except for coxosternal region, ventral areas of the pedipalp segments, and chela manus). Chela (Figure 3A–D) fingers blackish. Metasoma (Figure 3A–D): segments dark reddish-brown, progressively darker towards the telson; segments IV–V blackish-brown. Telson (Figure 3A–D): blackish-brown; aculeus dark reddish-brown.</p><p>Morphology. Body moderately covered with microsetae (except for the pedipalp that is densely covered with microsetae), white colored under UV light. Carapace (Figure 4C, D): densely covered with fine granulation and few coarse granules; anterior margin with deep median notch; anterior median carinae, central lateral, central median, lateral ocular, posterior, posterior median and superciliary carinae, all well-marked, and furrows (anterior median, anterior marginal, central transverse, lateral ocular, supercialiary, posterior transverse, posterior lateral and posterior marginal), all well-marked; ocular tubercle well-marked, located on the anterior half of carapace; median eyes separated by 0.5 ocular diameters; with three pairs of lateral eyes and two pairs of lateral micro-ocelli (ADMi and PDMi) (pattern 4A).</p><p>Chelicerae (Figure 4C, D). Dentition characteristic of the family Buthidae (Vachon 1963), densely covered with setae over the internal and ventral surfaces; anterior half of the manus with a transverse row of fine granules.</p><p>Pedipalps. Chela, bulky in male (L/W= 3.18) or slender in female (L/W= 4.35). Trichobothriotaxic pattern Type A, alfa configuration (hand: Eb3:Eb2:Eb1:Esb:Est:Et, fixed finger: eb:esb:est:et:db:dt:it). Femur (Figure 5E–H) with five well-marked carinae: VI, DI, DE and VE crenulate, EM serratocrenulate and complete, with intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation and few coarse granules. Patella (Figure 6E–H) with seven carinae well-marked: VI, DI, DE and EM, crenulate and complete; VE obsolete- only present on the distal half of the segment (male) or complete (female) and crenulate; DM crenulate and incomplete; IM serratocrenulate and complete, with a short spur near the segment base; with intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation. Chela (tibia) (Figures 7D–F, 8D–F) with eight slightly-marked (obsolete) carinae: VI, VE, D, DS, DMA, IM and ES, crenulate and complete; SA crenulate and incomplete, only present on the anterior half of the hand. Pedipalp movable and fixed fingers each with a basal concavity followed by a well-marked basal lobe (male) (Figure 8D) or movable and fixed fingers with obsolete basal concavities and a slightly-marked basal lobe only present on the movable finger (female) (Figure 7D). Oblique rows of granules: Movable finger with 16–17 (male) and 14–16 (female) rows.</p><p>Coxosternal region (Figure 9C, D). Sternum with posterior depression, outer ridge, and apical button, wellmarked; region covered with abundant coarse and fine granulation, and abundant microsetae; genital operculum longitudinally divided, composed of two sub-triangular plates. Male genital papillae are rounded and with sclerotized tips.</p><p>Pectines (Figure 9C, D). Pectines are strongly sclerotized and brownish, with white areas (less sclerotized) on the marginal plate (Figures 3B, D, 9C, D). Pectinal basal piece shield-like shaped, with a deep anteromedian notch and without glandular areas (Figure 9C, D); pectinal tooth counts of 17–17 (male) and 16–17 (female). Intermediate plate, marginal plate, and fulcra densely covered with microsetae (Figure 9C, D). Basal middle lamellae, not dilated (male) (Figure 9C) or dilated and ovoid shaped (female) (Figure 9D). Female basal middle lamellae with a vestigial distal glandular area, white colored (Figures 3D, 9D).</p><p>Legs. Carinae present; intercarinal areas with fine granulation; ventral telotarsi setae distributed in two rows of ventrosubmedian setae (type II), acute and stout; telotarsi, counts of ventral macrosetae in the left (L) and right (R) legs on prolateral (pro) and retrolateral (retro) rows from leg I to IV (L (pro/retro) R (pro/retro)): 8/8 8/8; 7/8 8/8; 8/8 8/9; 8/11 8/11 (male) and 7/8 7/7; 6/7 6/8; 7/8 -/-; 8/9 7/7 (female). Claws short and symmetrical.</p><p>Mesosoma . Tergites I–VI (Figure 3A, C), moderately covered with coarse and fine granulation; pre-tergite well defined, with median carina visible on the posterior margin of the post-tergite; tergite VII with DSM and DL carinae complete and crenulate, and median carina composed of a crenulate anteromedian eminence present on the anterior half of the post-tergite. Sternites densely covered with coarse and fine granulation (Figure 10C, D); sternites III–VI with a pair of elliptic spiracles on the posterior half, which are progressively larger (Figure 10C, D); sternites III–VI with a median longitudinal hyaline suture; sternite V with a large hyaline subtriangular area on the posterior margin (Figure 10C, D); sternite VI with VSM carinae crenulate, present on posterior half; sternite VII with VSM and VL carinae crenulate, present on posterior 2/3 (Figure 10C, D).</p><p>Hemispermatophore (Figure 11D–E). Thin and sclerotized; pars reflexa, curved but not folded over itself (Figure 11D, E); foot narrow and flat (Figure 11D–F); pedal flexure inconspicuous (Figure 11D–F); body occupying more than 2/3 of the hemispermatophore total length (Figure 11D–F). Capsular region with a furrow connecting the internal lobe with the medial area of the region (Figure 11D); internal lobe with rounded tip forming an 80º angle (Figure 11E); median lobe inconspicuous (Figure 11E, F); external lobe thin and not overpassing the internal lobe level and with a translucent area between the middle of the basal lobe and the base of the internal lobe (Figure 11F); translucent area narrow but widened basally and distally; basal lobe bifurcate and with a moderate sized projection subovate-shaped (in posterior and ventral views) (Figure 11D, F); basal lobe with a conspicuous visible surface in lateral view (Figure 11E); basal lobe with a “U’’-like shaped curvature between its base and the body (in anterior or posterior views) (Figure 11D, F).</p><p>Metasoma (Figures 12C, D, 13C, D, 14C, D). Strongly widening towards segment V (Figures 12C, D, 13C, D). Segments II–V short and robust (male- L/W ratio: II= 1.28; III= 1.29; IV= 1.09; V= 1.08/ female- L/W ratio: II= 1.24; III= 1.24; IV= 1.09; V= 1.10). Segments I–II (Figures 12C, D, 13C, D, 14C, D) with eight complete carinae, parallel and crenulate (paired DL, ML, VL and VSM) and two serratocrenulate (paired DSM); ML of segment II represented by coarse granules; intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation and moderately covered with coarse granulation; segments III–IV (Figures 12C, D, 13C, D, 14C, D) with six complete carinae, parallel and crenulate (paired DL, VL and VSM) and two serratocrenulate (paired DSM), intercarinal areas densely covered with fine granulation and moderately covered with coarse granulation; segment V (Figures 12C, D, 13C, D, 14C, D) with five complete carinae and crenulate (VM, paired VL and VSM carinae) and two serratocrenulate (paired DSM), intercarinal areas densely covered with coarse granulation and moderately covered with fine granulation. Segments II–V (Figure 14C, D) with DSM carinae, composed of moderately protruding rounded granules that progressively increase distally (except on segment V), ending in an enlarged distoterminal granule (distoterminal granule not enlarged in segment V).</p><p>Metasomal macrosetation. Segments I–IV each with two pairs of VSM macrosetae (2/2): pair VSM1 located in the anterior 1/3, and pair VSM3 located near the posterior margin of the segment, and two pairs of VL macrosetae (2/2): pair VL1 located near the anterior margin, and pair VL2 located in the posterior 2/3 of the segment. Segment V with two pairs of VSM macrosetae (2/2), two pairs of VL macrosetae (2/2), and a single pair of ML macrosetae; pair VSM1 and VL1 located near the anterior margin of the segment; VL2 located on the posterior 2/3, and pair ML1 located dorsolaterally near the posterior margin (behind DSM carinae); anal arch with two pairs of setae on the intercrestal area, one pair of VSM macrosetae (1/1) and one pair of VL macrosetae (1/1).</p><p>Telson (Figure 15C, D). Covered with abundant microsetae, white colored under UV light (Figure 15C, D). Vesicle spherical, not elongated (L/H= 1.21 (male)/ L/W= 1.31 (female)), with dorsal surface smooth and a lateral longitudinal furrow on each side; with VM, paired VSM, VL, and DL carinae, vestigial and slightly marked. Subaculear tubercle vestigial pyramidal, with a rounded apex directed to the middle portion of the aculeus (Figure 15C, D); subaculear tubercle with a ventral pair of small rounded granules, pointing to the basal portion of the aculeus; aculeus strongly curved, shorter than vesicle and with a ventral groove.</p><p>Variability. Morphometrics. Total length (including telson): 53.38–61.55 (female) (n=5, mean= 57.28, standard deviation (SD)= 3.41) and 55.03 (male) (n=1). Chela L/W ratio: 4.36–4.71 (female) (n= 4; mean= 4.21; SD= 0.59) and 3.18 (male) (n=1). Metasomal segment I L/W ratio: 0.98–1.11 (female) (n= 5; mean= 1.05; SD= 0.05) and 1.08 (male) (n= 1). Metasomal segment V L/W ratio: 1.09–1.17 (female) (n= 5; mean= 1.12; SD= 0.03) and 1.08 (male) (n= 1). Telson vesicle L/H: 1.50–1.68 (female) (n= 5; mean= 1.62; SD= 0.07) and 1.60 (male) (n= 1). Counts. Pectinal tooth counts: females 15–17 (n= 5, mode= 16) and male 17 (n=2, mode= 17). Number of movable finger oblique granule rows: females 14–16 (n= 5, mode= 15) and male 16–17 (n= 2). The variation of the telotarsi ventrosubmedian setae counts is in Table 6.</p><p>Natural history. The type specimens recorded herein were hand-captured at day in small patches of montane forests surrounded by deforested grassland. The specimens were collected under large fallen logs or under the loose bark of rotten logs. The new species was found in sympatry with the chactid Chactas vanbenedenii . Distribution (Figure 16). Only known from its type locality in the Cordillera Central (El Cerrito municipality, El Moral Sidewalk), Valle del Cauca department, Colombia .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B3264F4BFF93705CADB9FA30FCF2FEE4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo;Cabra-García, Jimmy	Pinto-Da-Rocha, Ricardo, Cabra-García, Jimmy (2022): On the Tityus forcipula species group: redescription of Tityus forcipula (Scorpiones, Buthidae), description of a new Andean species, and notes on the taxonomy of the group. Zootaxa 5155 (2): 151-186, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5155.2.1
