identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
55B911B5AD43FDA305890335FB433453.text	55B911B5AD43FDA305890335FB433453.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaphorodesmus Silvestri 1896	<div><p>Taxon classification Animalia Polydesmida Chelodesmidae</p><p>Genus Diaphorodesmus Silvestri, 1896</p><p>Diaphorodesmus Silvestri, 1896: 197.</p><p>Diaphorodesmus - Cook 1896: 16; Attems 1899: 311; 1931: 91; 1938: 409; Carl 1905: 271; Verhoeff 1938: 166; Hoffman 1980: 155.</p><p>Campodesmoides VandenSpiegel, Golovatch &amp; Nzoko Fiemapong, 2015, syn. n.</p><p>Campodesmoides corniger VandenSpiegel, Golovatch &amp; Nzoko Fiemapong, 2015, by original designation. Type species.</p><p>Type species.</p><p>Paradesmus dorsicornis Porat, 1894, by original designation.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>A genus of Prepodesminae, Chelodesmidae that is distinguished by the presence of conspicuous paramedian, increasingly short, dorsal, horns on metaterga 2-4, coupled with the normal pore formula: 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15-19, the ozopores being borne on conspicuous porosteles; the spiracles are small and inconspicuous; and the gonopod telopodites suberect, in situ directed forward, held parallel to each other, not crossing mesally; prefemoral (= densely setose) part erect, taking up about 2/3 of total gonotelopodite length, without a femorite part, but with a prominent dorsal process (pfp), set off from acropodite by a distinct cingulum; acropodite clearly twisted, divided parabasally into one smaller dorsobasal lobule (lo) and two large lamellar lobes, the ventral lobe forming a solenophore (sph) to support a dorsal solenomere lobe (slo) with only an indistinct, small solenomere proper on top.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/55B911B5AD43FDA305890335FB433453	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	VandenSpiegel, Didier;Golovatch, Sergei I.;Mauries, Jean-Paul	VandenSpiegel, Didier, Golovatch, Sergei I., Mauries, Jean-Paul (2016): Review of the western African millipede genus Diaphorodesmus Silvestri, 1896 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Chelodesmidae), with the description of a similar, but new monotypic genus from Cameroon. ZooKeys 600: 7-24, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345
25BC8C4920072EF00D3D846208E01766.text	25BC8C4920072EF00D3D846208E01766.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis (Porat 1894) Porat 1894	<div><p>Taxon classification Animalia Polydesmida Chelodesmidae</p><p>Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis (Porat, 1894) Figs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 12</p><p>Paradesmus dorsicornis Porat, 1894: 33, figs 3-3c (D).</p><p>Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis - Silvestri 1896: 197 (D) (erection and typification of Diaphorodesmus); Cook 1896: 16 (D); Attems 1899: 312, plate 7, fig. 167 (D) (reiterated original description and a reproduced original figure); 1931: 100, figs 147-151 (D, R); 1938: 409, figs 451-452 (D, R); Carl 1905: 271, plate 6, fig. 1-1a (D, R).</p><p>Diaphorodesmus attemsii Verhoeff, 1938: 167, figs 1-3 (D), syn. n.</p><p>Diaphorodesmus attemsii - Attems 1940: 560 (D, R).</p><p>Campodesmoides corniger VandenSpiegel, Golovatch &amp; Nzoko Fiemapong, 2015: 2, figs 1-3 (D), syn. n.</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>Apart from the type series of Campodesmoides corniger, deposited at MRAC (VandenSpiegel et al. 2015), the following unpublished samples are available.</p><p>1 ♂ (MNHN JB254), Cameroon, Kumba, 25.XI.1975, leg. M. Lamotte ( Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis, det. J.-P. Mauriès); 5 ♂, 2 ♀ (ZMUC), eastern Nigeria, Osomba 56 miles from Calabar, 17.VI.1965; 1 ♀ (ZMUC), eastern Nigeria, 1963, all leg. V. Schiøtz ( Diaphorodesmus attemsii, all det. H. Enghoff).</p><p>Revised published material.</p><p>1 ♂, 2 juveniles (fragments of caudal body part only) (ZSM Reg. No. A 20052425 + slide A 20035316), “Kamerun”, without further information ( Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis, det. K.W. Verhoeff).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>This species enjoys several descriptions, the latest of which (VandenSpiegel et al. 2015) is particularly complete and detailed. We only add here more pictures and drawings (Figs 1-7) to show evident variations in some somatic and gonopodal characters that bridge Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis and Diaphorodesmus attemsii and justify their synonymization.</p><p>Considering the measured material published elsewhere (Porat 1894; Attems 1938; VandenSpiegel et al. 2015) and here, body size variations are quite considerable both between individuals and, to a lesser degree, sexes: length 26-35 mm (♂, ♀), width of midbody pro- and metazonae 2.1-3.5 and 3.0-4.9 mm (♂) or 2.5-3.6 and 3.6-5.0 mm (♀), respectively. General coloration varies from yellow through grey-brown to blackish (Porat 1894; Carl 1905; Attems 1931, 1938; VandenSpiegel et al. 2015).</p><p>As regards the somatic characters mentioned by Verhoeff (1938) and quoted above that distinguish Diaphorodesmus attemsii from Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis, they are actually mistaken or reflecting individual variations. Thus, the dorsal horns on metaterga 4 are typically somewhat shorter in the ♀ compared to the ♂, and they tend to be more or less gradually and increasingly reduced from metatergum 2 to 4 in both sexes. The higher the horns on metatergum 4, the less strong their shift forward off the caudal margin. This shift is usually particularly apparent in the ♀.</p><p>The more or less evident cones in front of these horns are usually subequal in shape and size, 2+2, arranged in a transverse row (Fig. 1A, C, D). However, occasionally there are variations observed in shape and size of those cones as well. The pertinent material of Verhoeff (1938), at least the single adult ♂ at his disposal which is currently kept at the ZSM, shows the typical 2+2 (not 3+3!) cones, albeit the central pair is indeed a little larger than the lateral one, while the dorsal horns are relatively short, tuberculiform, clearly set off from the caudal margin of the metatergum (Fig, 1E, F). The gonopod structure of the ZSM ♂ is likewise closer to the one as depicted by Attems (1931) for " Diaphorodesmus attemsii " (Fig. 4).</p><p>The single relatively large sample in our hands, that from Osomba, shows the following variations in structure of metatergum 4. Most of the samples have rather long dorsal horns which often are even slightly curved caudad and set close to the caudal margin, with 2+2 subequal tubercles/cones in front. However, in one ♂ the situation is largely the same as described above for the ZSM ♂. It shows the gonopods typical of " Diaphorodesmus attemsii " as clearly depicted by Attems (1931, 1938) (Fig. 5) and used for SEM here (Fig. 7), both horns are shorter, rather tuberculiform and clearly shifted forward off the caudal margin of the metatergum (the left horn also being nearly bifid), while the 1+1 central paramedian cones in front are a little higher than the lateral ones (Fig. 1A). All this is definitely evidence of the variability being purely individual.</p><p>The NHMW series of " Diaphorodesmus attemsii " syntypes, which contains 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ from Bibundi, 2 ♀♀ from Victoria, and a microscopic slide with the gonopods of a ♂ from Mukonje Farm, shows the same somatic variations as noted above (N. Akkari, in litt.). Thus, metatergum 4 of the ♂ from Bibundi (Fig. 1B) has typical horns, both rather high, slightly curved caudad and placed quite close to the posterior margin, whereas the cones in front are 2+2, the paramedian pair being slightly larger than the lateral one.</p><p>Hoffman, in his unpublished archives, provided the following distinctions between Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis from Diaphorodesmus attemsii, based solely on gonopod structure. The gonopod of " Diaphorodesmus attemsii " was drawn from a ♂ taken at Victoria, southwestern Cameroon (apparently, the Hamburg Museum collection, see Weidner 1960).</p><p>Hoffman used Verhoeff’s (1938) account of somatic differences (which actually do not hold, as the ZSM ♂ has the typical 2+2 cones in front of the dorsal horns!) to distinguish both Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis and Diaphorodesmus attemsii from what Hoffman evidently intended to describe as a new species. He also made several drawings of somatic and gonopodal characters, using a ♂ from Port Harcourt, southeastern Nigeria (Fig. 2). Its metatergum 4 may indeed show 3+3 cones in front of the horns (Fig. 2A), while its gonopod traits (Fig. 2 D–F) match very closely those presented by Verhoeff (1938) for the ZSM ♂ (Fig. 4).</p><p>Comparing the gonopods of Diaphorodesmus samples from a number of often disparate localities across western Africa (see Porat 1894; Carl 1905; Attems 1931; Verhoeff 1938; VandenSpiegel et al. 2015, as well as our Figs 2 D–F, 3-7), the variations observed in the relative sizes and shapes of pfp, slo, lo and sph, just like those of the above somatic features, seem to be random and too minor to consider more than individual. Therefore, we do not hesitate to formally synonymize Diaphorodesmus attemsii Verhoeff, 1938 with Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis (Porat, 1894), syn. n., treating the genus monospecific, albeit quite polymorphic. This conclusion is in accord with the vast distribution of Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis in southeastern Nigeria, southwestern Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea, western Africa (Fig. 12).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/25BC8C4920072EF00D3D846208E01766	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	VandenSpiegel, Didier;Golovatch, Sergei I.;Mauries, Jean-Paul	VandenSpiegel, Didier, Golovatch, Sergei I., Mauries, Jean-Paul (2016): Review of the western African millipede genus Diaphorodesmus Silvestri, 1896 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Chelodesmidae), with the description of a similar, but new monotypic genus from Cameroon. ZooKeys 600: 7-24, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345
CAE845AC5684E0ACA35D6CD6A5DDA720.text	CAE845AC5684E0ACA35D6CD6A5DDA720.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaphorodesmoides	<div><p>Taxon classification Animalia Polydesmida Chelodesmidae</p><p>Diaphorodesmoides gen. n.</p><p>Type species.</p><p>Diaphorodesmoides lamottei sp. n., by present designation.</p><p>Name.</p><p>To emphasize the strong resemblance to Diaphorodesmus Silvestri, 1896, particularly in sharing the conspicuous dorsal horns on metaterga 2-4.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>A genus of Prepodesminae, Chelodesmidae that differs by the presence of a single, conspicuous, increasingly long, dorsomedian horn on each of metaterga 2-4, coupled with the ozopores not being borne on porosteles, but opening flush dorsolaterally on the surface of poriferous paraterga; the spiracles tubiform, unusually long and slender; and the gonopod telopodites being suberect, in situ directed forward, held parallel to each other, not crossing mesally; prefemoral (= densely setose) part erect, taking up ca 2/3 of total gonotelopodite length, without femorite, but with a more complex dorsal postfemoral process (pfp), set off from acropodite by a distinct cingulum; acropodite clearly twisted, divided parabasally into three large lobes, the middle of which forming a large solenomere lobe (slo) with only a minor solenomere proper (sl) on top, slo being neatly squeezed between a larger mesal uncus (u) and a smaller lateral branch (lb), both u and lb forming a solenophore.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CAE845AC5684E0ACA35D6CD6A5DDA720	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	VandenSpiegel, Didier;Golovatch, Sergei I.;Mauries, Jean-Paul	VandenSpiegel, Didier, Golovatch, Sergei I., Mauries, Jean-Paul (2016): Review of the western African millipede genus Diaphorodesmus Silvestri, 1896 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Chelodesmidae), with the description of a similar, but new monotypic genus from Cameroon. ZooKeys 600: 7-24, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345
456682C46FC6703A521692BF93EF3719.text	456682C46FC6703A521692BF93EF3719.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaphorodesmoides lamottei	<div><p>Taxon classification Animalia Polydesmida Chelodesmidae</p><p>Diaphorodesmoides lamottei sp. n. Figs 8, 9, 10, 11, 12</p><p>Name .</p><p>To honour Maxime Lamotte, the collector.</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>Holotype. Cameroon: ♂ (MNHN JB253), KumbaEtam, 25.XI.1975, leg. M. Lamotte.</p><p>Paratype . Cameroon: 1 ♂ (MNHN JB253), same place, together with holotype.</p><p>Description.</p><p>Length of holotype ca 26 mm, width of midbody pro- and metazonae 2.0 and 5.7 mm, respectively. The sole ♂ paratype is ca 27 mm long, 2.1 and 5.8 mm wide on pro- and metazonae, respectively. Metaterga and epiproct dirty brown dorsally, with lighter granulations and tubercles (Fig. 8); head and ventral sides of paraterga a little lighter, brownish; antennae, sides, venter and legs light, yellowish.</p><p>Head densely granulate-microtuberculate and setose on dorsal face, interantennal isthmus about half as broad as diameter of antennal socket. Antennae long and only slightly clavate, in situ reaching behind body segment 3 when stretched dorsally; antennomeres 5 and 6 each with a dorso-apical group of tiny bacilliform sensilla; in length, antennomere 6&gt;2=5&gt;1&gt;7; apical segment with usual four sensory cones.</p><p>Body with 20 segments (♂). In width, segment head &lt;collum &lt;segment 2 &lt;3 &lt;4 &lt;5 &lt;6 = 15; body rapidly tapering from segment 18 towards telson. Collum transversely ellipsoid, not covering the head from above; sides narrowly rounded; dorsal surface densely irregularly granulate-tuberculate (Figs 8C, 9B). Dorsum strongly and mostly regularly convex (Figs 8, 9). Only prozonae smooth and shining; metazonae dull, densely tuberculate-granulate all over, devoid of a cerategument, but in places clothed with a crust of earth dirt; dorsal surface of metaterga and ventral sides of paraterga with 6-8 irregular transverse rows of small grains, tubercles or short spines, only marginal rows being regular and, on paraterga, composed of ca 10 tubercles in each fore and caudal row, and of 5-6 at lateral edge; stricture smooth. Metaterga 2-4 each with an increasingly prominent, caudally curved and nearly sharp, microgranulate, subcylindrical, central horn (Figs 8 A–D, 9). Metaterga 2-5 each with a small, but evident impression at base of paraterga, following paraterga (nearly) regularly convex, continuing the convex outline of mid-dorsal region. Paraterga very broad, set at about upper 1/3 of body, tips regularly rounded, mostly lying at about half of body height and slightly bent down; only paraterga 16-19 increasingly clearly drawn behind rear tergal margin, 19th sharp. Sides below paraterga densely granulate, grains in caudal row being longer, spiniform and sharp. Ozopores barely visible, open flush on surface near midlength slightly above lateral edge of paraterga; pore formula untraceable. A thin, dark, axial line sometimes traceable through a transparent tegument, best visible on collum and prozonae. Pleurosternal carinae wanting. Limbus entire, translucent. Epiproct short, small, spade-shaped, strongly flattened dorsoventrally, subtruncate, dorsally granulate-tuberculate (Fig. 8G). Hypoproct densely granulate-tuberculate, roundly subtrapeziform, with 1+1 caudal setae very distinctly separated and borne on minute knobs (Fig. 8E). Paraprocts likewise densely granulate-tuberculate (Fig. 8E).</p><p>Sterna broad, nearly twice as broad as coxa length, almost flat, densely setose (Fig. 8E). Gonapophyses on ♂ coxae 2 vestigial. Spiracles (Fig. 8A, C, F) tubiform, remarkably long and slender. Legs very long, about 2.0 times as long as midbody height (♂), very slender; in length, femur&gt; tarsus&gt; tibia&gt; prefemur = postfemur = coxa; claw very small, very slightly curved; ventral surface of tarsi densely setose, but forming no brushes.</p><p>Gonopod aperture transversely ovoid, large, its lateral and posterior edges slightly elevated, fully concealing gonocoxae and bases of telopodites. Gonopods relatively complex (Figs 10, 11). Coxites medium-sized, subcylindrical, fused at base to a small membranous sternal remnant, poorly setose distodorsally, including a pair of very closely placed, distalmost and particularly long setae. Cannulae slender, without peculiarities. Telopodites in situ directed forward, held subparallel to each other, suberect, not crossing each other mesally. Prefemoral (= densely setose) part erect, taking up ca 2 /3 of total gonotelopodite length, without femorite, but with a relatively short, complex, tridentate, dorsal postfemoral process (pfp), set off from acropodite by a distinct cingulum; acropodite clearly twisted, divided parabasally into three large lobes, the middle of which forming a large solenomere lobe (slo) with only an indistinct, small solenomere proper on top, slo being neatly squeezed between a larger mesal uncus (u) and a smaller, subtriangular, lateral branch (lb), both u and lb forming a solenophore.</p><p>Remark.</p><p>At least at Kumba, the above new genus and species seems to occur sympatrically with Diaphorodesmus dorsicornis (Fig. 12). The label reading “KumbaEtam” is somewhat dubious. ‘Etam’ is a locality about 15 km NE of Kumba in Cameroon. The locality may therefore mean 'between Kumba and Etam’ or 'in the Kumba-Etam area’ .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/456682C46FC6703A521692BF93EF3719	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	VandenSpiegel, Didier;Golovatch, Sergei I.;Mauries, Jean-Paul	VandenSpiegel, Didier, Golovatch, Sergei I., Mauries, Jean-Paul (2016): Review of the western African millipede genus Diaphorodesmus Silvestri, 1896 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Chelodesmidae), with the description of a similar, but new monotypic genus from Cameroon. ZooKeys 600: 7-24, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.600.9345
