Abstract
Populations of the large scolopendrid centipede Ethmostigmus Pocock 1898, from five islands of the Bismarck volcanic arc between New Guinea and New Britain comprise a monophyletic group within which three species can be identified based on each forming a strongly supported clade based on concatenated sequence data for three genes, diagnostic morphological characters, and ecology. Two species occurred in sympatry on four of the islands, and all three species are sympatric on the island of Umboi. The two best-sampled and most widely geographically overlapping species are each other’s closest relative, one of them only collected from the ground and the other from trees, a pattern consistent across all islands on which they occur. The tree-dwelling species, Ethmostigmus arboreus sp. nov., is distinguished from the ground species, Ethmostigmus platycephalus (Newport, 1845), by having longer legs. This pair’s sister species, Ethmostigmus krausi sp. nov. from the islands of Umboi and Sakar, is readily distinguished by rugose and coarsely granulate tergal sculpture. This radiation exhibits ecological partitioning at a spatial scale that has not previously been documented in centipedes.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | ixaf060 |
| Journal | Insect Systematics and Diversity |
| Volume | 10 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2026 |
| MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Funding
Weijola’s work was supported by grants 105541 and 158161 from the Swedish Cultural Foundation and grant 226R-17 from the National Geographic Society. Molecular work was supported by Turku University Foundation and Entomologiska Föreningen i Helsingfors.
Keywords
- ecomorphology
- Ethmostigmus
- habitat partitioning
- Otostigminae
- Scolopendridae
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