-
Figure 1.Dorsal A–C and right lateral D–E views of midbody rings of freshly killed males A, D Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n., ex QVM 23:53865 B, E Tasmaniosoma interfluminum sp. n., ex QVM 23:53866 C, F Tasmaniosoma nicolaus sp. n., paratype ex QVM 23:53860. Scale bars = 0.5 mm.
-
Figure 2.A, D, E Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n., paratype ex QVM 23:53817 B Tasmaniosoma interfluminum sp. n., paratype ex QVM 23:52247 C Tasmaniosoma nicolaus sp. n., paratype ex QVM 23:53860 A, B, C Ventral views of male ring 6 D Left lateral view of midbody spiracles E Limbus on lateral portion of midbody ring. Scale bars: A–C = 0.25 mm, D, E = 0.05 mm.
-
Figure 3.Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n., paratype ex QVM 23:53817; right lateral A and posterior B views of gonopods in situ. s = solenomere. Scale bar = 0.1 mm.
-
Figure 4.A Museum specimen localities to 15 February 2015 of Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n. (blue markers). Base map from http://maps.thelist.tas.gov.au/listmap/app/list/map; for general location see index map, Fig. 5A. B Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n. type locality, looking west to Lake Trevallyn. Accumulations of bark litter at the base of Eucalyptus viminalis (the tall, white-barked trees at top centre) are preferred shelters for Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n.
-
Figure 5.A The main island of Tasmania (Mercator projection) showing locations of Launceston (Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n. range) and the Nicholas Range area (rectangle; ranges of Tasmaniosoma interfluminum sp. n. and Tasmaniosoma nicolaus sp. n.) B Anubis, as illustrated by Jeff Dahl (Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license, GNU Free Documentation License; http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Anubis_standing.svg) C Posterior and slightly ventral view of distal portion of right gonopod of Tasmaniosoma interfluminum sp. n., ex QVM 23:52262. Dotted line marks course of prostatic groove.