Published December 31, 2017 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Calapnita dinagat Huber, 2017, sp. nov.

Description

Calapnita dinagat sp. nov. Figs 131, 236–244

Diagnosis. Distinguished from other species of vermiformis group by shape of procursus (bifid ventral flap and distinctive prolateral process, Figs 236–238) and by additional ventral process close to distal ventral process on male palpal femur (arrow in Fig. 240). From most species also by small pedipalps (Figs 287–288). From C. bario and C. bariengi also by distal cheliceral apophyses clearly bipartite (Fig. 241); from several species also by dark male sternum and by oval pore plates in transversal orientation (Fig. 244).

Etymology. The species name is derived from the type locality; noun in apposition.

Material examined. Holotype. PHILIPPINES: ♂, ZFMK (Ar 16052), Dinagat Island, near Libjo, Paragua Forest, ‘site 1’ (10.222°N, 125.553°E), 130 m a.s.l., forest at brook, on leaf, 20.ii.2014 (B.A. Huber, P.N. Banaag).

Other material. PHILIPPINES: 2♂ 5♀ 2 juvs, ZFMK (Ar 16053), same data as holotype; 2 juvs in absolute ethanol, ZFMK (Phi 233), same data.

Description. Male (holotype)

MEASUREMENTS. Total body length 5.5, carapace width 0.75. Leg 1: 31.5 (8.0 + 0.3 + 7.1 + 13.6 + 2.5), tibia 2: 5.5, tibia 3: 3.4, tibia 4: 6.1; tibia 1 L/d: 118. Distance PME-PME 200 µm, diameter PME 90 µm, distance PME- ALE ~30 µm; no trace of AME.

COLOR. Entire animal mostly pale gray to whitish, sternum darker, legs slightly yellowish with brown patellae and tibia-metatarsus joints.

BODY. Habitus as in Fig. 131; ocular area barely elevated, each triad on very low hump; carapace without median furrow; clypeus unmodified; sternum as wide as long (0.48), unmodified.

CHELICERAE. As in Figs 241–242, with pair of bipartite apophyses near lamellae, pair of lateral processes; without modified hairs; without stridulatory ridges.

PALPS. In general similar to C. vermiformis (cf. figs 139 and 140 in Huber 2011) but much smaller; trochanter apophysis as in Fig. 239; femur as in Fig. 240, distal process at 24% of femur length; tibia length/diameter 0.43/ 0.27; procursus as in Figs 236–238, with conical semitransparent prolateral process, with flat bifid ventro-distal sclerite; bulb length 0.29; embolus length 0.35.

LEGS. Without spines and curved hairs; few vertical hairs; retrolateral trichobothrium on tibia 1 at 2%; prolateral trichobothrium absent on tibia 1, present on other tibiae; tarsus 1 pseudosegments not seen in dissecting microscope.

Male (variation). Tibiae 1 missing in other males.

Female. In general similar to male but sternum whitish; eye triads slightly closer together (distance PME-PME 190 µm). Tibia 1 in 4 females: 5.2, 5.2, 5.6, 5.7. Epigynum as in Fig. 243, weakly sclerotized with wide anterior ‘knob’; internal genitalia as in Fig. 244, with oval pore plates far apart.

Natural history. One male had an ectoparasitic mite on its prosoma (Fig. 131; cf. C. bankirai above). Such mites are not rare in spiders (e.g., Welbourn & Young 1988) but have rarely been reported for Pholcidae.

Distribution. Known from type locality on Dinagat Island only (Fig. 284).

Notes

Published as part of Bernhard A. Huber, 2017, Revision and cladistic analysis of the Southeast Asian leaf-dwelling spider genus Calapnita Simon (Araneae, Pholcidae), pp. 1-63 in Zootaxa 4219 (1) on page 49, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.273086

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
ZFMK
Event date
2014-02-20
Family
Pholcidae
Genus
Calapnita
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Araneae
Phylum
Arthropoda
Species
dinagat
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2014-02-20
Taxonomic concept label
Calapnita dinagat Huber, 2017

References

  • Huber, B. A. (2011) Revision and cladistic analysis of Pholcus and closely related taxa (Araneae, Pholcidae). Bonner zoologische Monographien, 58, 1 - 509. Avaliable from: http: // www. pholcidae. de / PDFs / Huber _ 2011 _ BZM _ low. pdf (Accessed 12 Jan. 2017)
  • Welbourn, W. C. & Young, O. P. (1988) Mites parasitic on spiders, with a description of a new species of Eutrombidium (Acari, Eutrombidiidae). Journal of Arachnology, 16, 373 - 385.