identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
7F85D5E9921052EC9E5B8FE38A5C2374.text	7F85D5E9921052EC9E5B8FE38A5C2374.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Foordana distincta Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Foordana distincta sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 1 A – C, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 D, G, H</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>
                  Holotype. South Africa • ♂; Free State Province; Clocolan,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 27.65425/lat -28.80935)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=27.65425&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.80935">Amahelo-ho-Spitskop</a>
                 ; 28°48.561'S, 27°39.255'E; 17 Mar. 2010; C. Haddad leg.; base of grass tussocks; NCA 2010/349. 
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            <p>
                 Paratypes. South Africa • 4 ♀; together with holotype •   Eastern Cape Province; 1 ♀; Queenstown / Komani district,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 26.568533/lat -31.8591)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=26.568533&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-31.8591">Farm Arphen</a>
                 ; 31°51.546'S, 26°34.112'E; 1160 m a. s. l.; 4 Apr. 2021; C. Haddad leg.; hand collecting; NCA 2021/1044  •   1 ♂ 2 ♀; Amatola Mountains, Hogsback,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 26.9154/lat -32.56212)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=26.9154&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-32.56212">Amatole Forestry Company</a>
                 ; 32°33.727'S, 26°54.924'E; 1460 m a. s. l.; 23 Mar. 2013; C. Haddad leg.; active search, grass tussocks and fynbos in grassland; NCA 2014/321  •   Free State Province: 1 ♂ 2 ♀; Clocolan,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 27.65/lat -28.8)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=27.65&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.8">Amahelo-ho-Spitskop</a>
                 ; 28°48'S, 27°39'E; 9 Mar. 2007; C. Haddad leg.;  Rhus litter; NCA 2007/1334  •  2 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; 8 Mar. 2007; dense grass; NCA 2007/1336 •  1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; grassy litter near dam; NCA 2008/2897 •   1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding;  Eucalyptus litter; NCA 2007/1335  •   1 ♀; Clocolan,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 27.65425/lat -28.80935)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=27.65425&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.80935">Amahelo-ho-Spitskop</a>
                 ; 28°48.561'S, 27°39.255'E; 2010; A. Jones leg.; in garden and around house; NCA 2010/328  •   3 ♀; Wepener district,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 27.074266/lat -29.87785)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=27.074266&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-29.87785">Farm Dereham</a>
                 , 29°52.671'S, 27°04.456'E; 1520 m a. s. l.; 31 Mar. 2024; C. Haddad leg.; hand collecting in grassland; NMBA 19614  •   KwaZulu-Natal Province; 3 ♀; Pietermaritzburg,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 30.35/lat -29.55)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=30.35&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-29.55">Town Bush</a>
                 ; 29°33'S, 30°21'E; 15 Apr. 1976; F. Wanless &amp; A. Russell-Smith leg.; ground layer in grassland; BMNH  •   Western Cape Province: 1 ♀; Houw Hoek,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 19.1537/lat -34.2046)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=19.1537&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-34.2046">Houw Hoek Inn</a>
                 ; -34.2046, 19.1537; 275 m a. s. l.; 25 Nov. 2021; C. Haddad leg.; hand collecting in fynbos; NMBA 18796  . 
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            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The male of this species shares with  F. flavipoda sp. nov. a simple curved embolus in ventral view (Figs 8 B, 10 A), whereas it is S-shaped with a distal loop in  F. kasouga sp. nov. (Fig. 11 B). Furthermore, it can be recognised by the generally similar size of the dorsal and ventral retrolateral tibial apophyses in lateral view (Fig. 8 C), whereas the ventral is far larger than the dorsal in  F. flavipoda sp. nov. (Fig. 10 B) and the dorsal is larger than the ventral in  F. kasouga sp. nov. (Fig. 11 C). Females can be separated from  F. flavipoda sp. nov. and an undescribed species from Zimbabwe by the absence of a median hood (compare Fig. 9 G – J). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (holotype, Amahelo-ho-Spitskop, NCA 2010/349): Measurements: CL 2.36, CW 2.03, AL 2.77, AW 1.87, TL 5.15, FL 0.14, SL 1.33, SW 1.15, AME - AME 0.07, AME - ALE 0.04, ALE - ALE 0.41, PME - PME 0.11, PME - PLE 0.19, PLE - PLE 0.68, MOQ: AW 0.35, PW 0.36, L 0.40. Length of leg segments: I 2.05 + 0.95 + 1.61 + 1.22 + 0.81 = 6.64; II 1.80 + 0.88 + 1.35 + 1.12 + 0.76 = 5.91; III 1.32 + 0.63 + 0.88 + 1.07 + 0.43 = 4.33; IV 1.92 + 0.85 + 1.60 + 1.78 + 0.63 = 6.78. Carapace deep red-brown, with four pairs of mediolateral mottled markings, corresponding to palps and first three pairs of legs (Fig. 2 A); surface finely wrinkled, appearing asetose but with very short sparse setae (Fig. 3 B); fovea short, distinct, at ⅔ CL. AER slightly procurved, almost straight; clypeus height equal to AME diameter; AME very slightly larger than ALE; AME separated by distance equal ½ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance equal to slightly less than ⅓ AME diameter; PER slightly recurved, PLE slightly larger than PME; PME separated by distance equal to slightly more than ⅘ their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance equal to 1 ½ PME diameter. Chelicerae, endites and labium dark orange-brown; anterior surface of cheliceral paturon covered with fairly dense long, fine setae mesally, sparse laterally; promargin with three slightly separated teeth, median tooth largest; retromargin with three adjacent teeth on common base, decreasing in size distally; endites slightly paler. Sternum dark orange, with faint black mottled patches laterally, border dark orange-brown; surface smooth, with scattered erect setae. Abdomen elongate-oval, creamy-grey dorsally, with narrow yellow-brown dorsal scutum, leaving narrow sliver between scutum and black lateral markings (Fig. 2 A); dorsum with continuous black line from anterior to posterior, with pair of narrow lines in posterior half of abdomen, joined by six faint transverse chevron markings; sides black (Fig. 2 B); venter creamy-grey, with pair of black mediolateral lines from epigastric fold to spinnerets (Fig. 2 C). Legs I to IV dark yellow-orange, I darker than others; ventral cusps present on tibiae, metatarsi and tarsi I and II (Fig. 8 A). Palp (Figs 7 A, B, 8 B, C, 9 D) dark red-brown; tegulum oval, with embolus originating mesally, initially with broad base directed prolaterally, bending sharply before gradually curving to tip, directed at 2 o’clock; vRTA slender, subtriangular, with rounded tip pointed inwards in ventral view; dRTA slightly smaller with sharp tip, triangular in lateral view.</p>
            <p>Female (paratype, Amahelo-ho-Spitskop, NCA 2010/349): Measurements: CL 2.48, CW 2.05, AL 3.58, AW 2.35, TL 5.60, FL 0.24, SL 1.32, SW 1.05, AME - AME 0.06, AME - ALE 0.03, ALE - ALE 0.37, PME - PME 0.13, PME - PLE 0.14, PLE - PLE 0.65, MOQ: AW 0.31, PW 0.40, L 0.35. Length of leg segments: I 2.12 + 1.02 + 1.52 + 1.20 + 0.86 = 6.72; II 1.90 + 0.92 + 1.35 + 1.02 + 0.80 = 5.99; III 1.47 + 0.77 + 1.00 + 1.12 + 0.55 = 4.91; IV 2.25 + 0.98 + 1.80 + 1.95 + 0.70 = 7.68. Carapace deep orange-brown, with three paired mediolateral mottled grey markings and mottled patch in front of fovea (Fig. 2 F); AER slightly procurved, almost straight; clypeus height equal to ALE diameter; AME slightly larger than ALE; AME separated by distance approximately ⅖ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance equal to ⅕ AME diameter; PER slightly recurved, PME and PLE subequal; PME separated by distance equal to their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance equal to PME diameter. Chelicerae, endites and labium orange-brown; cheliceral promargin with three slightly separated teeth, median tooth largest; retromargin with three adjacent teeth on common base, decreasing in size distally. Sternum deep yellow-brown, borders darker, with mottled lateral markings near coxal bases; surface finely wrinkled, covered with scattered short, fine setae. Abdomen without scutum, dorsal, lateral and ventral markings as for male (Fig. 2 F – H). Legs I to IV creamy-yellow, tibiae, metatarsi and tarsi I and II yellow-brown. Epigyne (Figs 7 F, 8 D, E, 9 G, H) with broad, sharply curved atria mesally, with copulatory openings entering short lateral copulatory ducts before entering large teardrop-shaped anterior ST II, each with oval lateral accessory gland; connecting ducts exiting ST II posteromesally, curving laterally, making a twist before entering bilobed posterolateral ST I, with short channel leading to fertilization ducts.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The species name is the Latin for “ distinct, clear ”, referring to the well-defined abdominal markings of this species.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Widespread across the southern half of South Africa (Fig. 12).</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7F85D5E9921052EC9E5B8FE38A5C2374	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
301FF2BAC0185A6AAF635802E403BD69.text	301FF2BAC0185A6AAF635802E403BD69.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Foordana flavipoda Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Foordana flavipoda sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 9 A, B, E, I, 10</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>
                  Holotype. South Africa • ♂; Free State Province; Bloemfontein district,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 26.163134/lat -28.861383)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=26.163134&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.861383">Farm Hopefield</a>
                 ; 28°51.683'S, 26°09.788'E; 1275 m a. s. l.; 28 Oct. 2001; C. Haddad leg.;  Eucalyptus bark; NMBA 19613. 
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            <p> Paratypes. 2 ♀; together with holotype . </p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>
                  South Africa • 1 ♀; Free State Province; Harrismith, Platberg Nature Reserve,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 29.165966/lat -28.252266)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=29.165966&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.252266">Platberg, near cross</a>
                 ; 28°15.136'S, 29°09.958'E; 2215 m a. s. l.; 11 Mar. 2006; C. Haddad leg.; under rocks, mountainside; NCA 2006/863  . 
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            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The male of this species can be recognised from congeners by the lack of ventral leg cusps on the anterior legs and the short broad dRTA (Fig. 10 B), which is longer in  F. distincta sp. nov. and  F. kasouga sp. nov. (Figs 8 C, 11 C). The female can be separated from  F. distincta sp. nov. by the strongly spiralled copulatory duct and small anterior secondary spermathecae, which are short and straight, and large, respectively, in the latter species (cf. Figs 10 D and 8 E). Furthermore,  F. flavipoda sp. nov. has a median hood in the epigyne (Fig. 10 C), whereas  F. distincta sp. nov. does not (Fig. 8 D). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (holotype, Hopefield, NMBA 19613): Measurements: CL 2.27, CW 1.91, AL 2.45, AW 1.77, TL 4.72, FL 0.18, SL 1.20, SW 1.03, AME - AME 0.07, AME - ALE 0.04, ALE - ALE 0.38, PME - PME 0.14, PME - PLE 0.13, PLE - PLE 0.61, MOQ: AW 0.30, PW 0.37, L 0.33. Length of leg segments: I 1.90 + 1.02 + 1.53 + 1.20 + 0.62 = 6.27; II 1.57 + 0.78 + 1.56 + 1.03 + 0.60 = 5.54; III 1.21 + 0.64 + 0.88 + 0.98 + 0.45 = 4.16; IV 1.65 + 0.85 + 1.43 + 1.55 + 0.60 = 6.08. Carapace orange-brown, sightly paler on posterior slope (Fig. 9 A); surface finely wrinkled; fovea short, distinct, at ⅔ CL. AER very slightly procurved, almost straight; clypeus height equal to 1 ⅛ AME diameter; AME very slightly larger than ALE; AME separated by distance equal to ⅗ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance equal to ⅓ AME diameter; PER recurved, PLE slightly larger than PME; PME separated by distance equal to slightly more than ¾ their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance equal to PLE diameter. Chelicerae orange-brown, anterior surface covered with scattered long, fine setae, denser mesally; promargin with three slightly separated teeth, median tooth largest; retromargin with three adjacent teeth on common base, decreasing in size distally; endites and labium slightly paler. Sternum bright yellow, orange-brown at borders, with faint mottling laterally between coxal pairs; surface smooth, covered with scattered short, fine setae. Abdomen oval, broadest at half its length; dark grey dorsally, with narrow cream stripe along midline in anterior half, fading posteriorly (Fig. 9 A); dorsal scutum weakly sclerotized, yellow-brown, covering most of dorsum; two pairs of indistinct sigilla present, at ¼ and ½ AL; sides dark grey; slightly paler ventrally, with two paired lines of tiny sclerites from epigastric furrow to spinnerets. Legs I pale yellow-brown, II – IV uniform yellow; ventral cusps absent on anterior legs; tibia I and II and all metatarsi and tarsi densely scopulate. Palp (Figs 9 E, 10 A, B) yellow-brown; tegulum oval, broadest medially; embolus originating prolaterally and proximally, long and slender, running along prolateral margin of tegulum, with tip directed at 1 o’clock; vRTA subtriangular, with sharp tip angled inwards in ventral view; dRTA very short and broad, subtriangular in lateral view.</p>
            <p>Female (paratype, Hopefield, NMBA 19613): Measurements: CL 1.80, CW 1.58, AL 2.10, AW 1.52, TL 4.05, FL 0.13, SL 1.12, SW 0.98, AME - AME 0.06, AME - ALE 0.02, ALE - ALE 0.30, PME - PME 0.11, PME - PLE 0.11, PLE - PLE 0.51 MOQ: AW 0.28, PW 0.32, L 0.29. Length of leg segments: I 1.50 + 0.84 + 1.04 + 0.98 + 0.58 = 4.94; II 1.25 + 0.71 + 0.91 + 0.80 + 0.47 = 4.14; III 0.92 + 0.54 + 0.60 + 0.80 + 0.48 = 3.34; IV 1.75 + 0.80 + 1.42 + 1.52 + 0.59 = 6.08. Carapace yellow-brown, paler on posterior slope (Fig. 9 B); surface finely wrinkled, sparsely covered in short straight setae; fovea short, distinct, at ⅔ CL. AER slightly procurved, almost straight; clypeus height equal to distance approximately ¾ AME diameter; AME very slightly larger than ALE; AME separated by distance slightly larger than ½ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance equal to ¼ ALE diameter; PER recurved, PME slightly larger than PLE; PME separated by distance equal to their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance equal to PME diameter. Chelicerae yellow-brown, anterior surface covered with scattered long, fine setae; labium and endites slightly paler. Sternum creamy-yellow, with yellow-brown borders; surface finely wrinkled, covered with scattered short, fine setae. Abdomen oval, broadest medially, dark grey dorsally and laterally, slightly paler ventrally; two pairs of brown to grey sigilla, first pair at ¼ AL and second pair just posterior to midpoint of abdomen. Legs with all femora creamy-yellow, remaining segments all pale yellow-brown, anterior legs slightly darker. Epigyne (Figs 9 I, 10 C, D) with large, back-to-back C-shaped atria, with copulatory openings positioned anteromedially in them; small arched hood between atria; copulatory duct initially directed anteriorly, forming single spiralling loop before entering small transverse finger-shaped ST II; connecting ducts running mesally from ST II, diverging posteriorly before entering globose ST I, with short duct leading to fertilization ducts.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>This species is a contraction of the Latin flavus (yellow) and poda (legs), referring to the colouration of the legs of both sexes.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Only known from two localities in central South African grasslands (Fig. 12).</p>
            <p>Remark.</p>
            <p> The placement of this species in  Foordana gen. nov. is tentative, as the lack of leg cusps in males, position of the sperm duct in the male palpal tegulum and the presence of a small hood in the female epigyne differ from the type species. Furthermore, the condition of the type material is not ideal, as the specimens are somewhat damaged and may have lost some of their colouration. As such, finding fresh material and incorporating sequence data into future analyses will be an essential step in resolving its placement. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/301FF2BAC0185A6AAF635802E403BD69	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
9B3F15AED72957E092FA039C21D484D3.text	9B3F15AED72957E092FA039C21D484D3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Foordana Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Foordana gen. nov.</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Foordana distincta sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Foordana gen. nov. superficially represent  Afroceto by their size and  Thysanina Simon, 1910 sensu stricto by the lack of leg spines, but can be recognized from the former by the heavily scopulate tibiae, metatarsi and tarsi of the anterior legs (Figs 2 D, I, 4 A – F, 5 A – C, G, H), the absence of leg spines (Figs 2 A, F, 9 A – C), the paired subtriangular RTA on the male palps (one dorsal and one ventral; Figs 8 B, 10 A, 11 B), which are generally single or irregularly shaped in  Afroceto (see Lyle and Haddad 2010 and Lyle 2015), and the lack of a large median atrium in the female epigyne (cf. Fig. 9 G – J and Lyle and Haddad 2010). They can be distinguished from  Thysanina by their larger size and the genitalic structure: the male palp has two well-developed subtriangular retrolateral tibial apophyses, one dorsal and one ventral (usually singular or irregularly shaped in  Thysanina when two are present; see Lyle and Haddad 2006) and the female epigynes are quite heavily sclerotized, with central paired curved atria housing the copulatory organs (weakly sclerotized and with atria and copulatory openings usually in the anterior half of the epigyne; see Lyle and Haddad 2006). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Small spiders, 4.72–5.60 mm in length; carapace bright orange to deep red-brown; carapace oval, broadest at coxae II, gradually narrowed towards eye region (Figs 1 A – C, 2 A, F, 3 A); fovea distinct, a short narrow slit; posterior margin slightly concave, almost straight (Fig. 3 A); convex in lateral profile, slightly elevated from clypeus to approximately ⅖ carapace length, with steeper slope in posterior quarter (Fig. 2 B, G); carapace surface finely wrinkled, with sparse very short fine curved setae with weakly tuberculate bases (Fig. 3 B). All eyes surrounded by black rings; AER slightly procurved in anterior view, slightly recurved in dorsal view; PER strongly recurved in dorsal view (Fig. 3 C); MOQ narrower anteriorly than posteriorly, posterior width slightly larger than length. Chilum distinct, a single transverse sclerite; cheliceral promargin and retromargin each with three teeth; fang with distinct serrula; endites with parallel lateral margins, mesal margins with longitudinal groove and dense maxillar hair tuft (Fig. 3 E), distal margins with distinct serrula comprising elongate, distally rounded denticles (Fig. 3 F); labium trapezoidal, slightly longer than wide, narrower distally than basally, distal margin with concavity (Fig. 3 E). Pleural bars sclerotised, isolated; sternum shield-shaped, slightly longer than broad, broadest at coxa II (Fig. 3 G), surface smooth centrally, covered in long straight setae with more pronounced tuberculate bases towards borders (Fig. 3 G); precoxal triangles present, intercoxal sclerites present between all coxal pairs. Leg formula 4123 or 1423; all legs densely covered in very short fine setae (Fig. 2 D, E, I, J); leg I not strongly thickened, very slightly so in males only (Fig. 2 A – C, F – H); dorsal femoral surface very slightly concave at ½ its length, ventral surface straight (Fig. 2 D, I); all femora strongly constricted proximally (Fig. 2 D, I); patellar indentation narrow, on retrolateral side, with lyriform organ at proximal end (Fig. 3 H, I); anterior legs of males with distinct small ventral cusps on tibiae, metatarsi and tarsi I and II in  F. distincta sp. nov. (Figs 4 A – I, 8 A) and metatarsi and tarsi in  F. kasouga sp. nov. (Fig. 11 A), absent in  F. flavipoda sp. nov. and all females; tibiae, metatarsi and tarsi I and II of both sexes with very dense scopulae (Figs 4 A – F, 5 A – C, F – H), with oval pored organs among the scopulate setae (Fig. 5 D); metatarsi with strongly developed metatarsal stopper, posteriors with ventral preening brush and comb at distal end (Fig. 5 E); tarsi with sparse tactile hairs, few dorsal trichobothria and chemosensory setae (Fig. 5 G, J); trichobothria with slightly lowered distal plate, distal margin of hood overlapping plate, hood with three roughly concentric curved ridges (Fig. 5 I); tarsal organ at approximately ⅚ tarsus length (Fig. 5 G), flush with integument, surface finely wrinkled, opening oval and distally placed (Fig. 5 J); paired tarsal claws short, with four teeth and dense tenant setae forming claw tufts in between (Fig. 5 H). Abdomen oval, with distinct black chevron markings on creamy-grey background (Figs 1 A – C, 2 A, F) or without markings (Fig. 9 A – C); dorsal scutum in males only, covering entire dorsum, absent in females; dorsum covered in scattered short fine setae, with two pairs of sigilla in both sexes; venter without large sclerites, only with markings in  F. distincta sp. nov. (Fig. 2 C, H), covered in scattered short fine setae. Spinnerets short, conical, in compact group (Fig. 6 A), spigot detail only studied in detail in female  F. distincta sp. nov. : ALS with two MAmp and 22 Pi (Fig. 6 B); PMS with single mAmp, four Cy, 13 Ac and one Ta (Fig. 6 C); PLS with two Cy and 10 Ac (Fig. 6 D). Male palpal femora and patellae without apophyses, patella with retrolateral lyriform organ (Fig. 7 A); palpal tibiae with ventral and dorsal retrolateral apophyses (Fig. 7 B, C), variable in shape and size between species; tegulum generally oval in ventral view, as broad as cymbium (Fig. 9 D – F), convex in lateral view (Fig. 7 B); embolus curved, with base flattened and broad, gradually narrowing distally (Fig. 9 D – F). Female palpal claw simple, straight, with six ridge-like transverse denticles (Fig. 7 D); palp also with tarsal organ (Fig. 7 E). Female epigyne quite heavily sclerotized, with copulatory openings near centre of epigyne in C-shaped ridges (Fig. 7 F); epigyne without (Fig. 9 G, H) or with (Fig. 9 I, J) small hood in anterior half; copulatory ducts directed anteriorly, entering anterior ST II; connecting ducts leading to posterolateral ST I. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The genus name is a patronym in honour of the late Stefan Foord, in recognition of his distinguished career and contribution to the development of African arachnology, with the suffix alluding to its superficial resemblance to Cetonana. Gender feminine.</p>
            <p>Composition.</p>
            <p> Foordana distincta sp. nov. ,  F. flavipoda sp. nov. ,  F. kasouga sp. nov. and an undescribed species from Zimbabwe. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9B3F15AED72957E092FA039C21D484D3	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
4A3F929A987F5C9F9DF29B3DF3204263.text	4A3F929A987F5C9F9DF29B3DF3204263.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Foordana kasouga Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Foordana kasouga sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 9 C, F, 11</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>
                  Holotype. South Africa • ♂; Eastern Cape Province; Kasouga, 16 km WSW of  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 25.75/lat -33.65)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=25.75&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-33.65">Port Alfred</a>
                 ; 33°39'S, 25°45'E; Jan. 1940; J. Omer-Cooper leg.; NMSA 5346. 
            </p>
            <p>
                  Paratype. 1 ♂; South Africa • KwaZulu-Natal Province; 75 km WSW of Estcourt, Cathedral Peak Forest Station, Meteorology Station,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 29.183332/lat -28.983334)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=29.183332&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.983334">Little Berg</a>
                 ; 28°59'S, 29°11'E; 1860 m a. s. l.; 13–31 Dec. 1979; S. &amp; J. Peck leg.; pan trap; AMNH ICZ 00357882  . 
            </p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>
                  South Africa • 8 ♂ 1 ♀; KwaZulu-Natal Province; 75 km WSW of Estcourt, Cathedral Peak Forest Station, Meteorology Station,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 29.183332/lat -28.983334)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=29.183332&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.983334">Little Berg</a>
                 ; 28°59'S, 29°11'E; 1860 m a. s. l.; 21–31 Dec. 1979; S. &amp; J. Peck leg.; veld, Malaise trap; AMNH ICZ 00357881  . 
            </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The male of this species can be recognised by the distinctive loop of the embolus and the far longer dRTA, which extends to more than a quarter of the tegulum length. In comparison, the emboli of  F. distincta sp. nov. and  F. flavipoda sp. nov. are only slightly curved, and the dRTA is clearly larger than the vRTA in lateral view (compare Figs 8 C, 9 D – F, 10 B, 11 C). Female unknown. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (holotype, Kasouga, NMSA 5346): Measurements: CL 2.64, CW 2.11, AL 2.92, AW 2.00, TL ~ 5.56, FL 0.27, SL 1.40, SW 1.10, AME - AME 0.11, AME - ALE 0.05, ALE - ALE 0.45, PME - PME 0.13, PME - PLE 0.17, PLE - PLE 0.79 MOQ: AW 0.40, PW 0.44, L 0.41. Length of leg segments: I 2.20 + 1.03 + 1.80 + 1.28 + 0.80 = 7.11; II 1.85 + 1.00 + 1.52 + 1.22 + 0.78 = 6.37; III 1.40 + 0.72 + 0.92 + 1.10 + 0.53 = 4.67; IV 1.98 + 0.87 + 1.55 + 1.62 + 0.62 = 6.64. Carapace orange-brown, with faint traces of striae radiating from fovea (Fig. 9 C); surface finely wrinkled; fovea short, distinct, at ⅔ CL. AER slightly procurved, almost straight; clypeus height equal to ⅘ AME diameter; AME and ALE subequal in size; AME separated by distance equal to ⅔ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance slightly larger than ¼ their diameter; PER recurved, PLE slightly larger than PME; PME separated by distance very slightly less than their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance almost equal to PLE diameter. Chelicerae orange-brown, anterior surface with long, fine setae, particularly along mesal surface; dentition not examined; endites and labium yellow-brown. Sternum yellow-brown, with orange-brown borders; surface with finely granulate texture, covered with scattered short, fine setae. Abdomen oval, pale grey, with faint dorsal scutum covering entire dorsum; two pairs of faint grey sigilla, at ¼ and ½ AL. Legs all creamy-yellow, faded in alcohol, anterior pair slightly darker. Palp (Figs 9 F, 11 B, C) yellow, tegulum cream with red-brown sperm duct; embolus originating proximally on the retrolateral side, curving clockwise around almost circular tegulum, with distal section making large S-shaped loop, with tip directed distally; vRTA short, finger-like, with tip bent slightly dorsally; dRTA long, triangular in ventral view, extending to approximately ¼ tegulum length.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The species is named after the type locality; noun in apposition.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Only known from single localities in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal provinces, South Africa (Fig. 12).</p>
            <p>Remark.</p>
            <p> At the proof stage I received a loan of  Trachelidae from the AMNH including two vials containing  F. kasouga sp. nov .. The single male is designated as a paratype, but unfortunately the second vial must have dried out at some stage and the material is not in an ideal condition to be included as paratypes. As this includes the only known female of the species, whose abdomen is badly damaged, description of this sex must wait until alternate material has been sampled. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A3F929A987F5C9F9DF29B3DF3204263	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
4C5CF4B7DD445FBAAE7681D00171B589.text	4C5CF4B7DD445FBAAE7681D00171B589.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mushimane Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Mushimane gen. nov.</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Mushimane tswibilinki sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p>This genus includes possibly the smallest known trachelids, with adults only ~ 1.8 mm in total length. Both sexes superficially resemble Falcaranea Haddad &amp; Lyle, 2024 but are smaller, lighter in colour and have very different genitalic morphology. Males can be distinguished by from all other trachelids by the distinctive spiralling loop in the distal section of the sperm duct of the palp, close to the base of the embolus, which is short and spike-like (Fig. 15 A), whereas long, curved and sword-like in Falcaranea (Haddad and Lyle 2024: figs 143, 147). Females can be easily recognized by the broad diamond-shaped epigynal atrium, flanked by sclerotized ridges along its posterior margin (Fig. 15 C).</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Small spiders, 1.79–1.84 mm in length; carapace creamy-yellow, yellow-brown in eye region (Fig. 13 A, B, F, G); carapace oval, broadest near middle of coxae II, gradually narrowed towards eye region, posterior margin straight (Fig. 13 A, F); fovea absent, reduced to broad shallow depression at ¾ carapace length (Fig. 14 A); carapace convex in lateral profile, slightly elevated from clypeus, highest just anterior to midpoint, with steeper slope in posterior quarter (Fig. 13 B, G); carapace surface smooth, with sparse short fine curved setae with small tuberculate bases (Fig. 14 A, B). All eyes surrounded by black rings (Fig. 13 A, F); AER slightly procurved in males, strongly procurved in females; clypeus height slightly larger than ½ AME diameter at AME, slightly less than ½ ALE diameter at ALE in males and slightly less than ⅓ ALE diameter in females; ALE slightly larger than AME in males, clearly larger in females; AME separated by distance equal to slightly less than ½ their diameter in males, equal to ⅓ their diameter in females; AME separated from ALE by narrow sliver, almost touching; PER slightly recurved, PLE slightly larger than PME in males, 1 ⅓ PME diameter in females; PME separated by distance equal to slightly less than their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance equal to ⅔ PLE diameter. Chilum and cheliceral dentition not observed; endites with parallel lateral margins, mesal margins with yellow-brown longitudinal groove, distal margins with distinct serrula and dense maxillar hair tuft on mesal margins; labium hexagonal, slightly longer than wide, with broad base and rounded distal margin. Pleural bars sclerotised, isolated; sternum elongate shield-shaped, longer than broad, broadest between coxae II and III (Fig. 13 C, H), surface smooth centrally, sparsely covered in short straight setae; precoxal triangles present, intercoxal sclerites only observed between coxae I and II. Leg formula 1423 in both sexes, sparsely covered in long fine setae; leg I clearly longer and more robust in males (Fig. 13 A), only slightly more so in females (Fig. 13 F); ventral cusps absent on anterior legs and scopulate setae and spines absent on all legs in both sexes; femora I very slightly swollen in both sexes, with slightly convex dorsal surface, ventral surface straight (Fig. 13 D, I); patellar indentation on retrolateral side narrow; metatarsi III and IV with ventral preening comb at distal end (Fig. 13 E, J); tarsi with sparse tactile hairs, one basal and two medial pairs of trichobothria and numerous chemosensory setae (Fig. 14 C); trichobothria with slightly lowered distal plate, distal margin of hood overlapping plate, hood with four curved ridges, roughly concentric (Fig. 14 E); tarsal organ distal, at approximately ⅞ tarsus length (Fig. 14 C, D), only very slightly elevated from integument, surface finely wrinkled, opening oval and distally placed (Fig. 14 F); paired tarsal claws long, stout, with at least eight long, broad teeth and numerous tenant setae forming claw tufts in between (Fig. 14 D). Abdomen oval, cream, with two pairs of indistinct sigilla, with dorsal scutum in neither sex (Fig. 13 A, F); dorsum with very sparse fine setae; venter without sclerites or markings, sparsely covered in fine setae (Fig. 13 C, H); abdomen of both sexes with tip directed ventrally (Fig. 13 B, G), which is especially accentuated in the female studied by S. E. M .. Spinnerets short, conical, in compact group (Fig. 13 C, H), spigot detail only studied in female  M. tswibilinki sp. nov. : ALS with one MAmp, one Nu and six Pi (Fig. 14 G); PMS with single mAmp, two Cy and six Ac (Fig. 14 H); PLS with two Cy and eight Ac (Fig. 14 I). Male palpal femur and patella without apophyses; palpal tibia with simple distal retrolateral apophysis (Fig. 15 A); tegulum oval in ventral view, with basal section of cymbium covering tegulum retrolaterally (Fig. 15 A, B), with short spike-like embolus originating prolaterally at distal end of tegulum (Fig. 15 A); sperm duct unique among  Trachelidae , forming distinct spiralling loop internally in distal half of tegulum near base of embolus (Fig. 15 A). Female epigyne weakly sclerotised, occupying half of epigastric plate length (Fig. 13 H), with broad diamond-shaped atrium (Fig. 15 C); copulatory openings in lateral corners of atrium, with short copulatory ducts leading to anterolateral ST II; connecting ducts initially directed laterally, converging to globose posterolateral ST I, with fertilization ducts on their mesal margin (Fig. 15 D). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The name is a noun in the indigenous African Sesotho language for “ boy ” or “ little man ”, referring to the diminutive size of the type species. Gender masculine.</p>
            <p>Composition.</p>
            <p>Monotypic.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C5CF4B7DD445FBAAE7681D00171B589	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
4B607F4CB0E153D394A5A45B8155BFE1.text	4B607F4CB0E153D394A5A45B8155BFE1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mushimane tswibilinki Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Mushimane tswibilinki sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 13, 14, 15</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>
                  Holotype. South Africa • ♂; KwaZulu-Natal Province; Ndumo Game Reserve,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 32.298832/lat -26.911)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=32.298832&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-26.911">Staff housing</a>
                 ; 26°54.660'S, 32°17.930'E; 130 m a. s. l.; 5 Dec. 2018; C. Haddad, R. Booysen &amp; J. Neethling leg.; canopy fogging,  Commiphora neglecta ; NCA 2019/757. 
            </p>
            <p> Paratype. 1 ♀; together with holotype . </p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>1 ♀; Same data as types; S. E. M. preparations, epigyne cleared and retained preserved with types.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p>As for the genus diagnosis.</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (holotype, Ndumo, NCA 2019/757): Measurements: CL 0.97, CW 0.75, AL 0.98, AW 0.59, TL 1.79, SL 0.56, SW 0.41, AME - AME 0.03, AME - ALE 0.01, ALE - ALE 0.16, PME - PME 0.06, PME - PLE 0.05, PLE - PLE 0.27, MOQ: AW 0.14, PW 0.18, L 0.16. Length of leg segments: I 0.67 + 0.35 + 0.48 + 0.47 + 0.27 = 2.24; II 0.54 + 0.30 + 0.39 + 0.40 + 0.25 = 1.88; III 0.40 + 0.24 + 0.21 + 0.29 + 0.16 = 1.30; IV 0.60 + 0.27 + 0.46 + 0.40 + 0.18 = 1.91. Carapace creamy-yellow, slightly darker in eye region (Fig. 13 A). For eye arrangement see genus description. Chelicerae yellow-brown, anterior surface coarsely wrinkled, with strongly tuberculate setae proximally on anterior surface and laterally, each with a long, fine seta; dentition not examined; endites and labium cream. Sternum creamy-yellow, with yellow-brown margins; surface smooth, with scattered fine long curved setae, denser near margins. Abdomen elongate-oval, caudal section slightly curved ventrally, broadest just behind ½ its length; creamy-grey dorsally, laterally and ventrally (Fig. 13 A – C); without dorsal scutum; two pairs of distinct sigilla present, at ⅓ and ⅗ abdomen length. Legs cream, metatarsi I and II and all tarsi yellow-brown, darker on anterior legs. Palp (Fig. 15 A, B) yellow-brown; tegulum oval, broadest medially, with subtegulum protruding prolaterally; sperm duct broad proximally in tegulum, initially directed distally, forming distinctive looping coil, with distal section narrowed, running above median section; embolus originating prolaterally and distally, short, stout and straight, directed approximately 45 ° to longitudinal axis of palp; RTA simple, short and distally rounded in ventral view, in retrolateral view with dorsal surface triangular, with sharp tip directed dorsally.</p>
            <p>Female (paratype, Ndumo, NCA 2019/757): Measurements: CL 0.83, CW 0.63, AL 1.27, AW 0.75, TL 1.84, SL 0.52, SW 0.37, AME - AME 0.02, AME - ALE &lt;0.01, ALE - ALE 0.14, PME - PME 0.05, PME - PLE 0.05, PLE - PLE 0.25, MOQ: AW 0.13, PW 0.17, L 0.16. Length of leg segments: I 0.54 + 0.30 + 0.33 + 0.34 + 0.25 = 1.76; II 0.46 + 0.26 + 0.31 + 0.30 + 0.24 = 1.57; III 0.38 + 0.21 + 0.25 + 0.27 + 0.16 = 1.27; IV 0.54 + 0.25 + 0.44 + 0.38 + 0.17 = 1.78. Carapace yellow-brown (Fig. 13 F); surface finely wrinkled, glossy, with scattered short straight setae throughout, sparse on posterior slope; fovea reduced to broad shallow depression at ¾ CL. For eye arrangement see genus description. Chelicerae deep yellow-brown, anterior surface finely wrinkled, clearly less rugose than male, with tuberculate setae on anterior and lateral surfaces; dentition not examined; endites creamy and labium yellow-brown, paler proximally. Sternum creamy-yellow, with yellow-brown margins; surface smooth, with fine long curved setae throughout. Abdomen elongate oval, caudal section strongly curved ventrally, broadest at midpoint; creamy-grey dorsally and laterally, with grey mottling ventrally (Fig. 13 F – H), without dorsal scutum; two pairs of indistinct sigilla present, at ¼ and ½ AL. All femora cream, patellae to tarsi I and metatarsi and tarsi II – IV yellow-brown, remaining segments cream. Epigyne (Fig. 15 C, D) weakly sclerotized; copulatory openings small, positioned in lateral corners of atrium; copulatory ducts short, initially curving sharply to enter weakly sclerotized sausage-shaped oblique ST II anteriorly; connecting ducts converging towards posterior, entering globose ST I, with extension leading to small fertilization ducts.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>This species name is a derogatory slang term in the indigenous African Sesotho, mocking a man with a small penis, in reference to the short embolus of the type species.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Only known from the type locality in northeastern KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa (Fig. 12).</p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p>Due to the limited number of specimens available, one female was sacrificed for scanning electron microscopy; its epigyne was cleared prior to preparation of the material for S. E. M., used for the illustrations, and has been retained in the same vials as the types. In addition, this female had an even more strongly ventrally curved abdomen than the paratype.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4B607F4CB0E153D394A5A45B8155BFE1	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
DAFF75AFBC605548B71D4FBFA5AE1195.text	DAFF75AFBC605548B71D4FBFA5AE1195.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Namaquella arida Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Namaquella arida sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 16, 17, 18, 19</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>
                  Holotype. South Africa • ♂; Northern Cape Province; Calvinia,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 19.780384/lat -31.407084)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=19.780384&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-31.407084">Akkerendam Nature Reserve</a>
                 ; 31°24.425'S, 19°46.823'E; 1170 m a. s. l.; 18 Jan. 2021; C. Haddad &amp; R. Booysen leg.; hand collecting, grass tussocks; NCA 2021/229. 
            </p>
            <p> Paratype. 2 ♀; together with holotype . </p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>1 subadult ♂ 2 subadult ♀; same data as types; S. E. M. preparations.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The male of this species can be recognised by the orientation of the embolus, at approximately 45 ° to the longitudinal axis of the palp (approximately 30 ° in  N. samanthae sp. nov. ) and the shape of the RTA, which is rounded and more strongly bent distally, with the tip directed dorsally, whereas the tip is directed dorso-distally in  N. samanthae sp. nov. (compare Figs 19 B, C with 20 B, C). The sperm duct has a distinct undulation along it prolateral course, while it is almost straight in  N. samanthae sp. nov .. The female is distinctive amongst Afrotropical trachelids by the weakly sclerotized epigyne with a central heart-shaped atrium formed by opposing curved ridges (Fig. 19 D). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (holotype, Akkerendam, NCA 2021/229): Measurements: CL 1.45, CW 1.22, AL 1.60, AW 1.07, TL 3.02, SL 0.87, SW 0.64, AME - AME 0.03, AME - ALE 0.03, ALE - ALE 0.25, PME - PME 0.08, PME - PLE 0.10, PLE - PLE 0.44, MOQ: AW 0.20, PW 0.25, L 0.21. Length of leg segments: I 1.25 + 0.65 + 1.06 + 0.85 + 0.49 = 4.30; II 0.90 + 0.54 + 0.73 + 0.61 + 0.41 = 3.19; III 0.68 + 0.40 + 0.44 + 0.51 + 0.30 = 2.33; IV 0.98 + 0.48 + 0.81 + 0.82 + 0.37 = 3.46. Carapace creamy-yellow (Fig. 16 A); surface finely wrinkled; fovea absent, replaced by broad shallow depression at ⅔ CL. AER procurved, clypeus height slightly larger than ½ AME diameter at AME, slightly more than ¼ ALE diameter at ALE; ALE slightly larger than AME; AME separated by distance approximately ⅓ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance equal to ⅓ ALE diameter; PER slightly recurved, PLE slightly larger than PME; PME separated by distance slightly less than their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance slightly larger than PLE diameter. Chelicerae yellow-orange, anterior surface covered with scattered long, fine setae; promargin with three widely separated teeth, decreasing slightly in size distally; retromargin with three adjacent teeth on common base, proximal tooth slightly larger than subequal median and distal teeth; endites and labium yellow-orange. Sternum pale creamy-yellow, yellow-brown at borders; surface smooth, sparsely covered with short, fine setae; precoxal triangles present, intercoxal sclerites weakly sclerotised but between all coxal pairs. Abdomen oval, broadest at half its length; cream dorsally, with faint grey mottling in posterior half, without distinct scutum (Fig. 16 A); two pairs of large oval sigilla present, at ¼ and ½ AL; sides faint mottled grey posteriorly (Fig. 16 B); slightly paler ventrally, with faint grey mottling around spinnerets (Fig. 16 C); single paired lines of tiny sclerites from epigastric furrow to spinnerets. Legs creamy-yellow, anterior pairs darker than posteriors; patellae to tarsi I with dark grey mottling, darkening distally on each segment, on tibiae with pair of dorsolateral pale lines with reduced mottling; ventral cusps present on metatarsi I and II and tarsus I (Fig. 19 A); tibia I and II and all metatarsi and tarsi densely scopulate. Palp (Fig. 19 B, C) yellow-brown; embolus short, originating distally, base broad but narrowing to slender slightly curved distal section at approximately 45 ° to longitudinal axis of palp; single RTA present, triangular in ventral view, in retrolateral view short and stout, rounded distally, with short abrupt tip directed dorsally.</p>
            <p>Female (paratype, Akkerendam, NCA 2021/229): Measurements: CL 1.67, CW 1.18, AL 1.96, AW 3.53, TL 2.18, SL 1.05, SW 0.76, AME - AME 0.06, AME - ALE 0.03, ALE - ALE 0.29, PME - PME 0.10, PME - PLE 0.13, PLE - PLE 0.52, MOQ: AW 0.21, PW 0.28, L 0.24. Length of leg segments: I 1.30 + 0.70 + 1.05 + 0.87 + 0.48 = 4.40; II 1.03 + 0.61 + 0.80 + 0.69 + 0.44 = 3.57; III 0.78 + 0.50 + 0.52 + 0.60 + 0.30 = 2.70; IV 1.25 + 0.65 + 1.08 + 1.10 + 0.42 = 4.50. Carapace creamy-yellow (Fig. 16 F); surface finely wrinkled; fovea absent, replaced by broad shallow depression at ⅔ CL. AER strongly procurved, clypeus height equal to AME diameter at AME, ⅖ ALE diameter at ALE; ALE diameter 1 ⅖ AME diameter; AME separated by distance slightly less than their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance equal ½ AME diameter; PER slightly recurved, PLE slightly larger than PME; PME separated by distance equal to 1 ¼ their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance approximately 1 ⅗ PME diameter. Chelicerae creamy-yellow, anterior surface covered with scattered long, fine setae; dentition as for male; endites and labium pale yellow-brown. Sternum pale creamy-yellow, slightly darker at borders; surface smooth, covered with scattered short, fine setae, particularly marginally. Abdomen oval, broadest at half its length; creamy-grey dorsally, laterally and ventrally (Fig. 16 F – H), without dorsal scutum; two pairs of indistinct sigilla present, at ¼ and ½ AL; two paired lines of indistinct tiny sclerites from epigastric furrow to spinnerets. Legs cream, tibia to tarsus I and tarsus II with grey mottling. Epigyne (Fig. 19 D, E) weakly sclerotized, with pair of curved central ridges forming heart-shaped atrium containing broad copulatory openings; copulatory duct initially funnel-shaped, narrowing rapidly from broad copulatory opening, looping laterally to enter oval anterolateral ST II on their posterolateral margin; connecting ducts short, lateral, entering small oval posterolateral ST I, with fertilization ducts forming on short mesal extension of ST I.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>This species name refers to the arid Succulent Karoo environments that it was collected from; adjective.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Only known from the type locality (Fig. 12).</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DAFF75AFBC605548B71D4FBFA5AE1195	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
0A0527996D675A1697AC0C93C605F54A.text	0A0527996D675A1697AC0C93C605F54A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Namaquella Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Namaquella gen. nov.</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Namaquella arida sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Both sexes of  Namaquella gen. nov. resemble  Poachelas Haddad &amp; Lyle, 2008 and  Rukuluk gen. nov. , with a pale body to support a lifestyle associated with grasses, although the body proportions are less elongate than in these genera. Males of  Namaquella gen. nov. can be recognized from these and other trachelid genera by the oval tegulum with a simple, slightly curved distal embolus directed retrodistally and the simple sperm duct and RTA (Figs 19 B, 20 B). The female epigyne is weakly sclerotized and can be distinguished by the central heart-shaped atrium formed by two convex ridges and the laterally looping copulatory ducts (Fig. 19 D, E), whereas the epigynal atrium of  Poachelas and  Rukuluk gen. nov. are subrectangular and extend to the epigastric furrow (Fig. 27 D; Haddad and Lyle 2008: fig. 94) [  P. montanus Haddad &amp; Lyle, 2008 has a different epigyne structure and is likely misplaced; Haddad and Lyle 2008: fig. 98]. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Small spiders, 2.18–3.52 mm in length; carapace creamy-yellow in  N. arida sp. nov. to bright yellow-orange in  N. samanthae sp. nov. ; carapace oval, broadest near posterior of coxae II, gradually narrowed towards eye region (Figs 16 A, F, 17 A); fovea indistinct, replaced by a shallow depression in  N. arida sp. nov. , a short shallow slit in  N. samanthae sp. nov. ; posterior carapace margin concave; carapace somewhat flattened, weakly convex in lateral profile, slightly elevated from clypeus to approximately ⅓ carapace length, with steeper slope in posterior quarter (Fig. 16 B, G); carapace surface finely wrinkled, with scattered short fine straight setae with small weakly tuberculate bases (Fig. 17 B). All eyes surrounded by black rings (Fig. 16 A, F); AER procurved in anterior view, slightly recurved in dorsal view (Fig. 17 C), AME slightly smaller than ALE or subequal in size; AME separated by less than their diameter, almost touching ALE; PER recurved in dorsal view, PME smaller than PLE or subequal; PME - PME and PME - PLE interdistances variable; MOQ narrower anteriorly than posteriorly, posterior width slightly larger than length. Chilum distinct, split; cheliceral promargin with three separated teeth, retromargin with three teeth on common base (Fig. 17 D); fang with distinct serrula; endites with parallel lateral margins, mesal margins with longitudinal depression (Fig. 17 E), distal margins with distinct serrula comprising short sharp denticles (Fig. 17 G) and dense maxillar hair tuft on mesal margins (Fig. 17 E); labium trapezoidal, slightly wider than long, narrower distally than basally (Figs 16 C, 17 E). Pleural bars weakly sclerotised, isolated; sternum oval, longer than broad, widest at anterior of coxa II, anterior with two concave excavations at lateral corners of labium, surface smooth, sparsely covered in long curved setae (Fig. 16 C); precoxal triangles present, intercoxal sclerites present between coxae I and II and II and III only. Leg formula 4123 or 1423, sparsely covered in long fine setae; legs I slightly swollen compared to others, with distinct convex dorsal and ventral surfaces (Fig. 16 D, I); all femora strongly constricted proximally; patellar indentation on retrolateral side narrow, with lyriform organ at proximal end (Fig. 17 H, I); tibiae to tarsi I and II densely scopulate ventrally, with ventral cusps in males on metatarsi and tarsi I at least, sometimes also on metatarsi II (Figs 19 A, 20 A), absent on tibiae and in females; metatarsi III and IV with distal preening brush and comb ventrally (Figs 16 E, J, 18 D); metatarsi with short metatarsal stopper (Fig. 18 D); tarsi with sparse tactile hairs, few dorsal trichobothria and chemosensory setae, tarsal organ at approximately ¾ tarsus length (Fig. 18 E), distinctly ovoid and rebordered, slightly elevated from integument, surface smooth, opening oval and distally placed (Fig. 18 F); tarsal claws quite slender, with five teeth and dense tenant setae forming claw tufts in between (Fig. 18 G, H); trichobothria with slightly lowered distal plate, distal margin of hood overlapping plate, hood with four curved ridges, roughly concentric (Fig. 18 I). Abdomen oval, with dorsal scutum absent or present in males, absent in females; dorsum densely covered in long fine setae, with two pairs of distinct sigilla (Fig. 16 A, F); venter without large sclerites or markings, sparsely covered in fine setae (Fig. 16 C, H). Spinnerets short, conical, in compact group, spigot detail not studied. Male palpal femora and patellae without apophyses; palpal tibiae with single simple retrolateral apophysis with pointed dorsal tip (Figs 19 C, 20 C); tegulum simple, oval in ventral view, slightly narrower than cymbium, with simple slightly curved embolus originating distally (Figs 19 B, 20 B). Female epigyne with central heart-shaped atrium, with copulatory openings positioned laterally (Fig. 19 D); copulatory ducts directed laterally, looping to anterolateral ST II, with short connecting ducts leading to ovoid posterolateral ST I, with fertilization ducts on their posteromesal surface (Fig. 19 E). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The name is derived from the Namaqualand region in arid western South Africa, from which the type species originates. Gender feminine.</p>
            <p>Composition.</p>
            <p> Two species,  Namaquella arida sp. nov. and  N. samanthae sp. nov.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0A0527996D675A1697AC0C93C605F54A	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
D912A4A904FA534584A6EDA31EB07F24.text	D912A4A904FA534584A6EDA31EB07F24.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Namaquella samanthae Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Namaquella samanthae sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Fig. 20</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>
                  Holotype. South Africa • ♂; South Africa; Western Cape Province; Fisherhaven, nr  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 19.12595/lat -34.357166)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=19.12595&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-34.357166">Hermanus</a>
                 ; 34°21.430'S, 19°07.557'E; 24 Mar. 2008; S. Oliver leg.; walking on pathway during day; NCA 2008/573. 
            </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> For detailed diagnosis, see  N. arida sp. nov. above. Female unknown. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (holotype, Fisherhaven, NCA 2008/573): Measurements: CL 1.70, CW 1.43, AL 1.73, AW 1.17, TL 3.52, FL 0.12, SL 0.98, SW 0.79, AME - AME 0.06, AME - ALE 0.03, ALE - ALE ~ 0.27, PME - PME 0.11, PME - PLE 0.09, PLE - PLE 0.56 MOQ: AW 0.26, PW ~ 0.32, L 0.27. Length of leg segments: I 1.38 + 0.73 + 1.12 + 0.92 + 0.50 = 4.65; II 1.08 + 0.59 + 0.79 + 0.73 + 0.45 = 3.64; III 0.72 + 0.47 + 0.50 + 0.61 + 0.30 = 2.60; IV 1.15 + 0.57 + 0.91 + 0.98 + 0.40 = 4.01. Carapace deep yellow-brown, with faint grey mottling; surface finely wrinkled; fovea short, distinct, at ⅔ CL. AER slightly procurved, almost straight; clypeus height equal to approximately ½ AME diameter; AME and ALE subequal in size; AME separated by distance approximately ½ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by distance slightly less than ⅓ AME diameter; PER recurved, PME and PLE subequal; PME separated by distance approximately equal to their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance equal to their diameter. Chelicerae deep yellow-brown, anterior surface covered with quite dense long, fine setae; promargin with three slightly separated teeth, retromargin with three adjacent teeth on common base; endites and labium orange. Sternum shield-shaped, yellow-brown, with orange-brown borders; surface finely wrinkled, covered with scattered short, fine setae. Abdomen elongate-oval, broadest in posterior half; creamy-yellow dorsally, with yellow dorsal scutum from ¼ AL to posterior; broad grey mottled stripe along midline, sides of abdomen also mottled grey, markings separated by pair of cream mediolateral strips; two pairs of distinct round sigilla, first and second pairs respectively just behind ¼ and ½ AL. Legs I to IV with yellow femora, remaining segments progressively darker to yellow-brown tarsi; cusps only present on metatarsi and tarsi I (Fig. 20 A). Palp (Fig. 20 B, C) yellow-brown; tegulum pear-shaped, with U-shaped sperm duct; embolus simple, straight, with pointed tip directed at 1 o’clock; RTA simple, subtriangular, directed slightly dorsally.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>This species is named for my wife Samantha, who collected the holotype.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Only known from the type locality.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D912A4A904FA534584A6EDA31EB07F24	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
31A6F7D6081B53F88A57571A26AA459A.text	31A6F7D6081B53F88A57571A26AA459A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Rukuluk gramineus Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Rukuluk gramineus sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Figs 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>
                  Holotype. South Africa • ♂; Northern Cape Province; Witsand Nature Reserve,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 22.462816/lat -28.578133)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=22.462816&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.578133">Brulsand</a>
                 ; 28°34.688'S, 22°27.769'E; 1210 m a. s. l.; 23 Mar. 2023; C. Haddad &amp; R. Booysen leg.; grass tussocks on sand dunes; NMBA 18616. 
            </p>
            <p>
                 Paratypes. South Africa • 2 ♀; together with holotype NMBA 18616 •   1 ♂ 1 ♀; Northern Cape Province; Witsand Nature Reserve,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 22.4928/lat -28.559732)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=22.4928&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.559732">Viewing Point</a>
                 ; 28°33.584'S, 22°29.568'E; 1225 m a. s. l.; 25 Mar. 2023; C. Haddad &amp; R. Booysen leg; grass tussocks on sand dunes; NMBA 18636  •   1 ♀; Witsand Nature Reserve,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 22.484917/lat -28.562883)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=22.484917&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.562883">Rest Camp</a>
                 ; 28°33.773'S, 22°29.095'E; 1195 m a. s. l.; 25 Mar. 2023; C. Haddad &amp; R. Booysen leg.; grass tussocks, woodland; NMBA 18661  •  1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; MACN . 
            </p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>
                  South Africa • 1 ♂ 2 ♀; Northern Cape Province; Witsand Nature Reserve,  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 22.484917/lat -28.562883)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=22.484917&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-28.562883">Rest Camp</a>
                 ; 28°33.773'S, 22°29.095'E; 1195 m a. s. l.; 25 Mar. 2023; C. Haddad &amp; R. Booysen leg.; grass tussocks, woodland; S. E. M. preparations  . 
            </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p>As for the genus diagnosis.</p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male (holotype, Witsand, NMBA 18616): Measurements: CL 1.53, CW 1.20, AL 1.72, AW 0.96, TL 3.06, FL 0.10, SL 1.36, SW 1.05, AME - AME 0.03, AME - ALE 0.02, ALE - ALE 0.23, PME - PME 0.08, PME - PLE 0.05, PLE - PLE 0.38, MOQ: AW 0.24, PW 0.26, L 0.25. Length of leg segments: I 1.30 + 0.62 + 1.13 + 0.90 + 0.45 = 4.40; II 1.07 + 0.51 + 0.88 + 0.77 + 0.42 = 3.65; III 0.70 + 0.41 + 0.50 + 0.63 + 0.33 = 2.57; IV 1.15 + 0.52 + 1.02 + 1.05 + 0.40 = 4.14. Carapace bright yellow-orange, with black mottled pentagonal marking in front of fovea (Fig. 21 A); fovea short and broad, distinct, at ⅔ CL. For eye arrangement see genus description. Chelicerae pale orange-brown, anterior and lateral surfaces covered with short, fine setae with small tuberculate bases; promargin with two slightly separated teeth, proximal tooth largest; retromargin with two larger subequal teeth placed closed together; endites and labium yellow-brown. Sternum creamy-yellow, yellow-brown at borders; surface smooth, covered with short, fine setae; precoxal triangles present, intercoxal sclerites only between coxae I and II and II and III. Abdomen oval, broadest at ⅖ its length; creamy-grey dorsally, with large scutum covering most of dorsum (Fig. 21 A); two pairs of distinct sigilla present, at ¼ and ½ AL; sides and venter mottled creamy-grey (Fig. 21 B, C), with two paired lines of indistinct tiny sclerites from epigastric furrow to spinnerets. Legs creamy-yellow, tibiae I with black mottling intensifying distally, metatarsi I black, tarsi I yellow-brown, with faint black mottling; leg II slightly darker than legs III and IV; numerous ventral cusps present on metatarsi and tarsi I and II. Palp (Figs 21 K – N, 26 A, B, 27 B, C) brown; tegulum broadly V-shaped, narrower proximally and broader distally; embolus very long, originating retrolaterally, forming a broad membranous ribbon in its basal section, curving once around tegulum transversely on palpal axis, gradually narrowing to a C-shaped membranous midsection, rapidly narrowing to long, slender, looping whip-like distal section with the tip directed ventrally; ventral RTA thumb-like, with rounded tip; dorsal RTA long, slender, slightly curved distally, closely associated with retrobasal cymbial groove (Figs 26 A, 27 C).</p>
            <p>Female (paratype, Witsand, NMBA 18661): Measurements: CL 1.27, CW 1.06, AL 1.93, AW 1.15, TL 3.20, FL 0.11, SL 1.40, SW 1.05, AME - AME 0.03, AME - ALE 0.02, ALE - ALE 0.21, PME - PME 0.08, PME - PLE 0.05, PLE - PLE 0.37, MOQ: AW 0.22, PW 0.27, L 0.23. Length of leg segments: I 1.12 + 0.57 + 0.92 + 0.70 + 0.40 = 3.71; II 0.95 + 0.50 + 0.70 + 0.61 + 0.36 = 3.12; III 0.62 + 0.38 + 0.48 + 0.55 + 0.29 = 2.32; IV 1.10 + 0.51 + 0.97 + 0.98 + 0.36 = 3.92. Carapace yellow, with faint black mottled marking in front of fovea (Fig. 21 F); fovea short and broad, distinct, at ⅔ CL. For eye arrangement see genus description. Chelicerae yellow-brown, anterior and lateral surfaces covered with short, fine setae with small tuberculate bases; dentition as in male; endites and labium pale creamy-yellow. Sternum cream, yellow-brown at borders; surface smooth, covered with short, fine setae; precoxal triangles present, intercoxal sclerites only between coxae I and II. Abdomen oval, broadest at ⅖ its length; mottled creamy-grey dorsally, without scutum, with traces of faint medial grey line (Fig. 21 F); two pairs of indistinct sigilla present, at ¼ and slightly more than ½ AL; sides and venter mottled creamy-grey (Fig. 21 G, H), with two paired lines of indistinct tiny sclerites from epigastric furrow to spinnerets. Legs generally creamy-yellow, tibiae and metatarsi I with dense black mottling, tarsi I yellow-brown, with faint black mottling. Epigyne (Figs 26 E, 27 D, E, 28) very weakly sclerotized, with large keyhole-shaped atrium; copulatory openings large, situated at anterior of atrium, entering initially broad membranous copulatory ducts, each provided with two accessory glands; copulatory ducts curving laterally in progressively narrowing semicircle, folding back along their interior margin, forming narrow duct running along margin of atrium before entering transverse bilobed ST II near midpoint of epigyne, with short duct connecting them to posterior transversely ovoid ST I, with fertilization ducts originating posteromesally.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>This species name is the Latin word meaning “ belonging to grass ”, referring to the microhabitat that the species was collected from.</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Only known from the type locality (Fig. 12).</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/31A6F7D6081B53F88A57571A26AA459A	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
421BE868546F555C9F720E9966C1A9B8.text	421BE868546F555C9F720E9966C1A9B8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Rukuluk Haddad 2025	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Rukuluk gen. nov.</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Rukuluk gramineus sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Members of  Rukuluk gen. nov. share with  Namaquella gen. nov. and  Poachelas the pale body with adaptations to grass-living but can be distinguished from the former by the very different genitalic morphology and more elongate body, and from the latter by the lack of paired spines ventrally on the anterior legs. Males of  Rukuluk gen. nov. can be recognized from all other trachelid genera by the distinctive palpal morphology, particularly the presence of retrolateral grooves in the cymbium that correspond to the RTA and distal section of the embolus (Figs 26 A, 27 C) and the long membranous basal section of the embolus, which gradually narrows to a long, whip-like tip (Figs 21 K – N, 26 A, B); the latter trait is most similar to the embolus morphology of  Poachelas (Haddad and Lyle 2008: figs 91, 97). Females are distinguished by the elongate subrectangular atrium that extends almost the entire length of the epigynal plate (Figs 26 E, 27 D), with long looping membranous copulatory ducts and small posterolateral spermathecal structures internally (Figs 27 E, 28 D). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Small spiders, 3.06–3.20 mm in length; carapace bright creamy-yellow to yellow-brown; carapace oval, broadest at posterior of coxae II, gradually narrowed towards eye region (Fig. 21 A, F); fovea distinct, a short narrow slit (Fig. 22 A); posterior margin very slightly concave, almost straight (Fig. 22 A); carapace weakly convex in lateral profile, slightly elevated from clypeus to approximately ½ carapace length, with steeper slope in posterior quarter (Fig. 21 B, G); carapace surface finely wrinkled, densely covered in short fine curved setae with small tuberculate bases (Fig. 22 A – C). All eyes surrounded by black rings (Fig. 21 A, F); AER strongly procurved in anterior view (Fig. 22 B), slightly recurved in dorsal view (Fig. 22 C); clypeus height slightly larger than ⅘ AME diameter at AME in males, ⅔ AME diameter at AME in female, ½ ALE diameter at ALE in males, slightly less than ⅖ ALE diameter at ALE in females; AME slightly larger than ALE; AME separated by distance approximately ⅓ their diameter; AME separated from ALE by narrow sliver, almost touching; PER slightly recurved, PME and PLE equal in diameter in males, PME very slightly larger than PLE in females; PME separated by distance equal to ⅚ their diameter; PME separated from PLE by distance approximately ½ PME diameter. Chilum distinct, split; cheliceral promargin and retromargin each with two teeth (Fig. 22 D, E); fang with distinct serrula; endites with lateral margins converging slightly distally, mesal margins with longitudinal groove and dense maxillar hair tuft (Fig. 22 F), distal margins with distinct serrula comprising sharp straight denticles (Fig. 22 G); labium trapezoidal, slightly longer than wide, narrower distally than basally (Fig. 22 F). Pleural bars sclerotised, isolated; sternum oval, with straight anterior margin (Fig. 22 H), two pairs of slit sensilla present between first two coxal pairs (Fig. 22 I); longer than broad, broadest at posterior of coxa II, surface smooth centrally, densely covered in long, slightly curved setae with small tuberculate bases (Fig. 22 H, I); precoxal triangles present, intercoxal sclerites present between coxae I and II and II and III only. Leg formula 1423 in males, 4123 in females, densely covered in short fine setae with tuberculate bases (Figs 21 D, E, I, J, 23 A – D, I, J); legs I swollen, more so in males (Fig. 21 A) than females (Fig. 21 F), femora with slightly convex dorsal surface, ventral surface almost straight (Fig. 21 D, I); all femora strongly constricted proximally; patellar indentation on retrolateral side narrow, with lyriform organ at proximal end (Fig. 23 B, C); anterior legs of both sexes with dense ventral scopulae in paired strips separated by strip with sparse setae, denser in females (Fig. 23 A, D – J) than males (Fig. 24 A – F); tibiae (at least) with ovoid pore-containing sensilla laterally (Fig. 24 G, H); males with ventral cusps on metatarsi and tarsi I and II (Figs 24 C, E, 25 A, B, 27 A), absent on tibiae and in females; metatarsi with strongly developed metatarsal stopper (Figs 23 H, I, 24 F, I), metatarsi III and IV with weak distal preening brush and distinct comb (Figs 21 E, J, 24 l); tarsi with numerous long and short dorsal trichobothria and chemosensory setae (Fig. 23 I, J); trichobothria with slightly lowered distal plate, distal margin of hood overlapping plate, hood with four curved ridges, roughly concentric (Fig. 25 D, E); tarsal organ at approximately ⅘ tarsus length on anterior tarsi (Fig. 23 J), ovoid, only very slightly elevated from integument, surface finely wrinkled, opening oval and distally placed (Fig. 25 F, G), possibly absent on tarsus IV (Fig. 25 C); tarsal claws short, with nine teeth, of which the basal two are broad and spatulate and the distal seven slender and elongate (Fig. 23 L), with dense tenant setae forming claw tufts in between (Fig. 23 I – L). Abdomen oval, clearly larger in females (Fig. 21 F) than males (Fig. 21 A), with dorsal scutum in males only (Fig. 25 H); dorsum covered in fine setae, two pairs of distinct sigilla in both sexes; venter without large sclerites or markings (Fig. 21 C, H), covered in fine setae (Fig. 25 I). Spinnerets short, conical, in compact group, only studied in detail in females: ALS with two MAmp and 10 Pi (Fig. 25 J); PMS partly obscured, with only two mAmp, one Cy and three Ac distinguished (Fig. 25 K); PLS partly obscured, with two Cy and nine Ac distinguished (Fig. 25 L). Male palpal femora and patellae without apophyses (Fig. 26 A), patella with retrolateral lyriform organ (Fig. 26 D); palpal tibiae with retrolateral trichobothrium (Fig. 26 A, C), thumb-like vRTA and long slender dRTA that corresponds with retrobasal groove on cymbium (Fig. 26 A); tegulum V-shaped, narrower proximally and broader distally; embolus very long, originating retrolaterally, with membranous looping base and midsection, narrowing to long slender whip-like tip (Figs 26 B, 27 B, C), part of its length corresponding to retrodistal cymbial groove (Fig. 26 A). Female epigyne very weakly sclerotized, with large subrectangular keyhole-shaped atrium, with median split visible under S. E. M. (Fig. 26 E) but not light microscopy (Fig. 27 D), weakly distinguishable under compound microscopy (Fig. 28); copulatory openings situated at anterior of atrium; copulatory ducts membranous, entirely translucent, their path only visible after staining, curving anteriorly and laterally, before bending back along their interior margin before looping towards posterior, running along margin of atrium before entering lateral ST II near midpoint of epigyne, with short duct connecting them to posterior ST I.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The name is an arbitrary combination of letters. Gender feminine.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/421BE868546F555C9F720E9966C1A9B8	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	Haddad, Charles R.	Haddad, Charles R. (2025): And they just keep coming: four new genera of dark sac spiders from southern Africa (Araneae, Trachelidae). African Invertebrates 66 (1): 19-64, DOI: 10.3897/AfrInvertebr.66.139299
