Arctosa himalayensis Tikader & Malhotra, 1980
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4908.4.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2F90F982-E4B7-46D6-A7CA-C666496B5ACE |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4455597 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03808789-FFCC-FF94-FF21-FC454774DDB8 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Arctosa himalayensis Tikader & Malhotra, 1980 |
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Arctosa himalayensis Tikader & Malhotra, 1980 View in CoL
Figs 1–4 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4
Arctosa himalayensis Tikader & Malhotra, 1980: 369 View in CoL , figs 238–241. Tikader & Biswas 1981: 59, plate VIII, figs 96–97. Biswas & Biswas 1992: 438. Majumder 2005: 26. Dhali et al. 2012: 1200. Dhali et al. 2017: 77, plate XXIII, figs 389–393. Arctosa tappaensis Gajbe, 2004: 31 View in CoL , figs 40–44. New synonymy
Type material. A. himalayensis . Female holotype from INDIA: Uttarakhand: Dehradun (formerly in Uttar Pradesh): Bank of Asan River ; R. N. Chopra leg.; 26 October 1971; repository NZC-ZSI (4654/18), examined. GoogleMaps Female paratype and male allotype with same data as holotype, examined. GoogleMaps A. tappaensis . Female holotype from INDIA: Chhattisgarh: Rajnandgaon (formerly in Madhya Pradesh): Dongargaon : Tappa (21°04’37.09’’N, 80°49’33.16’’E), 343 m alt.; U.A. Gajbe leg.; 22 December 1983; repository NZC-ZSI (no register number specified), examined. GoogleMaps Female paratype and male allotype with same data as holotype, examined GoogleMaps .
Other material examined: 3 females from INDIA: Madhya Pradesh: Jabalpur: Rani Durgawati Samadhi (23°01’07.66’’N, 79°59’36.16’’E), 419 m alt.; V. V. Rao leg.; 29 April 1970; repository NZC-ZSI (no register number) GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. Arctosa himalayensis seem closely related to Arctosa springiosa Yin, Wang, Xie & Peng, 1993 as both share a median apophysis with wide apex and a median septum with broad posterior part. It can be separated from the latter by nearly straight median apophysis, which is downwardly directed in A. springiosa , and spermathecae with short, wide stalks, whereas A. springiosa has globular spermathecae with slender stalks (compare Figs 2 View FIGURE 2 B–F, 4B–G to Yin et al. 2012: fig. 403b–e).
Supplementary description. Male (allotype, Fig. 1C View FIGURE 1 ). Fovea vertical, dark. Cheliceral promargin with two teeth, retromargin with three. Body length 6.31. Prosoma length 3.62, width 2.53. Opisthosoma length 2.69, width 1.83. Eye diameters: ALE 0.11. AME 0.13. PLE 0.27. PME 0.29. Eye interdistances: ALE–AME 0.04. AME–AME 0.10. PLE–PLE 0.54. PME–PLE 0.23. PME–PME 0.21. Chelicerae length 1.70. Clypeus height at ALEs 0.12, at AMEs 0.10. Measurements of pedipalp and legs. Pedipalp (right) 3.93 [1.36, 0.79, 0.56, 1.22], I (right) 7.58 [2.30, 0.93, 1.71, 1.78, 0.86], II 7.48 [2.12, 1.21, 1.25, 1.92, 0.98], III (right) 7.28 [1.94, 1.12, 1.46, 1.72, 1.04], IV (right) 10.93 [2.99, 1.46, 2.02, 3.05, 1.41]. Leg formula: 4123. Pedipalp as in Figs 2 View FIGURE 2 A–C.
Female (holotype, Fig. 1A View FIGURE 1 ). Same as male except the following: body length 7.86. Prosoma length 4.51, width 3.31. Opisthosoma length 3.35, width 2.84. Eye diameters: ALE 0.16. AME 0.17. PLE 0.23. PME 0.25. Eye interdistances: ALE–AME 0.07. AME–AME 0.10. PLE–PLE 0.68. PME–PLE 0.27. PME–PME 0.21. Chelicerae length 2.26. Clypeus height at ALEs 0.24, at AMEs 0.22. Measurements of palp and legs. Palp 3.57 [1.18, 0.69, 0.67, 1.03], I 8.99 [2.61, 1.49, 1.83, 1.97, 1.09], II 7.91 [2.30, 1.39, 1.41, 1.81, 1.00], III 7.51 [2.00, 1.37, 1.22, 1.95, 0.97], IV 9.60 [3.02, 1.61, 2.12, 1.83, 1.02]. Leg formula: 4123. Epigynum as in Fig. 2D View FIGURE 2 .
Measurements of paratype female ( Fig. 1B View FIGURE 1 ). Body length 8.87. Prosoma length 4.25, width 3.10. Opisthosoma length 4.62, width 3.01. Genitalia as in Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 E–F.
Justification of the synonymy. Gajbe (2004) described A. tappaensis based on a male and two females collected in Chhattisgarh. Since the type material of this species show no significant differences with those of A. himalayensis , we consider A. tappaensis as a junior synonym of A. himalayensis (compare Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A–F with Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 A–G).
Remarks. The NZC-ZSI collection has three glass tubes for A. himalayensis . A tube labelled ‘holotype’ (4654/18) contains one female in good condition, with intact genitalia. A second tube, labelled ‘paratype’ (4655/18), contains one female in good condition (but the label mentions two paratype specimens). The same tube has a small glass vial with the dissected genitalia. A third tube, labelled ‘allotype’ (4656/18), contains one male specimen in fairly good condition, with broken legs and missing the left pedipalp. The NZC-ZSI collection has two glass tubes for A. tappaensis . A first tube, labelled ‘ paratype and allotype’ (no register number), contains one female holotype, one male allotype and one juvenile (possibly the paratype) specimens, all in good condition. The same tube has a small glass vial that contains the dissected genitalia of the female holotype. A second tube is labelled ‘ Arctosa tappaensis ’ (no register number) and contains three female specimens in good condition, with intact genitalia.
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Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
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.
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Arctosa himalayensis Tikader & Malhotra, 1980
Sankaran, Pradeep M., Caleb, John T. D. & Sebastian, Pothalil A. 2021 |
Arctosa himalayensis
Tikader, B. K. & Biswas, B. 1981: 59 |
Tikader, B. K. & Malhotra, M. S. 1980: 369 |