Agyneta spicula, Dupérré, Nadine, 2013

Dupérré, Nadine, 2013, Taxonomic revision of the spider genera Agyneta and Tennesseellum (Araneae, Linyphiidae) of North America north of Mexico with a study of the embolic division within Micronetinae sensu Saaristo & Tanasevitch 1996, Zootaxa 3674 (1), pp. 1-189 : 102-103

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3674.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:981F80ED-96D7-40C7-8A3C-677954416A2E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6162388

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D6700-FFD9-5671-118C-043FAD84B02A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Agyneta spicula
status

sp. nov.

Agyneta spicula View in CoL new species

Figs 316–325 View FIGURES 316 – 325 , map 20

Type material: Male holotype and female paratype from Texas, Comfort, July 8, 1936, W.98.55:N29.58, L.I. Davis ( AMNH). EXAMINED.

Etymology: The specific name is a noun in apposition referring to the spine-like retrolateral tibial apophysis.

Diagnosis: Males and females are diagnosed by their abdominal pattern ( Figs 320, 321 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ).

Males are distinguished from all Agyneta by the presence of a unique spine-like retrolateral tibial apophysis ( Fig. 316 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Females are distinguished from all species by the presence of large depressions on the surface of the epigynum ( Fig. 322 View FIGURES 316 – 325 arrow), from A. crista and A. tuberculata by the narrow proximal part of scape ( Fig. 322 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ), very wide in A. crista and A. tuberculata ( Figs. 365 View FIGURES 361 – 367 , 373 View FIGURES 368 – 375 ).

Description: Male: Total length 1.87; carapace length 0.85, width 0.69.

CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace orange-brown, shiny, finely reticulate; suffused with gray along radiating lines, pars cephalica and margin. Sternum suffused with gray. Clypeus height 3. Chelicerae apical half yellow, basal half suffused with dark gray; not excavated; seta-tipped tubercles absent; promargin six denticles, retromargin three tiny denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ ~26 striae, widely spaced, slowly getting closer basally. ABDOMEN: Dark gray with off-white chevrons with or without hour glass apical mark ( Fig. 320 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). LEGS: Light yellow-orange; leg I total length: 3.71; leg III total length: 2.55; Tm I: 0.25, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Palpal retrolateral tibial apophysis long, pointed and smooth; dorsal tibial apophysis curved with one pointed spur; two retrolateral trichobothria and one dorsal ( Fig. 316 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Cymbium triangular; glabrous depression present ( Fig 316 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ); dorsal and ventral cymbial tubercles rugose; prolateral notch shallow ( Fig. 317 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Paracymbium apical pocket medium, anterior pocket long, posterior pocket absent ( Fig. 316 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Embolus tip narrow, pointed with long prong; basally with row of small spines; numerous spines ventrally; Fickert’s gland absent; ventral lamella reduced or absent; thumb reaching the embolus proper ( Fig. 318 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Embolus proper set apically on a vertical ridge, of equal part ( Fig. 318 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Anterior terminal apophysis narrow with short protrusions; posterior terminal apophysis small, with pointed tip; lamella characteristica large with numerous spines apically ( Fig. 319 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ).

Female: Total length 2.39; carapace length 0.93, width 0.69.

CEPHALOTHORAX: Coloration as in male. Chelicerae posterior half yellow, anterior half suffused with dark gray; promargin five denticles; retromargin three tiny denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ easily visible ~10 striae, well spaced. ABDOMEN: Dark gray with off-white chevrons with or without hour glass apical mark ( Fig. 321 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). LEGS: Same coloration as male; palpal tarsal claw absent, palpal segment suffused with dark gray; leg I total length: 3.90; leg III total length: 2.71; Tm I: 0.27, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Epigynum with circular depression ( Fig. 322 View FIGURES 316 – 325 arrow), narrow proximal part of scape, enlarging into an oval plate; epigynal slits narrow and curved; pit hook depression indistiguishable ( Fig. 322 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ); lateral lobes extremely elongated with basal constriction; stretcher long; pit small ( Figs 323, 325 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Median part of scape narrow, wrinkled; genital pores situated at base of lateral lobes pockets ( Fig. 324 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ). Internal genitalia with oval, ventral receptacula with triangular base ( Figs 323, 324 View FIGURES 316 – 325 ).

Other material examined: USA: Arkansas: no specific locality, 09–15. vi.1966, 13, 16–23. vi.1966, 13, M.X. ( CAS). Iowa: no specific locality, 1935, 1Ƥ, F. Andre ( AMNH). Kansas: Redfield, 29.ix.1967, 131Ƥ, W. Ivie ( AMNH). Missouri: Fillmore, 232Ƥ ( AMNH); Odessa, 132Ƥ ( AMNH); Rolla, 16.iii.1952, 131Ƥ, vi.1952, 3 Ƥ, H.E.F. ( CAS). Nebraska: Lincoln, 1941, 232Ƥ, M. Harbaugh ( AMNH). New Mexico: Albuquerque, 1Ƥ, C. Hoff ( AMNH); Peña Blanca, 1Ƥ, C. Hoff ( AMNH). Oklahoma: near Stillwater, vi–ix.1966, sorghum field, Ƥ, C. Bailey ( CAS); Red Oak, x.1975 – i.1976, woodland litter, 23, K. Stephan ( AMNH). Texas: Austin, 1Ƥ ( AMNH); Comfort, 08.vii.1936, 939Ƥ, L. Davis ( AMNH); Walkup Cave, 14.i.1967, 1Ƥ, R. Mitchell ( AMNH); Donna’s, 03.v.1936, 1Ƥ, L. Davis ( AMNH).

Distribution: Southwest USA, north to Iowa, east to Arkansas.

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Linyphiidae

Genus

Agyneta

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