Agyneta barfoot, 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 : 91-92

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.6162376

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D6700-FFE6-564C-118C-014FADDFB71A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Agyneta barfoot
status

sp. nov.

Agyneta barfoot View in CoL new species

Figs 274–282 View FIGURES 274 – 282 , map 18

Type material: Male holotype from Arizona, Cochise County, Chiricahua Mountains, Barfoot Meadows, July 5, 1975 ( CAS). EXAMINED.

Etymology: The specific name is a noun in apposition taken from the type locality Barfoot Meadows, USA.

Diagnosis: Males and females are diagnosed by their dark gray abdomens with chevrons ( Figs 278, 279 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Additionally males are distinguished from all species by their elongated, sword-shaped palpal retrolateral tibial apophysis ( Fig. 274 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). From closely related species A. sandia by the larger dorsal cymbial tubercle ( Fig. 275 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ), very short in the latter ( Fig 284 View FIGURES 283 – 289 ). Females are distinguished from all other Agyneta by their extremely large epigynal slits reaching the anterior part of the epigynum ( Fig. 280 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). From A. sandia by the elongated lateral lobes ( Fig. 281 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ), short in the latter ( Fig. 288 View FIGURES 283 – 289 ).

Description: Male: Total length 1.92; carapace length 0.83, width 0.66.

CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace orange, shiny, finely reticulate; margin, radiating lines strongly suffused with dark gray; trident mark often present. Sternum strongly suffused with dark gray. Clypeus height 3. Chelicerae orange, excavated; ~ 13 seta-tipped tubercles; promargin four teeth, retromargin four tiny denticles; both margins with rounded projection at base of fang. Cheliceral stridulatory organ ~ 64 striae, narrowly spaced. ABDOMEN: Oval, uniformly light to dark gray or with five dark gray chevrons ( Fig. 278 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ) LEGS: Yellow-orange; femora with retrolateral and prolateral sides suffused with gray; leg I total length: 3.44; leg III total length: 2.50; Tm I: 0.20, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Palpal retrolateral tibial apophysis elongated and rugose; dorsal tibial apophysis short, rounded and rugose; two retrolateral, one dorsal trichobothrium ( Fig. 274 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Cymbium triangular; glabrous depression present ( Fig. 274 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ); prolateral notch shallow; dorsal cymbial turbercle sharp, pointed and smooth; ventral cymbial tubercle elongated, rounded and smooth ( Fig. 275 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Paracymbium apical pocket medium, anterior pocket short and curved, posterior pocket small and straight ( Fig. 274 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Embolus tip pointed and thin; basally with large prong; Fickert’s gland basal, slightly enlarged; ventral lamella transparent, pointed; thumb short, reaching below the embolus proper ( Fig. 276 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Embolus proper set apically, of equal part ( Fig. 276 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Anterior terminal apophysis long with very few short protrusions and a large well sclerotized, pointed process basally; posterior terminal apophysis pointed; lamella characteristica long, with trident-shaped tip ( Fig. 277 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ).

Female: Total length 2.02; carapace length 0.88, width 0.65.

CEPHALOTHORAX: Coloration as in male. Chelicerae promargin five teeth, retromargin five denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ ~51 striae, narrowly spaced. ABDOMEN: Oval, uniformly light to dark gray or with five dark gray chevrons ( Fig. 279 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). LEGS: Coloration as male; palpal tarsal claw absent, palpal tibia and metatarsus suffused with dark gray; leg I total length: 3.46; leg III total length: 2.58; Tm I: 0.26, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Epigynum with wide proximal part of scape; epigynal slits extremely large; pit hook depression absent ( Fig. 280 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ); lateral lobes elongated; stretcher small; pit deep ( Fig. 281 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Median part of scape long, narrow; genital pores situated at base of lateral lobes pockets ( Fig. 282 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ). Internal genitalia with elongated, obliquely positioned ventral and dorsal receptaculas ( Figs 281, 282 View FIGURES 274 – 282 ).

Distribution: Southwestern USA, Arizona.

Other material examined: USA: Arizona: 6.4km S Bing Park, Chiricahua Mountains, 28.vi. 1967, 2743m, 231Ƥ, W. Gertsch, Hastings ( AMNH); 8km W Portal, South Western Research Station, 15.vi. 1940, 2286m, under rocks, 1Ƥ, D. Lowrie ( AMNH); Barfoot Meadows, Chiricahua Mountains, 05.vii.1975, 231Ƥ, D. Ubick ( DUC); Barfoot Park, Chiricahua Mountains, 19.viii. 1990, 2743–2286m, 2Ƥ, V. Roth ( CAS); Barfoot Park, 16km W Portal, 19.vii.1964, 23, W. Gertsch, Woods ( AMNH); Green House Canyon, Chiricahua Mountains, 14.v.1968, 1Ƥ, L. Herman ( AMNH); Pinecrest, Graham Mountain, 13.ix.1950, 2Ƥ, W. Gertsch ( AMNH); Summerhaven, Santa Catalina Mountains, 10.ix.1963, 1Ƥ, W. Gertsch, V. Roth ( AMNH).

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Linyphiidae

Genus

Agyneta

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF