Agyneta crawfordi, Dupérré, Nadine, 2013
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.6162356 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D6700-FFFB-5650-118C-07C7ADBCB658 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Agyneta crawfordi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Agyneta crawfordi View in CoL new species
Figs 209–212 View FIGURES 209 – 212 , map 12
Type material: Male holotype taken at Milk Canyon, 46.855ºN 120.819ºW, Yakima County, Washington, 09- 11.xi.1996, sifting litter, Y. Marusik ( UWBM). EXAMINED.
Etymology: The specific name is a patronym in honor of Mr. Rodney Crawford, curator at the Burke Museum in Washington.
Diagnosis: Male are diagnosed from all other species in the genus by their large, rounded dorsal cymbial tubercle associated with small ventral cymbial tubercle ( Fig. 210 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ), from members of the species group by their long rugose posterior pocket of the paracymbium ( Fig. 209 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ).
Description: Male: Total length 1.42; carapace length 0.64, width 0.53.
CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace light yellow, shiny, finely reticulate; lightly suffused with light gray along radiating lines and margin. Sternum lightly suffused with gray. Clypeus height 2. Chelicerae light yellow, not excavated; seta-tipped tubercles absent; promargin three denticles, retromargin two tiny denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ easily visible ~19 striae, well spaced. ABDOMEN: Uniformly light gray. LEGS: Light yellow; leg I total length: 2.45; leg III total length: 1.78; Tm I: 0.30, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Palpal retrolateral tibial apophysis small, triangular; dorsal tibial apophysis triangular, rugose; one retrolateral and one dorsal trichobothria ( Fig. 209 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ). Cymbium with retrolateral fold; glabrous depression present ( Fig. 209 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ); dorsal cymbial tubercle large and rugose; ventral tubercle small and smooth; prolateral notch shallow ( Fig. 210 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ). Paracymbium apical pocket long, anterior pocket absent, posterior pocket long and rugose ( Fig. 209 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ). Embolus tip pointed; retro-ventrally with a row of well-sclerotized and transparent spines; Fickert’s gland medial, bulbous; ventral lamella enlarged into a basal plate with a few short spines, extending on the retrolateral side of the embolus all the way to the embolus proper, with no obvious spines; thumb short, reaching the base of the embolus proper ( Fig. 211 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ). Embolus proper set apically with long dorsal part, serrated, reaching the tip of embolus ( Fig. 211 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ). Anterior terminal apophysis long with a few curved protrusions; posterior terminal apophysis with one rounded, one pointed tip and two spines basally; lamella characteristica long, with bifid spiny tip ( Fig. 212 View FIGURES 209 – 212 ).
Female: Unknown.
Other material examined: One male paratype collected with holotype.
Distribution: Northwest USA.
The vinki group includes three species, A. vinki n. sp., A. miniata n. sp. and A. panthera n. sp. This group of very closely related species occurs in western North America.
All members of the group share a unique characteristic, the embolus proper is set on a horizontal ridge reaching the tip of the embolus, retro-basally in correlation with a projection ( Fig. 215 View FIGURES 213 – 222 arrow). The group is characterized by males and females displaying similar abdominal patterns ( Figs 217, 218 View FIGURES 213 – 222 , 227, 228 View FIGURES 223 – 232 , 237 View FIGURES 233 – 237 ). Furthermore, the male chelicerae are large, excavated with seta-tipped tubercles and promarginal-retromarginal projections ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 25 – 30. 25 ). Palpal tibia with two retrolateral trichobothria and a dorsal one; paracymbium with long apical pocket, anterior pocket and posterior pocket curved ( Figs 213 View FIGURES 213 – 222 , 223 View FIGURES 223 – 232 , 233 View FIGURES 233 – 237 ). The ventral lamella is highly reduced; the thumb reaches a little over the embolus proper and no Fickert’s glands have been observed ( Figs 215 View FIGURES 213 – 222 , 225 View FIGURES 223 – 232 , 235 View FIGURES 233 – 237 ). The female genital pores are located in the lateral lobes, not at the lateral lobe pockets ( Figs 220 View FIGURES 213 – 222 , 230 View FIGURES 223 – 232 ) and the lateral lobes are elongated and folded basally ( Fig. 222 View FIGURES 213 – 222 , arrow).
UWBM |
University of Washington, Burke Museum |
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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