Cavisternum waldockae, Baehr & Harvey & Smith, 2010

Baehr, Barbara C., Harvey, Mark S. & Smith, Helen M., 2010, The Goblin Spiders of the New Endemic Australian Genus Cavisternum (Araneae: Oonopidae), American Museum Novitates 3684, pp. 1-40 : 38-39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1206/667.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C6A064BB-45E2-494A-935D-D7797D6E7BCC

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A08799-655A-CE0E-FD58-FDF2EA3FAE1B

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Cavisternum waldockae
status

sp. nov.

Cavisternum waldockae View in CoL , new species

Figures 25 View Figs , 171–173 View Figs , map 1

TYPE: AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: Male holotype from Drysdale River National Park, N of Larryoo, 14 ° 51 9 S, 126 ° 49 9 E (12 June 1992; M.S. Harvey, J.M. Waldock) (PBI_OON 00005444), deposited in WAM (T78181). Paratype: 1 male from Drysdale River National Park , N of Larryoo, 14 ° 51 9 S, 126 ° 49 9 E, 12 June 1992, M.S. Harvey, J.M. Waldock (PBI_OON 00005442) (WAM T78182) GoogleMaps .

ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a patronym in honor of Julianne Waldock from the Western Australian Museum, who collect- ed the holotype.

DIAGNOSIS: Males of C. waldockae resemble those of C. bertmaini , with both possessing long cheliceral fangs positioned in a V shape and in the general shape of the palp. Cavisternum waldockae differs in having a longer, oval-shaped sternal concavity, which occupies O of the sternum (fig. 25).

MALE: Total length 1.15. Carapace 0.56 long, 0.41 wide; abdomen 0.59 long, 0.35 wide. Carapace, sternum, mouthparts, and abdominal scutae pale orange, legs yellow. Sternum as long as wide, with oval field of clavate setae, covering about half of sternum width (fig. 25). Cheliceral fangs directed posteriorly forming a V shape, elongated, about O of paturon long, tips distally widened. Abdomen ovoid, epigastric scutum slightly protruding. Cymbium-bulb complex ovoid, bearing a long, medially bent embolus with a biarticulate basal apophysis (figs. 171–173).

FEMALE: Unknown.

DISTRIBUTION: This species is only known from a single location in the Drysdale River National Park, in northeastern Western Australia (map 1).

172. Retrolateral view. 173. Dorsal view.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Oonopidae

Genus

Cavisternum

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