Pectenobunus colliculosus ( Roewer, 1925 ) Tourinho-Davis, 2004
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.405.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2B86BEE1-44B6-4483-867A-DE1D7ABA31B6 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5227660 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C087CE-FFE3-4F7F-FEF1-E9272F97E715 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Pectenobunus colliculosus ( Roewer, 1925 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Pectenobunus colliculosus ( Roewer, 1925) View in CoL , comb. nov.
( Figs. 1–7 View FIGURES 1–5 View FIGURES 6–9 , 10–11, 14 View FIGURES 10–15 , 16 View FIGURE 16 )
Caiza colliculosa Roewer, 1925: 32 ; MelloLeitão 1938: 322 Ringuelet 1954:287; Ringuelet 1959: 217; Roewer 1953: 185.
Material Examined: 1 ♂ 1 ♀ paratypes (Roewer identified both as females) SMF R II/ 346/144, Bolivia, Chaco .
Type locality: Bolivia; (Chaco) .
Distribution: South America: Bolivia, Caiza (Chaco) ( Fig. 16 View FIGURE 16 ).
Emended diagnosis. Body uniformly brown ( Figs. 1–4 View FIGURES 1–5 ), including legs. Eye mound armed with two rows of seven spines ( Fig. 7a View FIGURES 6–9 ). Abdominal scute with two to three blunt processes sharply marked in both sexes ( Figs. 3–4 View FIGURES 1–5 , 7 View FIGURES 6–9 ). Shaft of penis more than two times longer than alate portion ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 10–15 ).
Redescription. Male: lengths: body 4.6 mm, prosoma: 1.1 mm, abdominal scute: 2.9 mm, chelicerae: 1.6 mm, pedipalps: 2.5 mm. Legs femora I–IV: 3.5 mm; 7.2 mm; 3.9 mm; 4.0 mm. Color: ventral surface brown, pedipalps and chelicerae cream. Dorsal and ventral surface with large reticulations forming alveoli ( Figs. 1a View FIGURES 1–5 ), segments slightly separated one from the other ( Figs. 1–2 View FIGURES 1–5 ). Supracheliceral laminae armed with two or threepointed sharp granules. Eye mound armed with two rows of seven spines, each tipped with three points ( Fig. 7a View FIGURES 6–9 ). Chelicerae: ventrobasal spine of basichelicerite sharp ( Fig. 5–5a View FIGURES 1–5 ). Pedipalps ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 6–9 ): ventral face of trochanter armed with sharppointed granules irregularly placed. Femur armed ventrally with longitudinal rows of sharppointed granules. Patella either unarmed or armed with dorsolateral sharppointed granules, inner apophysis of patella unarmed, as wide as long. Tibia densely armed with sharppointed spines disposed irregularly. Tarsus unarmed. Legs: femoral formula 0/2/0/0. Penis: Winglets narrow (longer then wide) distal portion straighter, without projections, outline of winglets not very sinuous ( Figs. 10–11, 14 View FIGURES 10–15 ). Female: Measurements: body 8.7 mm, carapace 1.1 mm; abdominal scute: 3.3 mm, chelicerae: 1.6 mm; pedipalps: 2.5 mm. Color: As in the male ( Figs. 2, 4 View FIGURES 1–5 ). Dorsal and ventral view, chelicerae, pedipalps and legs: As in the male.
Remarks. Roewer (1953) stated that this species also occurs in western Ecuador, although this distribution is probably too widespread for a gagrellinae species. Due to the high endemism observed in other Gagrellinae , it is possible that the specimen from Ecuador, is a misidentification of another species showing very similar external morphology. The generic groups established by Roewer and those that followed ( Ringuelet 1954, 1959, 1963; Soares 1972; MelloLeitão 1931, 1938) are cluttered with species without any phylogenetic meaning, obscuring the knowledge about the diversity of the subfamily and its distribution ( Capocasale 1967; Tourinho & Kury 2000, 2001, TourinhoDavis 2003). According to Roewer (1910, 1923, 1953) Holcobunus nigripalpis , the type species of the genus, was distributed in tropical and subtropical South America, and the genus Holcobunus was recorded from scattered localities throughout the Neotropics. The tropical and subtropical South American species assigned to Holcobunus were recently revised ( Tourinho & Kury, 2001), and it was shown that the genus includes only two endemic species of the western Rio de Janeiro state and eastern São Paulo state. Twelve Southern South American species of Holcobunus , nine species of Prionostemma and one species of Geaya are being transferred to other genera (further information on Neotropical Gagrellinae in Tourinho 2000; Tourinho & Kury 2001; TourinhoDavis 2003; TourinhoDavis & Kury 2003). Among the South American species of Gagrellinae studied up to now, a more widespread distribution occurs only in Jussara rosea = Holcobunus roseus ( TourinhoDavis & Kury 2003) , from Brazil (Espírito Santo, Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro) and in P. paraguayensis ( Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay). In North America Trachyrhinus marmoratus Banks, 1984 ranges from almost Canada to central Mexico, both Jussara and Trachyrhinus were revised by TourinhoDavis & Kury (2003) and Cokendolpher (1981) and their genitalia studied and described. The distribution of P. paraguayensis can not be confirmed in this paper because only the specimens from Paraguay and Uruguay were examined. The wide distribution of P. paraguayensis was noted by different authors ( MelloLeitão 1938; Roewer 1953; Ringuelet 1959) before the work of Capocasale (1967). Only Capocasale used the morphology of the genitalia as diagnostic characters.
Often the species of Gagrellinae have very similar color pattern and external morphology ( Holcobunus argentatus and Holcobunus luteovariatus ; Prionostemma farinosum , Prionostemma Usigillatum and Holcobunus dentatus ), but a closer examination of these characters reveals some slight differences, and the examination of the penis may confirm the specific and generic identity more precisely. As what happens with species of Holcobunus , Jussara , Prionostemma and Geaya , some of the specimens identified as P. paraguayensis may in fact represent different species very similar to P. paraguayensis . To confirm the distribution of P. paraguayensis a comparison of the color pattern and both external and genital morphology of all specimens from each locality is needed.
SMF |
Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg |
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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Genus |
Pectenobunus colliculosus ( Roewer, 1925 )
Tourinho-Davis, Ana Lúcia 2004 |
Caiza colliculosa
Ringuelet, R. A. 1959: 217 |
Ringuelet, R. A. 1954: 287 |
Roewer, C. F. 1953: 185 |
Mello-Leitao, C. F. 1938: 322 |
Roewer, C. - F. 1925: 32 |