Blakistonia newtoni, Harrison & Rix & Harvey & Austin, 2018

Harrison, Sophie E., Rix, Michael G., Harvey, Mark S. & Austin, Andrew D., 2018, Systematics of the Australian spiny trapdoor spiders of the genus Blakistonia Hogg (Araneae: Idiopidae), Zootaxa 4518 (1), pp. 1-76 : 49-51

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4518.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:708981EF-21DC-4DC2-B1CD-8CFF4373DA8C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5967819

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C10411-5567-FFF4-E1E8-FCEEFDDEFDF2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Blakistonia newtoni
status

sp. nov.

Blakistonia newtoni View in CoL , sp. n.

( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 A–L)

Type material. AUSTRALIA: South Australia: GoogleMaps Holotype male, Hiltaba, Gawler Ranges National Park   GoogleMaps , 32°09’51”S, 135°03’09”E, 13–22 November 2012, pitfall, N. Birks, BushBlitz survey (SAM NN28064 ).

Diagnosis. Males of B. newtoni can be distinguished from those of B. bella , B. pidax , B. tunstilli , B. emmottorum , B. gemmelli , B. aurea , B. parva , B. olea , B. tariae , B. carnarvon and B. raveni by the presence of one, rather than two, prolateral macroseta on tibia I, and by the absence of prolateral clasping spurs on tibia I ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 G– I); from those of B. plata and B. birksi by the square eye group ( Fig. 19D View FIGURE 19 ); and from those of B. maryae and B. hortoni by the field of spinules on the palpal tibia being in a rounded crescent shape, and by the ventral margin of the palpal tibia distal to the RTA being strongly concave in prolateral view ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 J–L). Females are unknown.

Description. Holotype male (SAM NN28064). Medium-sized idiopid spider (total length 10.4).

Colour (in ethanol; Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 A–C): Carapace bright golden orange-brown, with darker, indistinct lines of colour both sideson both sides of caput, and between fovea and eye group ( Fig. 19A View FIGURE 19 ); sternum, labium and maxillae very similar colour, chelicerae darker red-brown ( Fig. 19E, F View FIGURE 19 ); abdomen same golden orange-brown as sternum and carapace with pattern of seven dark, broad, mottled chevrons, down entire side of abdomen ( Fig. 19A, C View FIGURE 19 ); legs and pedipalp same colour as of carapace ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 G–L).

Cephalothorax: Carapace 5.1 long, 4.4 wide, 3.8 high, 1.2 times longer than wide; oval ( Fig. 19A View FIGURE 19 ), caput low, ocular area raised ( Fig. 19C View FIGURE 19 ); cuticle smooth, with pits outward from fovea and both sides of caput; fovea slightly procurved; carapace very sparsely setose, slightly more concentrated behind and both sides of eye group, and forming fringe around edge of carapace; median clump of thickened setae on clypeus ( Fig. 19D View FIGURE 19 ). Length of median clypeus less than 1.0; anterior margin slightly convex. Eye group 0.8 wide, 8.9 long, 0.2 of carapace width; anterior eye row strongly procurved, PLE–PLE/ALE–ALE ratio 1.0; posterior eye row straight; AME only slightly smaller than ALE and separated by about one and a half times the distance of AME; ALE and PLE separated by about three times the diameter of ALE; PME pale, less than half the size of AME and about half the size of PLE, and separated from PLE by about its own diameter ( Fig. 19D View FIGURE 19 ). Labium with five cuspules ( Fig 19F View FIGURE 19 ). Sternum 2.8 long, 2.1 wide, evenly setose ( Fig. 19E View FIGURE 19 ). Maxillae with 25 (left) and 19 (right) cuspules ( Fig. 19E, F View FIGURE 19 ).

Legs: Moderately setose and sparsely spinose; tarsi I, II ventrally flattened; tarsi and distal metatarsi I, II weakly scopulate. Paired tarsal claws: leg I p9 (3 large, 3 small) r8 (6 large, 2 small); leg II p9 (8 large, 1 small), r8 (6 large, 2 small); leg III p7 (6 large, 1 small), r6 (3 large, 3 small); leg IV p6 (6 large), r8 (7 large, 1 small).

Spination: Leg I: Tibia with single prolateral macroseta ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 G–I), r1; metatarsus p1 r1. Leg II: tibia r1; metatarsus p2, r3. Leg III: tibia p1, r3; tibia p1, r3; metatarsus p7, r10; tarsus p7, r6. Leg IV: moderately setose and sparsely spinose, with no clear demarcation between lanceolate setae and smaller spine-like setae.

Leg and pedipalp measurements: Length of legs IV> II> I> III. Leg I: femur 5.0, patella 2.5, tibia 3.8, metatarsus 3.2, tarsus 2.0, total = 16.5. Leg II: femur 4.9, patella 2.5, tibia 3.6, metatarsus 3.0, tarsus 2.3, total = 16.3. Leg III: femur 4.2, patella 2.2, tibia 3.2, metatarsus 3.4, tarsus 2.2, total = 15.2. Leg IV (right): femur 5.0, patella 2.3, tibia 5.3, metatarsus 5.4, tarsus 2.7, total = 20.7. Pedipalp: femur 2.8, patella 1.3, tibia 2.2, tarsus 1.2, total = 7.5.

Pedipalp: Femur spinose on dorsal surface; patella with thickened ventral setae; tibia short and swollen, RTA short, pointed, densely covered in short, stout spinules in narrow line to just over two-thirds of distance between base of apophysis and distal tibia, becoming more sparse towards distal tibia; long, erect setae on ventral tibia; bulb uniform, globular; embolus simple, slender, tapering, curved but not twisted, only slightly longer than bulb; cymbium covered in rows of short spinules, becoming longer distally ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 J–L).

Abdomen: Setose, oval, dorsal sigilla not evident; 5.3 long, 3.2 wide ( Fig. 19A View FIGURE 19 ).

Variation: None.

Etymology. This species is named in honour of Mark Newton, for his work in making South Australia’s invertebrate fauna more readily identifiable to the general public, and for supplying specimens and images for this study.

Distribution. Blakistonia newtoni is known only from Hiltaba Reserve in the Gawler Ranges ( Fig. 32 View FIGURE 32 ).

Remarks. Specimens of this species were collected in a pitfall trap, 1.8 km WSW. of Hiltaba Station, under Triodia vegetation on a rocky hill slope.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Idiopidae

Genus

Blakistonia

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