Flirtea C.L. Koch, 1839
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4093.2.5 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0D524032-3144-4389-8E95-6F0182B4CD33 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6075605 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C887C3-FFF7-FFA3-AFA0-F295EA2D549F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Flirtea C.L. Koch, 1839 |
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Flirtea C.L. Koch, 1839 View in CoL
Flirtea C.L. Koch 1839a: 97 View in CoL , 99 (combined description, 2 species incl.); C.L. Koch 1839b: 20 (incl. only F. picta View in CoL , F. andreae ); C.L. Koch 1840: 117 (incl. F. phalerata ); Kury 2003: 61.
Type species. Cosmetus pictus Perty, 1833 , by subsequent designation of Roewer (1912b).
Etymology. C.L. Koch (1839b: 20) stated that Flirtea was a person’s name. Gender feminine.
Originally included species. Flirtea andreae , Flirtea picta , Flirtea phalerata .
Included species. Flirtea officially includes 30 species (Kury 2003), mostly from Colombia and Venezuela, none of which is especially closely related with Flirtea picta , and which should therefore be transferred elsewhere. Without studying each species in detail under a phylogenetic framework it is not possible to determine their generic affinities now. According to the present diagnosis of Flirtea , another two Brazilian species should be included: Cynorta valida Roewer, 1928 , which does not match the current diagnosis of Cynorta (as given in Kury et al., 2007) and Paecilaema batman Pinto-da-Rocha & Yamaguti, 2013. Therefore, at the present state of knowledge, only those three Brazilian species belong confidently to Flirtea .
Diagnosis. Dorsal scutum beta-shaped in dorsal view, most convex at area III on lateral view. Dorsal scutum and free tergites entirely unarmed but for a pair of small tubercles on area I and a pair of paramedian high acuminate spines on area III. Pedipalpal Ti asymmetrical, without notable ectal projections; Ta moderately elongate. Chelicerae weak, monomorphic with reduced armature on posterior and ectal margins of bulla ( Figs 6 View FIGURE 6 a– b). All legs elongate but not filiform, with femora straight and podomeres cylindrical and unarmed. Metatarsus IV not prismatic. Coxae I–II with diagonal depression, connected to subdued sternal region, together forming socket for accommodation of resting pedipalpi. Depression of coxa II occupies only the proximal extreme of the podomere. Depression of coxa I occupies about the anterior half of the podomere and is delimited by rows of setiferous tubercles ( Figs 5 View FIGURE 5 d–f). In the posterior margin of the depression roughly five groups can be distinguished from proximal to distal: many small tubercles forming 1 to 3 rows (element 1); few larger tubercles (element 2); a very large acuminate conical process pointing laterally (element 3); a huge bifid or hooked process which extends to dorsal and is visible in dorsal view (element 4); the anterior margin is delimited by a short multi-pointed protuberance (element 5) ( Figs 5 View FIGURE 5 d–f). Coxa IX sexually dimorphic—in males, entire length of lateral margin surpassing the dorsal scutum in dorsal view ( Figs 3 View FIGURE 3 b, 9a), while in females the anterior half is concealed (9e). White blot pattern on dorsal scutum highly variable, scaramuccia (in F. picta , Figs 2 View FIGURE 2 , 8 View FIGURE 8 ), botuliform (in F. bat man , Pinto-da-Rocha & Yamaguti, 2013, figs 8–19), and leuconoid (in F. valida , Figs 9 View FIGURE 9 a, e). Ventral plate of penis rectangular elongate. MS C1–C2 large, flat, curved; D1 and A1 straight, pointed basally; small B, D2, E1–E2. Ventral side of VP glabrous. See “discussion” for comparison with other genera.
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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Flirtea C.L. Koch, 1839
Kury, Adriano B. & García, Andrés F. 2016 |
Flirtea
C.L. Koch 1839: 97 |