Pandava sarasvati, Almeida-Silva, Lina M., Griswold, Charles E. & Brescovit, Antonio D., 2010

Almeida-Silva, Lina M., Griswold, Charles E. & Brescovit, Antonio D., 2010, Revision of the Asian spider genus Pandava Lehtinen (Araneae: Titanoecidae): description of five new species and first record of Titanoecidae from Africa, Zootaxa 2630, pp. 30-56 : 49-50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.276087

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6211653

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CB1965-7201-FFF2-FF5B-B027FD82F95D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pandava sarasvati
status

sp. nov.

Pandava sarasvati View in CoL sp. nov.

Fig. 84–98 View FIGURES 84 – 89 View FIGURES 90 – 96 View FIGURES 97 – 98

Type material. Holotype male, from Yangon, Myanmar (previously Rangoon, Burma), L. Fea, deposited in ZMUC (1335). Paratypes: one female from Yan Hee Dam (elev. 250m), Thailand, 13.VII.1962, E. S.

Ross and D. Q. Cavagnaro, deposited in CAS (CASENT 9025943); one female, from ShweSettaw Wildlife Reservation (20º5'51"N, 94º33'24.5"E, elev. 450m), Magway division, Myanmar, deposited in IBSP (156975).

Etymology. The specific name is a noun in apposition referring to the Hindu Goddess Sarasvati , who is the goddess of learning, music, power and arts.

Diagnosis. Males of Pandava sarasvati resemble P. l a m i n a t a in the shape of the tibial apophysis but differ by the hook-shaped median apophysis ( Figs. 84–87 View FIGURES 84 – 89 ) and PLT longer than the RLT and curved. Females of P. sarasvati resemble P. laminata and P. ganesha sp. nov. in the shape of the epigynum, but differ by the straight posterior border of the median field and by having the broadest portion of the epigynum just after the ER ( Figs. 88 View FIGURES 84 – 89 , 90 View FIGURES 90 – 96 ).

Description. Male (holotype). Coloration: carapace, endites and sternum pale brown, cephalic area brown. Chelicerae reddish brown. Legs pale brown except femur I dorsally brown and ventrally pale brown. Abdomen beige. Total length 7.00. Carapace 3.20 long; 2.40 wide; 1.36 high. Clypeus 0.19 high. Abdomen 3.60 long; 1.9 wide. Eye diameters and interdistances: AME 0.11; ALE 0.18; PME 0.14; PLE 0.18; AME– AME 0.11; AME–ALE 0.15; PME–PME 0.19; PME–PLE 0.26; AME–PME 0.16; ALE–PLE 0.04. Chelicerae 1.49 long. Leg measurements: I: femur 3.52/ patella 1.28/ tibia 3.28/ metatarsus 3.12/ tarsus 2.32/ total 13.52; II: 3.12/ 1.04/ 2.80/ 2.64/ 2.00/ 11.60; III: 2.63/ 0.80/ 2.10/ 2.10/ 1.05/ 8.68; IV: 2.94/ 1.06/ 2.63/ 2.63/ 1.00/ 10.25. Leg formula 1243. Leg spination: femur I and II p1ap; tibia I: v2-2, p1-0-1, r1-1-1; II: v0- 1r-2-0 or 1-1-0-2-0, r1-1-1 or 1-1-0, p0-1-1; III: v0-2, p0-1, r1-0-1; IV: v0-1p, r0-0-1, p0-0-1; metatarsus I: v2 -0-2- 1m, p and r0-1-0-1; II: v2-2 - 1m, p and r0-1-0-1; III: v2-2 - 1m, p1-0-1, r0-1-2; IV: v2-2 - 1m, p0-1-0-1, r0-0-2. Male tibial crack present. Distally curved setae absent. Spermatic duct not visible in the tegulum ( Fig. 87 View FIGURES 84 – 89 ); area of the tegular furrow projected distally and well developed ( Fig. 87 View FIGURES 84 – 89 ).

Female (paratype, Thailand) Coloration: carapace yellowish brown, ocular area slightly darker and chelicerae brown. Legs brown. Abdomen beige. Total length 6.64. Carapace 3.44 long; 2.35 wide; 1.00 high; Clypeus 0.21 high. Abdomen 3.20 long; 2.00 wide. Eye diameters and interdistances: AME 0.11; ALE 0.17; PME 0.13; PLE 0.16; AME–AME 0.12; AME–ALE 0.19; PME–PME 0.24; PME–PLE 0.30; AME–PME 0.17; ALE–PLE 0.05. Chelicerae 1.51 long. Leg measurements: I: femur 2.84/ patella 1.08/ tibia 2.32/ metatarsus 2.32/ tarsus 1.16/ total 9.72; II: 2.19/ 1.06/ 2.05/ 1.76/ 0.96/ 8.02; III: 2.44/ 0.84/ 3.20/ 1.55/ 0.73/ 8.76; IV: 2.50/ 1.10/ 2.25/ 2.00/ 1.00/ 8.85. Leg formula 1432. Leg spination: femur I and II p1ap; tibia I v1 r- 2-2, p0-1-1; II: v1 r-2; III: d1rb, p1ap, r1ap; IV: p1ap, r1ap; metatarsus I v2-2 - 1m or 2-1r-1- 1m, p0-1-0-1, r1ap; II: v2-2 - 1m, p0-1-0-1, r1ap; III: v1 p-2- 1m, r0-1-0-2, p1-1-0-1; IV: v1-1 - 1m, p1ap, r1ap. Distally curved setae absent. Epigynum broad just behind the rims and becoming narrow posteriorly, and with the lateral part of the median field replaced by membranous tissue ( Figs. 88 View FIGURES 84 – 89 , 90 View FIGURES 90 – 96 ); posterior border of the median field subrectangular ( Figs. 88 View FIGURES 84 – 89 , 90 View FIGURES 90 – 96 ). Spermathecae horizontally diverging ( Fig. 91 View FIGURES 90 – 96 ) and shorter ( Figs. 92–93 View FIGURES 90 – 96 ). Giant pore and a pair of primary pores present ( Figs. 91–93 View FIGURES 90 – 96 ).

Variation. Length (10 females): total: 6.8–7.35; carapace: 3.00–3.19; femur 2.34–3.04.

Geographical distribution. Asia: Myanmar and Thailand.

Additional material examined. MYANMAR. Magway Division. ShweSettaw Wildlife Reservation (20o5'51"N, 94o 33'24.5"E, elev. 450m), 28-29.IX.2003, C. E. Griswold (CASENT 9019353, 1Ψ; 9019398, 2Ψ; 9019537, 1Ψ; 9019538, 1Ψ; 9019123, 1Ψ; IBSP 156976, 1Ψ). Yangon division. Hlawga Park, 23Km NNW Yangon (17o2'37"N, 96o6'5"E), 16-20.IX.2003, C. E. Griswold (CASENT 9019280, 1 Ψ; 9019418, 2Ψ; 9011351, 1Ψ; 9019158, 3Ψ). THAILAND. Mae Chiang Hai (elev. 200m), 18.VII.1962, E. S. Ross and D. Q. Cavagnaro (CASENT 9032204, 2Ψ).

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

IBSP

Instituto Biologico de Sao Paulo

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Titanoecidae

Genus

Pandava

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