Curicaberis bibranchiatus ( Fox, 1937 ) Fox, 1937
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4012.3.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AC5C8A21-27D1-4D2F-B2B2-36CB1759A3F2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6092349 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1023879D-FFD3-CB67-A3FB-47AFFC106075 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Curicaberis bibranchiatus ( Fox, 1937 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Curicaberis bibranchiatus ( Fox, 1937) View in CoL comb. nov.
Map 6
Olios bibranchiatus Fox, 1937: 470 View in CoL , figs 6, 8 (Holotype male from Madera Canyon [31°44’N, 110°53’W], Santa Rita Mountains, Pima County, Arizona, USA, and female allotype from Santa Fé [35°41’N, 105°56’W], New Mexico, USA, deposited in USNM, examined; two male and three female paratypes from Oro Blanco Mountains [31°19’N, 111°08’W], 12 miles from Nogales, Arizona, USA, deposited in AMNH, examined). Rheims 2010c: 531, figs 1–4; World Spider Catalog 2015.
Additional material examined. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: Arizona: 1♂, Yarnell (34°13’N, 112°44’W), 16. April 1958, W.J. Gertsch leg. ( AMNH); 1♀, South Fort, 6–13 May 1956, M. Statham leg. ( AMNH). MEXICO: Baja California: 1♀, 9 miles S Todos os Santos [31°50’N, 116°36’W], 14 January 1959, H.B. Leech leg. ( AMNH); 1♀, Bahia de los Angeles, 1 mile N Miller’s Landing [28°28’N, 114°02’W], 24 February 1966, V. Roth leg. ( AMNH); Sonora: 1♀, 27 miles S Nogales [30°52’N, 110°55’W], 15 June 1939, A.M. & L.I. Davis leg. ( AMNH); Baja California Sur: 1♀, San Jose del Cabo [23°03’N, 109°42’W], 15 March 1945, M. Correa leg. ( AMNH); Nayarit: 2♂, San Blas, Mantauchen Beach (21°32’N, 105°17’W), 9 September 1966, J. & W. Ivie leg. ( AMNH), 1♂, 1♀, Jalisco (21°26’N, 104°54’W), 1954, B. & V. Keef leg. ( AMNH).
Diagnosis. Males of C. bibranchiatus comb. nov. are distinguished from those of the other species of the genus by the vRTA2 transversally bifid with one branch rounded and the other laminar and slightly concave and by the embolus with large, roughly rectangular base, abruptly narrowed and filiform to tip ( Rheims 2010c: 531, figs 1−2). Females resemble those of C. annulatus comb. nov., C. peninsulanus comb. nov. and C. tortugero sp. nov. by the epigyne with median septum with lateral protrusions (Figs 19, 93: lp, Rheims 2010c: 531, figs 3, 7). They are distinguished from these species by the lateral protrusions short, not reaching one-sixth of the median septum width on each side, and by the anterior margins of the lateral lobes curved into the median septum ( Rheims 2010c: 531, fig. 3).
Description. See Rheims 2010c.
Distribution. Southwestern United States to western Mexico (Map 6).
AMNH |
American Museum of Natural History |
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.
Kingdom |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Curicaberis bibranchiatus ( Fox, 1937 )
Rheims, Cristina A. 2015 |
Olios bibranchiatus
Rheims 2010: 531 |
Fox 1937: 470 |