Pholcus olangapo Huber
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2016.225 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C1F4C6FC-2EB6-48D9-B628-F1C8BD1FF2F8 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5675559 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1CD3A2E0-1528-4D37-9BFD-82B752CA13C5 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:1CD3A2E0-1528-4D37-9BFD-82B752CA13C5 |
treatment provided by |
Jeremy |
scientific name |
Pholcus olangapo Huber |
status |
sp. nov. |
Pholcus olangapo Huber View in CoL , sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:1CD3A2E0-1528-4D37-9BFD-82B752CA13C5
Figs 3–26 View Figs 3 – 6 View Figs 7 – 11 View Figs 12 – 15 View Figs 16 – 23 View Figs 24 – 35
Diagnosis
Distinguished from most similar known relative ( P. bicornutus ) by dark lateral bands on carapace (in males and females; Figs 3, 6 View Figs 3 – 6 ), and by procursus shape (prolatero-dorsal process of proximal part shorter and wider; entire distal hinged part of procursus shorter and wider; distinctive shapes of procursus tip and of uncus; Figs 7–8 View Figs 7 – 11 ). From other species of the P. bicornutus group ( P. pagbilao , P. arayat , P. schawalleri , P. baguio sp. nov., P. mulu sp. nov., P. kawit sp. nov.) by hinged procursus, small epigynal plate ( Fig. 24 View Figs 24 – 35 ), undivided dark band ventrally on abdomen (also in P. kawit sp. nov. and P. mulu sp. nov.), and by presence of slightly curved hairs on legs (especially on tibiae and metatarsi 1–2).
Etymology
The species name is derived from the type locality; noun in apposition.
Material examined
Holotype
PHILIPPINES: ♁, Luzon , Bataan Prov., near Olangapo , along river near Pamulaklakin Forest Trail (14.798° N, 120.338° E), 80 m a.s.l., on wet rock wall , 28 Feb. 2014 (B.A. Huber), ZFMK ( Ar 15496 ) GoogleMaps .
Other material
PHILIPPINES: 9 ♁♁, 10 ♀♀, 3 juvs, ZFMK ( Ar 15497–98 ) GoogleMaps and 1 ♂, 1 ♀, MSU-IIT, same data as holotype GoogleMaps ; 2 ♀♀, 5 juvs, in absolute ethanol, same data, ZFMK ( Phi 207 ) GoogleMaps .
Assigned tentatively
PHILIPPINES: 1 ♀, Luzon , Laguna Prov., Mt. Banahaw , forest near Taytay Falls (14.110° N, 121.507° E), 560 m a.s.l., 26 Feb. 2014 (B.A. Huber), ZFMK ( Ar 15499 ) GoogleMaps .
Description
Male (holotype)
MEASUREMENTS. Total body length 6.0, carapace width 1.6. Leg 1: 42.7 (10.1 + 0.7 + 10.4 + 19.0 + 2.5), tibia 2: 7.2, tibia 3: 4.8, tibia 4: 6.7; tibia 1 L/d: 64. Distance PME-PME 370 µm, diameter PME 150×180 µm, distance PME-ALE ~40 µm, distance AME-AME 30 µm, diameter AME 100 µm.
COLOR. Carapace pale ochre to light brown, with wide median dark brown mark including ocular area and connecting posteriorly to wide lateral marginal bands ( Fig. 3 View Figs 3 – 6 ); clypeus pale ochre; sternum brown, with three pairs of light ochre marginal marks at bases of coxae 2–4; legs light brown to ochre, dark rings subdistally on femora and tibiae and in patella area, tips of femora and tibiae lighter; abdomen ochregray, dorsally with several pairs of indistinct cuticular marks, with distinct internal darker marks visible through cuticle dorsally and laterally; ventrally with undivided wide brown band between gonopore and spinnerets.
BODY. Habitus as in Figs 3 and 5 View Figs 3 – 6 ; ocular area raised, each eye triad on additional short hump directed towards lateral ( Fig. 12 View Figs 12 – 15 ), with pair of long processes between eye triads, each with distal brush of hairs that are ‘glued’ or ‘waxed’ together to form consistently curved pointed tip ( Figs 13, 15 View Figs 12 – 15 ); carapace without median furrow; clypeus unmodified; sternum wider than long (1.00/0.75), unmodified. ALS with one widened, one pointed, and six cylindrically shaped spigots of variable sizes ( Fig. 21 View Figs 16 – 23 ). Gonopore with four epiandrous spigots ( Fig. 22 View Figs 16 – 23 ).
CHELICERAE. As in Fig. 9 View Figs 7 – 11 , with large lateral apophyses and low frontal humps proximally, dark distal apophyses near median line provided with two small modified (cone-shaped) hairs each ( Fig. 20 View Figs 16 – 23 ); without stridulatory ridges.
PALPS. As in Figs 7–8 View Figs 7 – 11 ; coxa unmodified; trochanter with retrolateral pointed process; femur with distinct ventral process and indistinct retrolateral hump proximally; tibia with dark dorsal band, without ventral cavity; procursus complex and hinged, proximal part with distinctive prolatero-dorsal process ( Fig. 17 View Figs 16 – 23 ), distal part with prolateral membranous flap and distinctive tip ( Fig. 18 View Figs 16 – 23 ); bulb with long, distinctively curved uncus, weakly sclerotized embolus distally curved, without appendix ( Fig. 16 View Figs 16 – 23 ).
LEGS. Without spines; with weakly curved hairs on tibiae and metatarsi 1–2; few vertical hairs; retrolateral trichobothrium on tibia 1 at 4%; prolateral trichobothrium absent on tibia 1, present on other tibiae; tarsus 1 with>30 pseudosegments, only distally about 10 fairly distinct.
Male (variation)
Tibia 1 in 10 other males: 9.6–11.4 (mean: 10.4).
Female
In general similar to male but eye triads closer together (distance PME-PME 210 µm), without processes between eye triads ( Fig. 14 View Figs 12 – 15 ). Tibia 1 in 11 females from type locality: 8.6–10.5 (mean: 9.2). Epigynum mostly weakly sclerotized, small posterior plate with small ‘knob’ ( Figs 23–24 View Figs 16 – 23 View Figs 24 – 35 ); some females with strongly protruding epigynal area (apparently expandable); internal genitalia as in Figs 11 View Figs 7 – 11 and 26 View Figs 24 – 35 . Spinnerets as in Fig. 19 View Figs 16 – 23 , ALS with one widened, one pointed, and six cylindrically shaped spigots of variable sizes, PMS with two spigots each. The single female specimen from Mt. Banahaw shares the carapace pattern and is thus tentatively assigned to this species rather than to P. bicornutus (in which the female genitalia appear indistinguishable; compare figs 1539 and 1564 in Huber 2011a with Figs 11 View Figs 7 – 11 and 24 View Figs 24 – 35 herein); tibia 1: 9.7.
Natural history
At the type locality, specimens were collected from small webs attached to a perpendicular, dripping wet rock wall beside a small stream ( Figs 3–4 View Figs 3 – 6 ).
Distribution
Known from two localities in Luzon only (single female specimen from Mt. Banahaw assigned tentatively, see above; Fig. 1 View Figs 1 – 2 ).
ZFMK |
Germany, Bonn, Zoologische Forschungsinstitut und Museum "Alexander Koenig" |
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.