Enguterothrix Denis, 1962
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.155168 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6068856 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/567187F9-FFBE-B621-1778-FE4F991BF822 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Enguterothrix Denis, 1962 |
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Enguterothrix Denis, 1962 View in CoL
Enguterothrix Denis, 1962: 193 View in CoL ; type species Enguterothrix crinipes Denis, 1962: 193 View in CoL , figs 33-38; male holotype and female allotype (in MRAC) examined.
Apophygone Tanasevitch, 2014: 395 syn. nov.; type species Apophygone simpulum Tanasevitch, 2014: 395 View in CoL , figs 8-13, 24-25; male and female paratypes (in ZMMU) examined.
Remarks: The genus Enguterothrix was established for two species, E. crinipes Denis, 1962 from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (the type species) and E. fuscipalpis Denis, 1962 from Uganda ( Denis, 1962). Some years later, Holm (1968) described a third species, E. tenuipalpis from the vicinity of the type locality of E. crinipes . As it will be shown below, E. fuscipalpis does not belong to this genus, E. tenuipalpis is a synonym, and thus the Afrotropical element of the genus is represented by one species only, i.e. E. crinipes .
The monotypic genus Apophygone Tanasevitch, 2014 was established for A. simpulum Tanasevitch, 2014 from northern Thailand ( Tanasevitch, 2014). A comparison of the type specimens of A. simpulum and E. crinipes clearly showed that they are congeneric, thus Apophygone becomes a junior synonym of Enguterothrix .
Diagnosis: See Tanasevitch (2014), under the diagnosis of Apophygone .
Species included: At present, the genus contains two species: Enguterothrix crinipes and E. simpulum comb. nov. (transferred from Apophygone ). Enguterothrix fuscipalpis , known from Uganda ( Denis, 1962), is removed from the genus and preliminarily placed in Micrargus Dahl, 1886 (see below).
Distribution: The genus shows a Palaeotropical disjunct montane distribution: one species, E. crinipes , occurs on mountains of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a second, very closely related species, E. simpulum , is widespread in the mountains of northern Thailand. This type of disjunction is seen for Linyphiidae for the first time, but it is probably not a unique phenomenon. Further investigations of the Afrotropical and Oriental araneofaunas will likely reveal new examples of this type of distribution. Afrotropical-Oriental disjunctions are known among other groups of spiders, for example in the sparassid genus Barylestis Simon, 1910 (see Jäger, 2008)
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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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
Enguterothrix Denis, 1962
Andrei V. Tanasevitch 2016 |
Apophygone
Tanasevitch 2014: 395 |
Apophygone simpulum
Tanasevitch 2014: 395 |
Enguterothrix
Denis 1962: 193 |
Enguterothrix crinipes
Denis 1962: 193 |