Ariadna alta, Marsh & Stevens & Framenau, 2022

Marsh, Jessica R., Stevens, Mark I. & Framenau, Volker W., 2022, A taxonomic revision of the tube-web spiders of the genus Ariadna (Araneae: Segestriidae) in Tasmania, Zootaxa 5105 (2), pp. 151-201 : 159-162

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5105.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4F6F5BC6-2AAF-4B23-882E-F77C63BE4CC2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6333415

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DBCC5FDD-BEE0-444A-87EB-5D01FA0F19CF

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:DBCC5FDD-BEE0-444A-87EB-5D01FA0F19CF

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Ariadna alta
status

sp. nov.

Ariadna alta View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs 5 View FIGURE 5 , 6a–h View FIGURE 6 , 7a–b View FIGURE 7

http://zoobank.org/NomenclaturalActs/dbcc5fdd-bee0-444a-87eb-5d01fa0f19cf

Type material. Holotype ♀. AUSTRALIA: Tasmania: Frenchman’s Cap Track , west Tasmania, 42.27 °S, 145.83°E, under log/bark, Nothofagus forest, coll. L.J. Boutin, 26 December 1997 ( QVMAG QVM.13.24065). GoogleMaps

Other material examined. AUSTRALIA: Tasmania: 1 ♀ Frenchman’s Cap , coll. B. McCausland, April 1980 ( QVMAG QVM:2020:13:0106) ; 1 ♀, Evercreech Forest Reserve , 41.421667°S, 148.08111°E, coll. L.J. Boutin, 24 June 2003 ( QVMAG QVM:2020:13:0115) GoogleMaps ; 3 ♀, Mount Hobbs , 42.50°S, 147.59°E, V. V GoogleMaps . Hickman , 15 May 1928 ( AM KS.29180) .

Etymology. The specific epithet is a Latin adjective, meaning ‘high’ and refers to the elevation of the known localities.

Diagnosis. Ariadna alta sp. nov. is most similar to A. amabilia sp. nov., A. segmentata and A. thylacinus sp. nov. It can be differentiated from these by the presence of a proventral dual row of macrosetae on tibia I of females ( Fig. 6f, 6g View FIGURE 6 cf. Figs 10f, g View FIGURE 10 ; 28f, g View FIGURE 28 ; 36f, g View FIGURE 36 ); by the elevated, domed cephalothorax, being highest just posterior to the eye group ( Fig. 6c View FIGURE 6 cf. Figs 10c View FIGURE 10 , 28c View FIGURE 28 , 36c View FIGURE 36 ) and by the female genitalia, with the anterior receptaculum having three or four distinct anterior projections ( Fig. 7a–b View FIGURE 7 cf. Figs 11a–b View FIGURE 11 , 29a–b View FIGURE 29 ; 37a–b View FIGURE 37 ). Ariadna alta sp. nov. has been recorded from the type locality of A. major Hickman 1929 , Mount Hobbs, SE Tasmania. It is clearly distinguished from A. major by the presence of transverse abdominal chevrons in A. alta sp. nov. ( Fig. 6a View FIGURE 6 ), by the leg length ratio, which is II>I>III>IV in A. alta sp. nov., but is I>II>IV>III in A. major and by the overall larger size of A. major , which is 16mm long, as opposed to 10.8mm in A. alta sp. nov.

Description. ♀ (based on holotype; QVMAG QVM.13.24065). Total length 10.8.

Colour in ethanol: Carapace dark, reddish brown, darker around edges, with a pale area centrally demarking raised caput, beginning anteriorly of fovea and bordered by darker red brown; darkened median line running from fovea anteriorly and extending to between half distance of fovea to eye group. Sparse scattered setae, denser towards lateral edges and anteriorly. Sternum red-brown, with moderately long, scattered dark setae; labium darker brown, paler apically; maxillae orange brown, paler apically; chelicerae dark brown with dense, long, black setae. Abdomen with metallic sheen, dorsally grey, with faint paler, not well-defined chevrons; ventrally grey with mottled paler cream patches; book lungs yellow cream. Legs red brown, covered with setae ( Fig. 6a–c View FIGURE 6 ).

Cephalothorax: 5.4 long, 3.3 wide, 3.6 high. Carapace rounded rectangular, with broad, square ‘neck’ anteriorly, anterior edge convex, posteriorly with defined median indent, fovea a shallow slit ( Fig. 6a View FIGURE 6 ); lateral profile domed, highest point at fovea ( Fig. 6c View FIGURE 6 ). Labium narrowed anteriorly, about ¾ length of maxillae. Chelicerae broad, robust with basal transverse ridge, retromargin with single tooth, promargin with three teeth; sternum elongated oval with defined precoxal triangles and with rounded triangular intercoxal extensions ( Fig. 6b View FIGURE 6 ). Eye group 0.6 wide, 0.5 of the width of the anterior carapace; posterior eye row slightly recurved, eyes small, three pairs of eyes widely separated ( Fig. 6d View FIGURE 6 ).

Abdomen: 5.6 long. Covered in fine dense setae ( Fig. 6a View FIGURE 6 ).

Legs: Leg length ratio: II>I>III>IV. Leg I femur 3.1, patella 1.6, tibia 2.9, metatarsus 2.0, tarsus 0.7. Leg II femur 2.8, patella 1.7, tibia 2.8, metatarsus 2.3, tarsus 0.8. Leg III femur 2.4, patella 1.7, tibia 2.8, metatarsus 2.4, tarsus 0.9. Leg IV femur 2.9, patella 1.6, tibia 2.5, metatarsus 2.1, tarsus 1.0. Femur I bowed in dorsal view. Macrosetae: Leg I femur dp2ap; tibia pv1, v2-2-2, pv1, rv1, v2, pv1, v2ap; metatarsus pv1-1-1, v2-2-2-2-2-1-2ap, rv1. Leg II femur dp1ap; tibia p1-2, pv1ap, rv1-1-1-1-1ap; metatarsus 2-2-1-2-1-2-1-2ap. Leg IV femur d1-1; tibia p1ap, v1-1/0; metatarsus rv1-1-1-1ap. Retrolateral distal preening comb with 8 macrosetae with two long macrosetae adjacent ( Fig. 6e View FIGURE 6 ). STC I, II with 9 teeth, ITC with small tooth. Tarsi with distal ventral scopulae.

Pedipalp: Pedipalp with single, toothless claw. Tarsi and tibia with dense clusters of proventral macrosetae. Tarsi scopulate.

Genitalia: Anterior receptaculum bilobed, with several finger-like projections in the mid-point and apically ( Fig. 7a–b View FIGURE 7 ).

Variation. Specimens examined were consistent in colour and form of transverse abdominal markings and showed little variation in size. Pattern and number of macrosetae were consistent for tibia and metatarsus I.

Distribution. Known from locations across Tasmania ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ).

QVM

Queen Victoria Museum

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

AM

Australian Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Segestriidae

Genus

Ariadna

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