Pholcus sabah Huber, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2016.190 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BE92596B-62D9-46CD-8486-CF6B36C640B11 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6076774 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7F7187D5-4E47-7026-FD89-C506CF95FCE0 |
treatment provided by |
Jeremy |
scientific name |
Pholcus sabah Huber, 2011 |
status |
|
Pholcus sabah Huber, 2011 View in CoL
Figs 9–10 View Figs 9 – 16
Pholcus sabah Huber, 2011: 133 View in CoL , figs 497–498, 537–541 (♂♀).
Diagnosis
Easily distinguished from putatively closest known relatives (other species in the halabala core group) by ‘double’ uncus and large rounded rather than pointed flap dorsally on procursus (figs 537, 538 in Huber 2011) and by large lateral structures in female internal genitalia (fig. 541 in Huber 2011).
New material examined
MALAYSIA-BORNEO: 1 ♂, ZFMK ( Ar 15012 ), Sabah , Mt Kinabalu , Poring Hot Springs (type locality), forest near beginning of Kipungit Trail (6.048° N, 116.706° E), 450 m a.s.l., on underside of leaf, 7 Aug. 2014 (B.A. Huber, S.B. Huber) GoogleMaps ; 1 ♂, RMNH, Poring Hot Springs , 28–31 Mar. 1998 (C.L. Deeleman- Reinhold, P. Zborowski) ; 1 ♂, 2 ♀♀, 2 juvs, ZFMK ( Ar 15013 ), Sepilok, Rainforest Discovery Centre, forest along Pitta Trail (5.875– 5.878° N, 117.937– 117.942° E), 30 m a.s.l., on undersides of leaves, 9 Aug. 2014 (B.A. Huber, S.B. Huber) GoogleMaps ; 1 ♀, 5 juvs, in absolute ethanol, ZFMK ( Bor 173 ), same data GoogleMaps .
Note
The color dimorphism observed among females from Poring in the original description also occurs among males: while the single male from Sepilok has the ‘usual’ pattern of two V-marks ( Fig. 10 View Figs 9 – 16 ), the newly collected male from Poring has a large black mark covering most of the carapace posteriorly ( Fig. 9 View Figs 9 – 16 ). This latter pattern also occurs in one of the three females from Sepilok. In the male it is associated with a slightly darker brown sternum that is only medially and anteriorly light; in the female it is associated with a black sternum. Tibia 1 in two males: 7.1, 8.4; in two females: 7.1, 7.3.
Natural history
Most new specimens were collected relatively close to the ground (approximately 50 cm above the ground). All previously known specimens (1♂, 3♀♀) were collected by canopy fogging ( Huber 2011).
Distribution
Known from two localities in northeastern Borneo ( Fig. 17 View Fig. 17 ).
ZFMK |
Germany, Bonn, Zoologische Forschungsinstitut und Museum "Alexander Koenig" |
RMNH |
Netherlands, Leiden, Nationaal Natuurhistorische Museum ("Naturalis") [formerly Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie] |
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.