Namea gloriosa, Rix & Wilson & Harvey, 2020

Rix, Michael G., Wilson, Jeremy D. & Harvey, Mark S., 2020, The open-holed trapdoor spiders (Mygalomorphae: Anamidae: Namea) of Australia’s D’Aguilar Range: revealing an unexpected subtropical hotspot of rainforest diversity, Zootaxa 4861 (1), pp. 71-91 : 78

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4861.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:44321429-80FA-45AC-90D6-E3E13C961BFC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4414530

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F2560FF4-4484-4A5D-A2EB-4D8D588749DD

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:F2560FF4-4484-4A5D-A2EB-4D8D588749DD

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Namea gloriosa
status

sp. nov.

Namea gloriosa sp. nov.

( Figs 14a, b View FIGURES 14–21 , 22–34 View FIGURES 22–31 View FIGURES 32–34 )

http://zoobank.org/?lsid= urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:F2560FF4-4484-4A5D-A2EB-4D8D588749DD

Namea cucurbita Raven, 1984: 22 (in part; cited paratype specimen QMB S799 from Mt Tenison Woods).

Type material. AUSTRALIA: Queensland: male holotype, Mount Glorious , malaise trap, rainforest, 10 Au-gust–13 November 1983, A. Hiller ( QMB S10269 View Materials ) . Paratype: 1 male, Tenison Woods Mountain [sic “Mt Tenison Woods”], pitfall trap, 26 June–18 November 1978, G. & S. Monteith ( QMB S799 View Materials ) .

Diagnosis. Males of Namea gloriosa can be distinguished from those of all other described congeners except N. cucurbita by the size of the isolated, proximal retroventral macroseta on the palpal tibia, which is unusually long (i.e. clearly longer than the length of the palpal bulb) ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 32–34 ). Males can be further distinguished from those of N. cucurbita by the shorter embolus ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 32–34 ; cf. Rix et al. 2020, fig. 41) and the more slender profile of tibia I ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 22–31 ; cf. Rix et al. 2020, fig. 38).

Females are unknown.

Description (male holotype): Total length 19.9. Carapace 7.7 long, 6.1 wide. Abdomen 8.5 long, 4.4 wide. Carapace ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 22–31 ) dark chocolate-brown, covered with reflective downy setae ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 22–31 ); lateral margins with fringe of anteriorly curved, porrect black setae, longest posteriorly; fovea straight. Eye group ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 22–31 ) rectangular, twice as wide as long, PLE–PLE/ALE–ALE ratio 1.0; AME separated by less than their own diameter; PME separated by 4.1 X their own diameter; PME and PLE almost contiguous. Maxillae each with field of ca. 70 cuspules confined to heel and inner proximal corner ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 22–31 ); labium without cuspules. Abdomen ( Figs 23, 28 View FIGURES 22–31 ) elongate-oval, dark brown with course pale beige-brown marbled pattern dorsally, and pale beige-brown ventrally with finer dark brown mottling; covered with short, fine setae. Legs ( Figs 22, 29–31 View FIGURES 22–31 ) dark brown, with light scopulae on tarsi I–IV and distal half of metatarsi I–II; tibia I with 3 prodorsal, 2 proventral, 3 ventral and 1 retrolateral macrosetae; macroseta v1 large, reaching beyond ventro-distal margin of tibia I ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 22–31 ). Leg I: femur ca. 5.7 [damaged], patella 4.0, tibia 4.6, metatarsus 4.7, tarsus 3.1, total length ca. 22.1. Leg I femur–tar-sus/carapace length ratio ca. 2.9. Pedipalpal tibia ( Figs 32–34 View FIGURES 32–34 ) 2.5 X longer than wide, with isolated, proximal retroventral macroseta (which is longer than length of palpal bulb), 1 retrodistal macroseta, 1 prodistal macroseta, and 2 proventral macrosetae. Cymbium ( Figs 32–34 View FIGURES 32–34 ) setose, with distal scopula. Bulb ( Figs 32–34 View FIGURES 32–34 ) sub-spherical, with long, whip-like, reflexed embolus arising from retroventral base of bulb.

Etymology. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin gloriosus (adjective: ‘glorious’, ‘full of glory’), in reference to the type locality of this species.

Distribution. Namea gloriosa is endemic to the D’Aguilar Range, where it is known only from rainforest at Mount Glorious and Tenison Woods Mountain ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–3 ).

Remarks. This species is extremely rare, and currently known from only two male specimens. Nothing is known of its biology or life history, other than that the two known male specimens were collected wandering in search of females in winter or spring.

QMB

Queensland Museum, Brisbane

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Nemesiidae

Genus

Namea

Loc

Namea gloriosa

Rix, Michael G., Wilson, Jeremy D. & Harvey, Mark S. 2020
2020
Loc

Namea cucurbita

Raven, R. J. 1984: 22
1984
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