Leiobunum subalpinum Komposch, 1998

Martens, Jochen & Schönhofer, Axel L., 2016, The Leiobunum rupestre species group: resolving the taxonomy of four widespread European taxa (Opiliones: Sclerosomatidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 216 (216), pp. 1-35 : 9-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2016.216

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2F526459-E23A-458B-9829-31F4C1BC6C46

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3853176

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BA4E87D3-FFE7-BB1D-722B-FC7FCC47FD6E

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Leiobunum subalpinum Komposch, 1998
status

 

Leiobunum subalpinum Komposch, 1998

Fig. 2 View Fig

Leibunum subalpinum Komposch, 1998: 20 .

Leiobunum rupestre Gruber, 1966: 46 (partim).

Nelima religiosa Roewer, 1910: 912 (in part: series from Tirol, Gross-Glockner).

Nelima religiosa Thaler, 1966: 79 .

Leiobunum sp. – Komposch 1997: 83.

Leibunum subalpinum – Komposch 2009 b: 487.

Taxonomic history

Rather uncomplicated. Because of its extreme similarity to L. rupestre , including genital morphology, this species went unidentified in many former high-altitude reports on L. rupestre until its formal description in 1998. Leiobunum rupestre and L. subalpinum occur in sympatry and local syntopy, but coxal markings allow easy field identification, so no further misindications were recorded.

Diagnosis

A medium-sized Leiobunum species very similar to L. rupestre , except for black coxal markings in both sexes and white markings on Ceph including a white area in front of the tuber oculorum in males. Coxa IV without granules. For further details refer to Komposch (1998).

Description

BODY. See Diagnosis.

DORSAL PATTERN. Extremely similar to L. rupestre .

PEDIPALPS. Very similar to L. rupestre except for a medio-basal swelling on Ta in males.

GENITAL MORPHOLOGY. Very similar to L. rupestre . The wing-free basal part of truncus shorter than in L. rupestre .

Distribution ( Fig. 2 View Fig )

Restricted to the eastern Austrian Alps, mainly on the southern macroslope in the federal states of Salzburg, Steiermark and Kärnten ( Komposch 1998; Komposch & Gruber 2004; Komposch 2009 b) extending into adjacent Slovenia ( Novak et al. 2006). Type locality is Gössnitztal in the National Park Hohe Tauern in Kärnten.

Ecology

This a mountainous species of the eastern Alps. Its distributional range extends from about 1500 m to 2100 m a.s.l. with rare outliers down to 430 m in moist and cool ravines and up to 2200 m. Vertical rockfaces mostly of siliceous origin are preferred ( Komposch 2009 a, b; Komposch & Gruber 1999). There is a zone of sympatric and sometimes even syntopic occurrence together with L. rupestre between 500 m and 1400 m. Strongholds of L. rupestre in that area extend from 500 m to 1000 m with rare occurrences below (down to 200 m) and above (up to 1400 m) ( Komposch 1998).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Opiliones

Family

Phalangiidae

Genus

Leiobunum

Loc

Leiobunum subalpinum Komposch, 1998

Martens, Jochen & Schönhofer, Axel L. 2016
2016
Loc

subalpinum

Komposch C. 1998: 20
1998
Loc

Leiobunum

Komposch C. 1997: 83
1997
Loc

Leiobunum rupestre

Gruber J. 1966: 46
1966
Loc

Nelima religiosa

Thaler K. 1966: 79
1966
Loc

Nelima religiosa

Roewer C. F. 1910: 912
1910
Loc

subalpinum

Komposch 2009 b: 487
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