Euophrys falciger, Wesołowska & Azarkina & Russell-Smith, 2014

Wesołowska, Wanda, Azarkina, Galina N. & Russell-Smith, Anthony, 2014, Euophryine jumping spiders of the Afrotropical Region-new taxa and a checklist (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryinae), Zootaxa 3789 (1), pp. 1-72 : 15-18

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3789.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E59786FC-F821-4B2F-86AB-6C245E68ABE1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4914185

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E32A8132-FF91-FFEA-FF12-F953C282FEEF

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Euophrys falciger
status

sp. nov.

Euophrys falciger View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs 40–46 View FIGURES 40–46

Holotype: male, SOUTH AFRICA, KwaZulu-Natal Province, Champagne Castle Hlathikulu For., 29°02'S: 29°23'E, 1550 m a.s.l., bases of grasses and ferns in forest, 20 January 2011, leg. C. Haddad ( NCA 2010 / 2717). GoogleMaps

Paratypes: same data, 2 females ( NCA 2010 /2718) .

Diagnosis. The species resembles E. difficilis (Simon, 1868) from the Mediterranean area but differs from it in the longer tibial apophysis and the shorter proximal lobe of the bulb. It is also similar to E. meridionalis described below, but the male is larger. It may be recognized by the presence of the outgrowth on the ventral surface of the palpal tibia, the more elongated bulb and clearly longer embolus. The structure of the epigyne resembles that in E. gracilis described below in having a knot in the distal parts of the seminal ducts, which are also longer in this species.

Etymology. The specific name is Latin, meaning sickle bearing and refers to the shape of embolus.

Description. Measurements (male/female). Cephalothorax: length 1.9/1.1, width 1.4/0.9, height 0.8/0.5. Abdomen: length 1.8/1.2, width 1.5/0.8. Eye field: length 0.8/0.4, anterior and posterior width 1.3/0.9.

Male. General appearance as in Fig. 40 View FIGURES 40–46 . Carapace oval, moderately high, dark brown, clothed in colourless and grey hairs, eye field black, with longer bristles near eyes. Clypeus low, dark. Chelicerae dark brown, with two promarginal teeth and single tooth on retromargin. Labium and endites dark, sternum black. Abdomen oval, black with pattern composed of light patches, and with a few darker chevrons posteriorly ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 40–46 ), brown hairs on dorsal surface. Venter with mosaic of dark spots. Spinnerets dark. Legs dark brown, basal parts of patellae, tibiae and metatarsi orange. First pair of legs almost black. Pedipalps brown. Embolus thin, broader at base, small bump on the tibia ventrally ( Figs 41–43 View FIGURES 40–46 ), resembling one found in members of Chalcoscirtus .

Female. Smaller than male, slightly lighter coloured. Abdomen greyish brown with five pairs of light patches, in the second specimen the patches joined in two irregular streaks, venter yellowish. Spinnerets light. Legs greyish yellow with darker rings. Epigyne with two rounded depressions ( Fig. 45 View FIGURES 40–46 ). Internal structure as in Fig. 46 View FIGURES 40–46 , seminal ducts with knot in front of the inlets to spermathecae, accessory glands in spermatheca wall.

Distribution. Known only from the type locality.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Salticidae

Genus

Euophrys

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