Alopecosa (Tarentula) kochi Keyserling, 1877
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2024.2374542 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13785662 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1C2A87AA-FFAE-FF80-FF30-9B69FC74FA72 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Alopecosa (Tarentula) kochi Keyserling, 1877 |
status |
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Alopecosa (Tarentula) kochi Keyserling, 1877 View in CoL – historical record ( Evans 1959)
There are only two historical records for lycosid spiders taken by A. evansi : a single specimen of Lycosa sp. at 2743 m AMSL from Cloudcroft, New Mexico mentioned in the original description of the wasp ( Townes 1957), and a penultimate-instar male Alopecosa (Tarentula) kochi from the Graham (now Pinaleño) Mountains, Arizona ( Evans 1959). Both of these spiders had all of their legs removed. Lycosids are a lesser element in the host base of A. evansi in the Park, comprising approximately 7% of the total spiders taken. All of the lycosid host spiders ( Figure 20C View Figure 20 ) taken from wasps at Arkenstone Cave are juveniles and cannot confidently be identified beyond the family level.
Alopecosa View in CoL has a global distribution, with seven species known in North America ( Dondale and Redner 1979; World Spider Catalogue [WSC] 2022). Ageniella kochi is mostly a western ( USA) species and is the southernmost distributed species in the genus in North America, reaching into northern Mexico ( Dondale and Redner 1979). A study of the species in San Bernardino National Forest south of Banning, California, at an elevation of 1645 m found the species had a 2-year life cycle and two concurrent populations that matured in alternate years ( Hagstrum 1970). Because of the lower elevation and longer clement (warmer) season in the Park, A. kochi may have only a single annual population here. A single adult male A. kochi was sampled in Arkentsone Cave on 9 March 1993, so the species is present on the cave hill and is likely taken by A. evansi View in CoL . Ageniella kochi is also recorded as a host for Ageniella euphorbiae Viereck, 1903 View in CoL in California, and possibly for Tachypompilus View in CoL u. unicolour, Banks, 1919 in Nevada ( Kurczewski et al. 2020).
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