Zephyrarchaea barrettae Rix & Harvey

Rix, Michael G. & Harvey, Mark S., 2012, Australian Assassins, Part II: A review of the new assassin spider genus Zephyrarchaea (Araneae, Archaeidae) from southern Australia, ZooKeys 191, pp. 1-62 : 15-17

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.191.3070

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/219CE1D9-DA81-AD40-3EBE-5AF2380B348F

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Zephyrarchaea barrettae Rix & Harvey
status

sp. n.

Zephyrarchaea barrettae Rix & Harvey View in CoL   ZBK sp. n. Figs 1B8F9I1525

Talyuberlup Assassin Spider

Type material.

AUSTRALIA: Holotype male: Stirling Range National Park, Talyuberlup Peak, Western Australia, Australia, 34°24'21"S, 117°57'08"E, sifting elevated leaf litter under Lepidosperma sedges near summit, 4.VIII.2008, M. Rix, M. Harvey (WAM T117055DNA: TA-154-M).

Paratypes: Allotype female and 2 juveniles, same data as holotype except 8.II.2009, M. Harvey (WAM T97466DNA: TA-156-J/TA-157-J).

Other material examined.

AUSTRALIA: Western Australia:Stirling Range National Park: same data as holotype, 1 juvenile (WAM T94089DNA: TA-155-J); Talyuberlup Peak, 34°24'20"S, 117°57'06"E, sifting elevated and low leaf litter, montane vegetation around rocky peak, 752 m, 12 April 2009, H. Wood, 1♂, 2♀ (CASENT 9028379); same data, 1♀ (CASENT 9034515).

Etymology.

The specific epithet is a patronym in honour of Sarah Barrett, for first discovering assassin spiders in the Stirling Range National Park in 1996.

Diagnosis.

Zephyrarchaea barrettae can be distinguished from Zephyrarchaea janineae and Zephyrarchaea mainae by the absence of dorsal hump-like tubercles on the abdomen (Figs 15 A–B); from Zephyrarchaea marae sp. n., Zephyrarchaea marki , Zephyrarchaea porchi sp. n. and Zephyrarchaea vichickmani sp. n. by the shape of tegular sclerites 2-3, which do not project beyond the retro-distal rim of the tegulum (Figs 15 D–E); and from Zephyrarchaea melindae by the shape of the anterior margin of the diastema adjacent to the ‘neck’, which is slightly (in females) or strongly concave in lateral view (in males) (Figs 15 A–B cf. Figs 14 A–B). Females further distinguished from other known congeners by the combination of a spherical abdomen (Fig. 15A), shallow post-ocular depression in lateral view (Fig. 9I), taller carapace (CH/CL ratio> 1.70) (Figs 7, 15A) and slightly concave anterior margin of the diastema adjacent to the ‘neck’ (Fig. 15A).

Description.

Holotype male: Total length 3.13; leg I femur 2.19; F1/CL ratio 1.92. Cephalothorax dark reddish-brown; legs tan brown with darker annulations; abdomen mottled grey-brown and beige, with reddish-brown dorsal scute and sclerites (Fig. 15B). Carapace relatively short (CH/CL ratio 1.71); 1.14 long, 1.95 high, 1.13 wide; ‘neck’ 0.67 wide; highest point of pars cephalica (HPC) approaching posterior third of ‘head’ (ratio of HPC to post-ocular length 0.59), carapace with shallow concave depression anterior to HPC; ‘head’ not strongly elevated dorsally (post-ocular ratio 0.21) (Fig. 8F). Chelicerae with proximal brush and additional comb of accessory setae on anterior face of paturon (Fig. 15C). Abdomen 1.59 long, 1.21 wide; almost spherical in lateral profile, without dorsal hump-like tubercles; dorsal scute fused anteriorly to epigastric sclerites, extending posteriorly to cover anterior two-thirds of dorsal abdomen. Unexpanded pedipalp (Figs 15 D–F) pyriform, with broad, distally curved embolus supported by conductor sclerites 1-2; tegular sclerite 1 (TS 1) strongly curved, claw-like in prolateral view, with twisted, flattened and broadly rounded apex; TS 2-3 not projecting beyond retro-distal rim of tegulum.

Allotype female: Total length 3.64; leg I femur 2.31; F1/CL ratio 1.77. Cephalothorax dark reddish-brown; legs tan brown with darker annulations; abdomen variably beige-grey (Fig. 15A). Carapace relatively short (CH/CL ratio 1.78); 1.31 long, 2.33 high, 1.26 wide; ‘neck’ 0.78 wide; highest point of pars cephalica (HPC) approaching posterior third of ‘head’ (ratio of HPC to post-ocular length 0.59), carapace with shallow concave depression anterior to HPC; ‘head’ not strongly elevated dorsally (post-ocular ratio 0.22) (Fig. 9I). Chelicerae without accessory setae on anterior face of paturon. Abdomen 1.90 long, 1.69 wide; spherical in lateral profile, without dorsal hump-like tubercles. Internal genitalia (Fig. 15G) with cluster of ≤ 15 sausage-shaped spermathecae either side of gonopore, clusters widely separated along midline of genital plate.

Distribution and habitat.

Zephyrarchaea barrettae is known only from the summit of Talyuberlup Peak, in the western Stirling Range National Park of southern Western Australia (west of Chester Pass) (Fig. 25). Specimens have been collected by beating and sifting sedges ( Lepidosperma sp.) in montane heathland.

Conservation status.

This species is a short-range endemic taxon ( Harvey 2002b), with a maximum total range of less than 10 km2, and all known populations in the western Stirling Range National Park potentially threatened by fire, dieback disease (affecting montane vegetation) and climate change.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Archaeidae

Genus

Zephyrarchaea