Labahitha Zonstein, Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017

Magalhaes, Ivan L. F., Berry, James W., Koh, Joseph K. H. & Gray, Michael R., 2022, Labahitha spiders (Arachnida: Araneae: Filistatidae) from islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans, European Journal of Taxonomy 805 (1), pp. 1-51 : 3-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2022.805.1693

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B43262BE-6FC4-45D9-8DBF-BF6DCACBF97E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6383014

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B67287B2-7C37-FFA4-FE55-AB599171FE41

treatment provided by

Felipe (2022-03-21 17:09:10, last updated by Juliana 2024-12-04 19:14:06)

scientific name

Labahitha Zonstein, Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017
status

 

Genus Labahitha Zonstein, Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017 View in CoL

Mystes Bristowe, 1938: 319 (preoccupied in Coleoptera; see Zonstein et al. 2017).

Labahitha Zonstein, Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017: 305 View in CoL .

Type species

Mystes oonopiformis Bristowe, 1938 , by monotypy.

Emended diagnosis

Labahitha is closely related to Wandella Gray, 1994 and Yardiella Gray, 1994 , with whom it shares a dorsal paraembolic lamina on the palp of males ( Fig. 5 View Fig ), excavated tegulum, microteeth combs on the tegulum ( Fig. 5H View Fig ), and complete absence of the macrosetae on the legs of females. Males can be distinguished from Wandella and Yardiella by: (1) the rounded clypeus, similar to that of the female ( Figs 7 View Fig , 17 View Fig ) (vs anterior margin of the carapace straight, with acute clypeus in males), (2) paraembolic lamina, which has a ragged margin ( Figs 5 View Fig , 12A–D View Fig ) (vs entire margin), and may be divided into two parts ( Figs 5 View Fig , 15 View Fig , 20 View Fig ) or reduced to a small proximal keel almost completely fused to the tegulum ( Figs 12A–D View Fig , 25 View Fig ) (vs a single free-ending, unfused part); in addition, they usually have an apical macroseta on the ventro-retrolateral face of metatarsal I (vs macroseta usually absent; present in at least W. murrayensis Gray, 1994 ). Females are distinguished from Wandella and Yardiella by the less contrasting colouration pattern, with weak or absent submarginal bands, leg rings and chevron pattern on the abdomen ( Figs 2–3 View Fig View Fig ) (vs submarginal bands, chevron and leg rings well-marked). The female genitalia is variable, with paired ( Figs 6 View Fig , 12 View Fig ) or unpaired ( Fig. 19 View Fig ) receptacles; the median receptacles may be well-developed ( Fig. 12 View Fig ) or reduced ( Fig. 6 View Fig ).

Relationships

Labahitha forms a clade with Wandella and Yardiella on the basis of shared possession of a paraembolic lamina with micro-teeth ( Figs 5 View Fig , 12A–D View Fig ) and micro-teeth in the male clypeus ( Fig. 23F View Fig ) (see also Gray 1994; Magalhaes 2016; Zonstein et al. 2017).

Tentative transfers

The following three species are known only from the females mentioned in the original descriptions, which include poor figures, if any at all. Based on the textual description and their distribution, they are here provisionally transferred to Labahitha , taking into account that their current placement in the mainly Eurasian genus Pritha (proposed by Lehtinen 1967: 260) is poorly justified. Examination of their type material should be carried out to confirm the generic placement and clarify their identities, as it is not unlikely that they are synonyms of the other species treated here. This is especially important in the case of Filistata insularis Thorell, 1891 , which has nomenclatorial priority over any of the names treated in this paper.

(1) Labahitha littoralis ( Roewer, 1938) comb. nov. ( Filistata littoralis Roewer, 1938: 8 , fig. 3. Female holotype from Indonesia, New Guinea, Kamana, 19 Mar. 1929, deposited in the Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Belgium, not examined). Roewer (1938) describes the colouration of the carapace as yellowish brown, without spots or markings; the abdomen as dark grey; the legs as pale yellow and uniform, except for the darker femora. This is similar to pattern in other species of Labahitha ( Fig. 2C View Fig ).

(2) Labahitha insularis ( Thorell, 1891) comb. nov. ( F. insularis Thorell, 1891: 17 . Female (subadult?) from India, Car Nicobar, repository unknown, not examined). Lehtinen (1967) mentions that the types are deposited in Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, Austria, but the only specimens identified as Filistata insularis in this collection come from Sumatra and were collected in 1938 (C. Hörweg, pers. com.), and thus cannot possibly be the types. The description mentions a dark spider, consistent with some species of this genus; the type locality is the same as that of L. nicobarensis ( Tikader, 1977) comb. nov. and it is not unlikely the two species are synonyms ( Fig. 2A View Fig ).

(3) Labahitha sundaica ( Kulczyński, 1908) comb. nov. ( Filistata sundaica Kulczyński, 1908: 579 . Female holotype from Indonesia, Java, deposited in Instytut Zoologiczny, Polska Akademia Nauk, Poland, labelled Filistata biroi according to Lehtinen 1967, not examined). Kulczyński (1908) states that the carapace, the sternum, palps and legs are pale yellow, the abdomen is hazelnut brown, and that the mouth parts and distal portion of the legs are suffused with rusty red. This is similar to pattern in other species of Labahitha ( Fig. 2C View Fig ).

Composition

Eight species surely belong in the genus: Labahitha fuscata ( Nakatsudi, 1943) comb. nov., Labahitha garciai ( Simon, 1892) comb. nov., Labahitha gibsonhilli ( Savory, 1943) , Labahitha marginata (Kishida, 1936) comb. nov., Labahitha nicobarensis ( Tikader, 1977) comb. nov., Labahitha oonopiformis ( Bristowe, 1938) , Labahitha platnicki sp. nov. and Labahitha ryukyuensis ( Ono, 2013) comb. nov. Four other species are tentatively allocated here: Labahitha incerta sp. nov., Labahitha littoralis ( Roewer, 1938) comb. nov., Labahitha insularis ( Thorell, 1891) comb. nov. and Labahitha sundaica ( Kulczyński, 1908) comb. nov.

Distribution

The genus is mainly distributed in Oceania and adjacent areas ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). Species occur in a wide range spanning the Seychelles, Malaysia, Indonesia, Australia, New Guinea and several islands in the Pacific Ocean; records from the American continent likely represent human-mediated introduction. Material examined by us from India, Sri Lanka, China, Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand belongs to other Prithinae genera, thus we suspect that Labahitha is not diverse in continental Asia.

Bristowe W. S. 1938. The classification of spiders. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London B 108: 285 - 322. https: // doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 1096 - 3642.1938. tb 00028. x

Gray M. R. 1994. A review of the filistatid spiders (Araneae: Filistatidae) of Australia. Records of the Australian Museum 46 (1): 39 - 61. https: // doi. org / 10.3853 / j. 0067 - 1975.46.1994.17

Kulczynski W. 1908. Symbola ad faunamAranearum Javae et Sumatrae cognoscendam. I. Mygalomorphae et Cribellatae. Bulletin International de l'Academie des Sciences de Cracovie 1908: 527 - 581.

Lehtinen P. T. 1967. Classification of the cribellate spiders and some allied families, with notes on the evolution of the suborder Araneomorpha. Annales Zoologici Fennici 4: 199 - 468.

Magalhaes I. L. F. 2016. On new or poorly known Australian Filistatidae spiders (Araneae: Araneomorphae), including a study on the fine morphology of Wandella. Journal of Natural History 50 (29 - 30): 1815 - 1858. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222933.2016.1181805

Nakatsudi K. 1943. Some Arachnida from Micronesia. Journal of Agricultural Science Tokyo Nogyo Daigaku 2: 147 - 180.

Ono H. 2013. Spiders of the genus Tricalamus (Araneae, Filistatidae) from Japan. Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science. Series A, Zoology 39 (1): 15 - 20.

Roewer C. F. 1938. Araneae. In: Resultats scientifiques du Voyage aux indes orientales neerlandaises de la LL. AA. RR. le Prince et la Princesse Leopold de Belgique. Memoires du Musee royal d'Histoire naturelle de Belgique 3 (19): 1 - 94.

Savory T. H. 1943. On a collection of Arachnida from Christmas Island. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 11 10 (65): 355 - 360. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 03745481.1943.9728022

Simon E. 1892. Etudes cavernicoles de l'ile Luzon. Voyage de M. E. Simon aux l'iles Phillipines (mars et avril 1890). 4 e Memoire. Annales de la Societe entomologique de France 61: 35 - 52.

Thorell T. 1891. Spindlar fran Nikobarerna och andra delar af sodra Asien. Kongliga Svenska Vetenskaps- Akademiens Handlingar 24: 1 - 149. Available from https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / part / 78009 [accessed 14 Feb. 2022].

Tikader B. K. 1977. Studies on spider fauna of Andaman and Nicobar islands, Indian Ocean. Records of the Zoological Survey of India 72: 153 - 212.

Zonstein S. L., Marusik Y. M. & Magalhaes I. L. F. 2017. Labahitha nom. n., a replacement name for Mystes Bristowe, 1938, with a redescription of the type species (Aranei: Filistatidae). Arthropoda Selecta 26 (4): 303 - 309. https: // doi. org / 10.15298 / arthsel. 26.4.04

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Fig. 5. Labahitha fuscata (Nakatsudi, 1943) comb. nov., males. A–I. Palau, Koror (JBJB), left palp. A. Retrolateral. B. Prolateral. C. Dorsal. D. Prolateral, detail. E. Tarsal organ. F. Trichobothria base. G. Detail of tegular spines. H. Detail of arrays of micro-teeth combs. I. Semi-plumose seta. J. Marshall Islands (JBJB), prolateral. K–L. Torres Strait, Darnley Island (AM), prolateral. Figures not to scale.

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Fig. 7. Labahitha garciai (Simon, 1892) comb. nov., males. A–C. Holotype of Pritha sechellana Benoit, 1978 (MRAC 143165). A. Dorsal. B. Ventral. C. Lateral. D–G. Male from Malaysia, Sarawak (AMNH IFM-0936). D. Habitus, dorsal. E. Left leg I, retrolateral. F. Clypeus, lateral. G. Clypeus, subventral. H–I. Males from Singapore, Upper Selatar Reservoir Park (ZFMK 12710), carapace, dorsal. Scale bars = 1 mm, except where noted.

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Fig. 17. Labahitha marginata (Kishida, 1936) comb. nov., somatic morphology. A–C, E–H, J. From Parque Nacional La Cangreja, San Jose, Costa Rica (INBIO 79582). D, I. From Tamandaré, Pernambuco, Brazil (CHNUFPI 1590).A. Male habitus, dorsal. B. Ventral. C. Right leg I, retrolateral. D. Male habitus, dorsal. E. Female habitus, dorsal. F. Ventral. G. Lateral. H. Left calamistrum, retrolateral. I. Female habitus, dorsal. J. Male habitus, lateral. Scale bars = 1 mm, except where noted.

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Fig. 12. Labahitha garciai (Simon, 1892) comb. nov., from Singapore, Upper Selatar Reservoir Park (ZFMK 12710), genitalia. A–D. Male. A. Left palp, prolateral view. B. Bulb, prolateral view. C. Same, detail of paraembolic lamina. D. Bulb, dorsal. E–F. Female. E. Endogyne, cleared, dorsal. F. Same, detail of receptacle pores. Abbreviations: Cy = cymbium; ES = embolic slit; Ex = tegular excavation; Fi = fimbriations on paraembolic lamina; LR = lateral receptacle; MR = median receptacle; PL = paraembolic lamina.

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Fig. 15. Labahitha incerta sp. nov., holotype, ♂, from Australia, Queensland, Nipping Gully (QM S.78659), left palp. A. Prolateral. B. Subdorsal. C. Retrolateral. D. Clove oil cleared, prolateral. E. Detail of embolus and paraembolic lamina, prolateral. Scale bars = 0.1 mm.

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Fig. 20. Labahitha marginata (Kishida, 1936) comb. nov., male from Costa Rica, Alajuela, Upala (INBIO 108899), right male palp. A. Prolateral. B. Bulb, prolateral. Inset showing tegular microteeth. C. Embolus and apex of paraembolic lamina, prolateral. D. Bulb, dorsal. E. Bulb, retrolateral. F. Embolus and apex of paraembolic lamina. Abbreviations: Cy = cymbium; E = embolus; ES = embolic slit; Ex = tegular excavation; Fi = fimbriations on paraembolic lamina; O = embolus opening; PL = paraembolic lamina.

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Fig. 25. Labahitha oonopiformis (Bristowe, 1938) from Malaysia, Penang, Telok Bahang (JBJB). A. Left male bulb, prolateral.B. Detail of paraembolic lamina. C. Female endogyne, dorsal. Figures not to scale.

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Fig. 2. Labahitha Zonstein, Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017, live specimens. A–B. Labahitha fuscata (Nakatsudi, 1943) comb.nov., from Brunei, Tutong.A. Female.B. Female with juveniles.C–E. Labahitha garciai (Simon, 1892) comb. nov., from Singapore. C. Male. D. Female (arrow) in her web. E. Female. Photos by Joseph Koh, except D by Chris Ang.

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Fig. 3. Labahitha marginata(Kishida, 1936) comb. nov., females. A–B. Brazil, Pernambuco, Tamandaré. A. House wall with webs. B. Female and prey remains on web. C. Mexico, Campeche, Calakmul. D. Original illustration included in the description of Filistata marginata. Photos: A–B by Leonardo Carvalho; C by Fabián Vol; D reproduced from Komatsu (1936).

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Fig. 6. Labahitha fuscata (Nakatsudi, 1943) comb. nov., endogyne, dorsal, lactic acid cleared. A. Brunei, Tutong (JK 110416.1907). B. Same locality (JK 130213.1101). C. Papua New Guinea, Bismarck Islands, habitus, dorsal (ZMB). D. New Caledonia, Poum (AMNH IFM-0918). E. Palau, Koror (JBJB) (not to scale).

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Fig. 19. Labahitha marginata (Kishida, 1936) comb. nov., female endogyne, dorsal, lactic acid cleared. A. From Parque Nacional La Cangreja, San Jose, Costa Rica (INBIO 79582). B. Bagaces, Guanacaste, Costa Rica (INBIO 104619). C. Vanuatu, Espiritu Santo (MNHN AR 3436). D. Upolu, Samoa (AMNH IFM-0885). E. Kanton, Phoenix Islands, Kiribati (AMNH). F. Chao-Chow, Ping-Tung, Taiwan (AMNH IFM-0872). G. Makeke Highlands, Papua New Guinea (AM KS.59201). H. Hawai’i, USA (AM). Scale bars = 0.05 mm.

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Fig. 23. Labahitha marginata (Kishida, 1936) comb. nov., male from Costa Rica, Alajuela, Upala (INBIO 108899), cephalothorax. A. Dorsal. B. Eye region, sublateral. C. Subanterior, dry specimen before sputter-coating. D. Subanterior. E. Chelicerae, subanterior. F. Unsclerotized region of the clypeus, subventral. G. Ventral. Inset showing sigillum. Abbreviations: A = eye apodeme; UR = unsclerotized region of the clypeus.

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Fig. 1. Geographical distribution of Labahitha Zonstein, Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017. A. L. fuscata (Nakatsudi, 1943) comb. nov. B. Labahitha spp. (black triangle = L. gibsonhilli (Savory, 1943); white circle = L. nicobarensis (Tikader, 1977) comb. nov.; white square = L. oonopiformis (Bristowe, 1938); white star = L. platnicki sp. nov.; white triangle = L. ryukyuensis (Ono, 2013) comb. nov.; black star = L. incerta sp. nov.; black diamond = L. littoralis (Roewer, 1938) comb. nov.; black square = L. insularis (Thorell, 1891) comb. nov.; black circle =L. sundaica comb. nov. C. L. garciai(Simon, 1892) comb. nov. D. L. marginata (Kishida, 1936) comb. nov. Scale bars = 1000 km.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Filistatidae

SubFamily

Prithinae