Leptopholcus kiskeya Huber and Wunderlich, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930601051196 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B2583A-FF88-1B2D-FEDC-FBEBFE4DFB52 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Leptopholcus kiskeya Huber and Wunderlich |
status |
sp. nov. |
Leptopholcus kiskeya Huber and Wunderlich , new species
( Figures 1c, d View Figure 1 , 11 View Figure 11 )
Type
Male holotype in Dominican amber, ‘‘F1554/DB/AR/CJW’’, no further data, in SMF .
Etymology
Kiskeya (or Quisqueya) was the name of Hispaniola used by the Taínos, an Arawakspeaking people originally occupying the island. It is here used as a noun in apposition.
Diagnosis
Distinguished from extant Caribbean Leptopholcus species by the long and slender procursus that is widened distally on the ventral side ( Figure 11c View Figure 11 ; not widened on the dorsal side like L. hispaniola and L. toma ), and by the shapes of uncus and appendix; from L. hispaniola also by the longer trochanter apophysis and the presence of distinct AME lenses; from L. baoruco and L. toma apparently also by the abdomen tip that barely projects beyond the spinnerets.
Male (holotype)
Total length, 3.4, carapace width 0.65. Leg 1: 7.0+0.3+7.8, metatarsus broken; leg 2: 20.0 (5.1+0.3+5.0+8.7+0.9); leg 3: 10.9 (3.2+0.3+2.8+3.9+0.7); leg 4: only broken right femur. Entire animal pale reddish to ochre-yellow. Carapace slightly deformed, without thoracic groove. Eight eyes, lateral triads only slightly elevated, distance PME–PME, 240 Mm; diameter PME, 80 Mm, AME with distinct lenses, diameter, 20 Mm. Chelicerae with two pairs of frontal apophyses, presence of modified hairs on distal apophyses could not be verified. Palps as in Figure 11c View Figure 11 ; trochanter with small retrolateral and long ventral apophyses, femur with three distinctive apophyses, procursus long and slender, strongly curved, distally widened on the ventral side, genital bulb egg-shaped, with curved uncus and triangular appendix. Tarsal organ not seen. Legs densely covered with regular mechanoreceptive hairs, apparently without spines and curved hairs, vertical hairs not seen; pseudosegments barely visible.
Female
Unknown
Distribution
Dominican Republic; mine not identified.
Material examined
Only type above.
Other inclusions
The amber piece contains four additional specimens: one ‘acalyptrate’ fly and one ceratopogonid (Diptera, kindly identified by B. Sinclair), one Hymenoptera , and one unidentified neopterous insect.
SMF |
Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.