Pholcus harveyi, Zhang & Zhu, 2009
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2235.1.2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5327622 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D88781-FFEE-FFA2-FF15-4D9AFD51FE5F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Pholcus harveyi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Pholcus harveyi View in CoL sp. nov.
( Fig. 15 View FIGURE 15 )
Types. Male holotype, 4♂, 16♀ paratypes, CHINA: Henan Province, Luanchuan County [33°42’N, 115°30’E], Mt. Longyuwan , July 20, 2004, leg. M. S. Zhu ( MHBU) GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. Among its relatives within Pholcus (see the remark of P. clavatus ), this species is very similar to P. huberi sp. nov., P. songxian sp. nov., P. parayichengicus sp. nov. (all Henan Province) and P. yichengicus (Shanxi Province) in the shapes of the palpal bulb and epigynum, all with a biforked ventral apophysis of trochanter ( Figs. 15I View FIGURE 15 , 17I View FIGURE 17 , 33I View FIGURE 33 , 46I View FIGURE 46 and 60I View FIGURE 60 ) and a long teat-shaped epigynal apophysis ( Figs. 15A View FIGURE 15 , 17A View FIGURE 17 , 33I View FIGURE 33 , 46A View FIGURE 46 and 60A View FIGURE 60 ). It can be distinguished from them by the shape of the tip of the procursus and the appendix ( Figs. 15G–I View FIGURE 15 ); also from P. huberi sp. nov. by the branched appendix centrally ( Fig. 15H View FIGURE 15 ), also from P. songxian sp. nov. and P. parayichengicus sp. nov. by the cephalic region with brown central marks ( Fig. 15C View FIGURE 15 ) and also from P. yichengicus by the pair of large pore plates ( Fig. 15B View FIGURE 15 ).
Etymology. The specific name is a patronym in honor of Dr. Mark S. Harvey, a well known arachnologist from Australia.
Description. Male (holotype): total body length 4.8: cephalothorax 1.4 long, 1.6 wide; abdomen 3.4 long, 1.4 wide. Leg I: 36.3 (9.3+0.7+9.0+14.9+2.4), tibia II: 8.2, tibia III: 4.4, tibia IV: 7.3; tibia I L/D: 64. Prosoma shape as in Fig. 15C View FIGURE 15 . Carapace short, broad and almost circular, ochre, with brown mark broadly connecting to ocular area. Cephalic region raised, with one brown slender central mark, ocular area dark yellow. Clypeus 0.42, ochre, with marks centrally. Distance AME–AME 0.08. Diameter AME 0.09, ALE 0.15, PME 0.14, PLE 0.15. Chelicerae as in Fig. 15E View FIGURE 15 , with pair of black apophyses distally, pair of unsclerotized thumb-shaped apophyses proximolaterally and pair of small unsclerotized rounded apophyses proximocentrally. Labium light yellow. Endites gray. Sternum dark gray, with one central marking and three pairs of pale markings along margin as in Fig. 15F View FIGURE 15 . Femora, patellae and tibiae ochre, with dark rings, metatarsi and tarsi brown. Abdomen cylindrical, pale ochre, dorsum with several small brown markings as in Fig. 15C View FIGURE 15 . Venter pale brown. Palps as in Figs. 15H and 15I View FIGURE 15 , bulb with large uncus having numerous teeth along the margin and hoe-shaped appendix. Procursus as in Fig. 15G View FIGURE 15 . Tarsal organ capsulate.
Variation. Tibia I in four other males: 8.4, 8.4, 8.8, 8.9. Body length in four other males 4.4–4.9.
Female: in general very similar to male. Total length of bodies 4.3–5.2. One paratype (Mt. Longyuwan), total length 4.5: cephalothorax 1.4 long, 1.5 wide; abdomen 3.1 long, 1.4 wide. Tibia I: 6.7. Distance AME–AME 0.06. Diameter AME 0.08, ALE 0.15, PME 0.13, PLE 0.13. Epigynum roughly dome-shaped as in Fig. 15A View FIGURE 15 , with a large necktie-shaped apophysis on the top. Dorsal view as in Fig. 15B View FIGURE 15 , with a wavy sclerotized arch anteriorly and a pair of oval pore plates.
Distribution. Known from type locality only.
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.