Tegenaria egrisiana, Zamani & Kaya & Marusik, 2024

Zamani, Alireza, Kaya, Rahşen S. & Marusik, Yuri M., 2024, New taxonomic and faunistic data on the funnel-weavers (Araneae, Agelenidae) of Turkiye and the Caucasus, with five new species, ZooKeys 1218, pp. 251-286 : 251-286

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1218.135249

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7F6A7B71-74A9-42BA-A258-C28544EAC887

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14199448

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/45CD9A9F-8B0B-47DD-B0A7-145458C6B6BE

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:45CD9A9F-8B0B-47DD-B0A7-145458C6B6BE

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Tegenaria egrisiana
status

sp. nov.

Tegenaria egrisiana sp. nov.

Figs 16 D – F View Figure 16 , 17 A – D View Figure 17 , 18 A, B View Figure 18 , 20 C View Figure 20

Type material.

Holotype • ♂ ( ZMMU), Georgia: Imereti Prov.: cave between Gumbrini and Khamali , 42°18'56.4"N, 42°38'09.4"E, 161 m, 19.07.2012 (Y. M. Marusik) GoogleMaps . Paratypes: • 1 ♂ 1 ♀ ( ZMUT), 2 ♀ ( ZMMU), same data as for the holotype GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis.

Tegenaria egrisiana sp. nov. is very similar to T. pallens Zamani & Marusik, 2023 from Iran in the overall shape of the copulatory organs. However, the male differs from T. pallens in the shorter tip of the cymbium, ~ 0.7 the length of the palpal tibia (Fig. 17 A – D View Figure 17 , 20 C View Figure 20 ; vs as long as the palpal tibia), the blunt tip of the conductor (vs pointed and curved; Zamani et al. 2023: fig. 2 A), the embolus base positioned at the 9: 00 o’clock position (vs 8: 30 o’clock), the tip of the embolus terminating at ~ 2: 00 o’clock position (Fig. 17 A View Figure 17 ; vs 1: 00 o’clock), and the median apophysis (Ma) with a different shape. The female of the new species differs from that of T. pallens in the epigynal plate nearly twice as wide as it is long (vs> 3 × wider than long; cf. Fig. 16 D View Figure 16 and Zamani et al. 2023: fig. 3 C), in having a distinct median plate (vs absent), and a small rectangular fovea (vs oval; cf. Fig. 16 D, E View Figure 16 and Zamani et al. 2023: fig. 3 A, B).

Description.

Male. Habitus as in Fig. 18 A View Figure 18 . Total length 7.10. Carapace 3.23 long, 2.37 wide. Eye sizes: AME: 0.12, ALE: 0.17, PME: 0.14, PLE: 0.18. Carapace, labium, and maxillae pale brown; carapace with darker submedian bands; chelicerae reddish brown; sternum greyish brown, with yellow median band and six spots. Legs pale brown, with very faint annulations; Fe with long ventral setae at basal 1 / 2. Abdomen pale beige, with greyish dots, patches, and stripes. Spinnerets uniformly pale beige. Measurements of legs: I: 22.92 (6.12, 1.44, 6.26, 6.50, 2.60), II: 19.02 (5.05, 1.28, 4.96, 5.50, 2.23), III: 16.90 (4.63, 1.15, 4.15, 5.15, 1.82), IV: 20.79 (5.50, 1.28, 5.24, 6.65, 2.12).

Palp as in Fig. 17 A – D View Figure 17 ; femur longer than patella + tibia; femur ~ 2.2 × longer than tibia (Fig. 20 C View Figure 20 ); patella 2 × longer than wide; cymbium ~ 1.8 × longer than tibia; tibia ~ 2 × longer than wide, with two apophyses: large and membranous retroventral apophysis (Rv) and conical retrolateral apophysis (Rl) with a notched blunt tip (Figs 17 D View Figure 17 , 20 C View Figure 20 ); retrolateral apophysis shorter than ventrolateral one; cymbium 2 × longer than wide; bulb longer than wide; median apophysis (Ma) large and wide, originating at ~ 4 o’clock position; conductor as long as wide, with a spatula-like tip; embolus filiform, roundly bent, originating at ~ 9: 00 o’clock position (Fig. 17 A View Figure 17 ).

Female. Habitus as in Fig. 18 B View Figure 18 . Total length 8.68. Carapace 4.25 long, 2.95 wide. Eye sizes: AME: 0.12, ALE: 0.20, PME: 0.18, PLE: 0.20. Coloration as in male. Measurements of legs: I: 22.80 (6.13, 1.65, 6.00, 6.30, 2.72), II: 19.81 (5.53, 1.57, 4.96, 5.47, 2.28), III: 18.03 (5.07, 1.44, 4.32, 5.22, 1.98), IV: 22.57 (6.18, 1.47, 5.63, 7.00, 2.29).

Epigyne as in Fig. 16 D – F View Figure 16 ; epigynal plate ~ 2 × wider than long with two sclerotized and barely visible teeth; fovea small and almost rectangular; copulatory openings (Co) located on anterior edges of holes (Fig. 16 D, E View Figure 16 ); copulatory ducts (Cd) with a membranous anterior part and a widened slightly sclerotized posterior part; receptacles tubular and twisted along their axis (Fig. 16 F View Figure 16 ).

Distribution.

Known only from the type locality in Imereti Province, central-western Georgia.

Etymology.

The specific epithet refers to the historical Georgian polity of Egrisi, which was centered in present-day western Georgia.

ZMMU

Zoological Museum, Moscow Lomonosov State University

ZMUT

University of Tokyo, Department of Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Agelenidae

SubFamily

Ageleninae

Tribe

Tegenariini

Genus

Tegenaria