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Blestia, a new genus of erigonine spider with clypeal sulci (Araneae:Linyphiidae) PDF

3 Pages·1993·0.38 MB·English
by  MillidgeA F
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Preview Blestia, a new genus of erigonine spider with clypeal sulci (Araneae:Linyphiidae)

126 Bull. Br. arachnol. Soc. (1993) 9 (4), 126-128 Blestia, a new genus of erigonine spider with clypeal 7,8,10) and association with the male. Males are diagnosed sulci (Araneae: Linyphiidae) by the clypeal sulci (Figs. 3, 6, 13, 14), which distinguish Blestia from all other known erigonine genera. A. F. Millidge Description: Total length 1.35-1.70. Female carapace 8 White Lodge, unmodified except for a small, shallow pit on clypeus Coastguard Road, below anterior median eyes; this pit contains no pores. Budleigh Salterton, Male carapace raised anteriorly into a shallow lobe (Fig. Devon EX96NU 3). Clypeus fairly high, and carries two sulci (Figs. 3,6); these are relatively shallow (Fig. 9), and lack the deep Summary invagination characteristic of erigonine post-ocular sulci (Fig. 12) (Blest, 1979). The sulci have long recumbent Oedothorax sarcocuon Crosby & Bishop, 1927 has clypeal spines on the margins, and the floor of each sulcus con- sulci similar to those of the linyphiid subfamily Myno- glenmae. The new genus Blestia is erected for this species, and tains small, irregular groups of pores (Figs. 13, 14), but its taxonomic position is discussed. few, if any, spines. The sulci were described by Crosby & Bishop (1927) as a transverse groove on the clypeus; the groove does not in fact extend across the clypeus, and a Introduction ridge of thickened integument lies between the sulci, which The male of a North American erigonine spider, are not connected to one another (Fig. 9). Chelicerae in originally described under Oedothorax, has been found both sexes with weak lateral files. Abdomen more or less to possess clypeal pits (subocular sulci) which are gener- unicolorous. Legs fairly short and stout, with tibia 11/d ally similar in position and structure to those of the (female) c. 5.0-5.5. Dorsal tibial spines 1111 in female, Mynogleninae. This species requires a new genus; a but short and rather weak; male tibiae spineless. Femora description is given of this genus, and the species is and metatarsi spineless in both sexes. Metatarsi I-III redescribed. All measurements are in mm. have a trichobothrium, with Tml c. 0.3. Female palp claw- less. Tracheal form erigonine, with median tracheae split into numerous tracheoles which extent into prosoma. Genus Blestia, new genus Epigynum (Figs. 7, 10) with a flask-shaped median area, Type species: Oedothorax sarcocuon Crosby & Bishop, which carries a small socket; spermathecae large (Fig. 8), 1927. and the duct follows a simple pathway around a laminar Etymology: A patronym in honour of A. D. Blest, in structure to the openings, which appear to lie posteriorly recognition of his work on the Mynogleninae. on or near to the margins of the median area. Male palpal Diagnosis: Both sexes are diagnosed as erigonine by the tibia with short apophyses (Figs. 4, 5); paracymbium tracheal form (Blest, 1976; Millidge, 1984). Females can fairly stout (Fig. 1), and tegulum with a rounded pro- be diagnosed only by the chaetotaxy, the epigynum (Figs. jection ventrally. Suprategular apophysis large, lightly Figs. 1-6: Blestia sarcocuon, male. 1 Palp, ectal; 2 Palp, mesal; 3 Carapace, lateral; 4 Palpal tibia, dorsal, holotype; 5 Palpal tibia, dorsal, Virginia specimen; 6 Carapace, anterior. Scale lines = 0.1 mm. A. F. Millidge 127 sclerotised (Fig. 1). Embolic division with a small rounded Pomeroy, 1978). The function of the sulci in Blestia is not radical part which carries a small, projecting section and a known, but their position indicates that it may not be curved, transparent lamina which projects anterodorsally sexual. (Fig. 2); embolus curved, stout basally but slender distally, The taxonomic position of the Erigoninae vis-a-vis the with its end resting on suprategular apophysis. Mynogleninae has been discussed by Blest (1979). The Included species: Only the type species. discovery of the clypeal sulci of Blestia must give some Distribution: Known only from. Pennsylvania and support to the view that these two subfamilies are prob- Virginia, eastern USA. ably fairly closely related; their relationship will be Taxonomic relationships: The genus is clearly erigonine considered in more detail in a forthcoming paper. in respect of the tracheal form, the genitalia and the Within the Erigoninae, Blestia is perhaps most closely somatic characters. As in other erigonines, cephalic sulci related to the genus Baryphyma Simon. The male palp is are present only in the male, but the position (clypeus) somewhat similar in form to that of B. trifrons (O. P.- and form (shallow pits, carrying pores but no deep Cambridge), and the internal epigynal structure is basi- invagination) of the sulci are sharply different from those cally of the same form as in the Baryphyma species (Fig. 8 of typical erigonines. The sulci resemble those of some cf. Fig. 11); the external epigynal form, however, differs members of the Mynogleninae, particularly those of from that of Baryphyma. The presence of the clypeal sulci Protoerigone females (Blest/1979: fig. 612), though with makes it unlikely that Blestia and Baryphyma can be fewer pores. particularly closely related. The presence in Blestia, in most respects a typical erigonine, of clypeal sulci of this kind gives support to the Blestia sarcocuon (Crosby & Bishop), new combination suggestion (Blest & Taylor, 1977; Blest & Pomeroy, 1978; (Figs. 1-10, 13,14) Blest, 1979) that the post-ocular sulci of the erigonines may be homologous with the clypeal sulci of the Mynogleninae. Oedothorax sarcocuon Crosby & Bishop, 1927: 149 (<£ holotype from On this hypothesis, the post-ocular sulci would have Pennsylvania, USA, 31 Oct. 1924; in AMNH, examined); arisen from the sub-ocular sulci by migration posteriorly, sarcocuon is a noun. coupled with a change in the glandular system and in the Maso sarcocuon: Bishop & Crosby, 1935:232 (figs, la, lb;no?figs. Ic, Id, which must refer to some other species). Roewer, 1942: 620. function. The clypeal sulci of Blestia would represent a Bonnet, 1957: 2734. relict erigonine character which has been retained in the single Blestia species alone out of some two thousand Diagnosis: The female is diagnosed by a combination of erigonine species so far described. the chaetotaxy and the epigynum (Figs. 7, 8, 10); the The post-ocular sulci of the erigonines are present in locality of capture must also be taken into account. The adults of the male sex only, and probably have a sexual male is diagnosed by the clypeal sulci (Figs. 3, 6) and by function (Blest & Taylor, 1977; Blest, 1979); in the the palp (Figs. 1,2). Mynogleninae, the sulci are present in adults and juveniles Female: Total length 1.35-1.6. Carapace, length 0.6- of both sexes, and their function, though not definitely 0.65, yellow to brown, with narrow blackened margins; known, is not sexual (Blest & Taylor, 1977; Blest & there is a tiny shallow pit below anterior median eyes. 9 8 10 12 11 Figs. 7-12: 7—10 Blestia sarcocuon. 7 Epigynum, pale specimen; 8 Epigynum, internal, dorsal; 9 Male carapace, dorsal, cleared to show outlines of clypeal sulci: 10 Epigynum, dark specimen. 11 Baryphyma duffeyi (Millidge), epigynum, internal, dorsal. 12 Monocephalusfuscipes (Bl.), male carapace, dorsal, cleared to show outlines of clypeal sulci. Abbreviation: S = sulci. Scale lines = 0.1 mm. 128 Blestia, new genus wider in the type (Fig. 4) than in the Virginian specimens (Fig. 5). Material examined: Male holotype, with one male paratype, from Potters Mills, Pennsylvania, USA; 8$, 5(J, from Otter Creek, Blue Ridge Parkway, Virginia, USA (79°27' W, 37°34' N), 18 Oct. 1965 (J. & W. Ivie) (in AMNH). Distribution: Known only .from Pennsylvania and 13 Virginia, USA. Natural history: Both sexes adult in October; habitat not known. Acknowledgements I am indebted to the American Museum of Natural History (N. I. Platnick) for the loan of specimens, and to D. R. Nellist and R. Flint for the scanning electron micrographs. References BISHOP, S.'C. & CROSBY, C. R. 1935: Studies in American spiders: miscellaneous genera of Erigoneae, Pt. 1. Jl N.Y.ent.Soc. 18: 217-281. BLEST, A. D. 1976: The tracheal arrangement and the classification of linyphiid spiders. J.Zool., Land. 180: 185-194. BLEST, A. D. 1979: Linyphiidae — Mynogleninae, in Spiders of New Zealand, V. Otago Mus.Bull. 5: 1-173. 14 BLEST, A. D. & POMEROY, G. 1978: The sexual behaviour and genital mechanics of three species of Mynoglenes (Araneae: Figs. 13-14: Blestia sarcocuon, male. Left sulcus, anterior view, Linyphiidae). J.Zool., Land. 185:319-340. scanning electron micrographs. BLEST, A. D. & TAYLOR, H. H. 1977: The clypeal glands of Mynoglenes and of some other linyphiid spiders. J.Zool., Land. 183:473-493. Eyes of moderate size, posteriors c. Id apart. Abdomen BONNET, P. 1957: Bibliographia Araneorum 2(3): 1926-3026. grey to almost black. Sternum brown, heavily suffused Toulouse. with black. Legs pale yellow to pale brown; Tml c. 0.3. CROSBY, C. R. & BISHOP, S. C. 1927: New species of Erigoneae and Epigynum (Figs. 7, 8,10). Theridiidae. Jl N. Y.ent.Soc. 35: 147-154. MILLIDGE, A. F. 1984: The taxonomy of the Linyphiidae based Male: Total length 1.65-1.7. Colour as female. Carapace, chiefly on the epigynal and tracheal characters (Araneae: length 0.7-0.75, raised anteriorly (Fig. 3), with sulci on Linyphiidae). Bull.Br.arachnol.Soc. 6(6): 229-267. clypeus (Figs. 3,6,9,13,14). Palp (Figs. 1,2); tibia slightly ROEWER, C. F. 1942: Katalog der Araneae 1:1-1040. Bremen.

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