Daddy-long-leg giants: revision of the spider genus Artema Walckenaer, 1837 (Araneae, Pholcidae)
Author
Aharon, Shlomi
FB5EEA73-DD16-440C-B611-07F1C0C1300B
Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Sede Boqer Campus, Midreshet Ben-Gurion, Israel. Alexander Koenig Research Museum of Zoology, Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn, Germany. The Arachnid National Natural History Collection, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Edmond J. Safra Campus, Givat Ram, Jerusalem, Israel.
shlomi.aharon@gmail.com
Author
Huber, Bernhard A.
33607F65-19BF-4DC9-94FD-4BB88CED455F
Alexander Koenig Research Museum of Zoology, Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn, Germany. & Email: b. huber @ zfmk. de & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 33607 F 65 - 19 BF- 4 DC 9 - 94 FD- 4 BB 88 CED 455 F
b.huber@zfmk.de
Author
Gavish-Regev, Efrat
FC073F19-2202-4C89-8B43-CEA4CC5E2D50
The Arachnid National Natural History Collection, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Edmond J. Safra Campus, Givat Ram, Jerusalem, Israel. & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: FC 073 F 19 - 2202 - 4 C 89 - 8 B 43 - CEA 4 CC 5 E 2 D 50 & Corresponding author: efrat. gavish-regev @ mail. huji. ac. il
efrat.gavish-regev@mail.huji.ac.il
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2017
2017-12-08
376
376
1
57
journal article
21948
10.5852/ejt.2017.376
4298f5cf-d85e-48fb-afe8-f12c99ad65b3
2118-9773
3838544
F67AE00B-28CF-48AF-89D6-31251B22BB7C
Artema transcaspica
Spassky, 1934
Figs 1
,
121–154
,
206
,
213
Artema transcaspica
Spassky, 1934: 369–372
, figs 8–10 (
♂
♀
,
Turkmenistan
,
Tajikistan
).
Misidentifications
Artema transcaspica
–
Denis 1958: 112
(
Afghanistan
). —
Roewer 1955: 752
(
Iran
). —
Ghahari & Marusik 2009: 4
(
Iran
). See redescription of
A. doriae
above.
Diagnosis
Males are easily distinguished from most other known congeners (except
A. doriae
and
Artema
sp. c) by their bulbal processes (
Figs 125–127
): process c triangular, curved and pointing towards prolateral, and distinct ventral process d. Males are possibly distinguishable from
A. doriae
and from
Artema
sp. c by their cheliceral proximal incline without ridge or process above modified hairs in lateral view (
Figs 128, 131–133
) which is present in
A. doriae
(
Figs 100–102
) and in
Artema
sp. c (
Figs 186–191
). Females differ from other congeners by their rectangular to square-shaped epigynal plate (i.e., lateral margins parallel;
Figs 134–145
,
150
) (rather slightly trapezoidal in
A. doriae
, rectangular and wider in
Artema
sp. c); by dark median sclerite fused at posterior epigynal margin with lateral sclerotized plates (not fused in
A. doriae
and
Artema
sp. c) and by less distinct pale median area posteriorly (in
A. doriae
the pale median area is usually distinct posteriorly, very prominent in
Artema
sp. c).
Material examined
Syntypes
The ZIN collection has three vials, two of which (with a total of
10 ♂♂
,
18 ♀♀
, ~15 juvs) contain both
syntypes
(as suggested by the label data) and non-types; the third (with
2 ♂♂
,
1 juv.
) may contain
syntypes
only, but the label does not specify any collection data. A further vial in MNHN may contain
syntypes
only (
1 ♂
,
2 ♀♀
), but the collection data are also unclear. For these reasons, we list here all the material from these four vials, sorted by country. Specimen numbers are taken from the original description, but since specimens from different localities and collection dates were combined, individual specimens can no longer be attributed to different localities. This is why specimen numbers are unspecified in two cases below.
Figs 121–127.
Artema transcaspica
Spassky, 1934
.
121
. ♂, habitus (ZIN type vials).
122–124
. Male left pedipalp (ZMMU, Uzbekistan, near Zarafshon): prolateral, dorsal, and retrolateral views.
125– 127
. Male left bulb and procursus: prolateral, dorsal, and retrolateral views. Scale lines: 122–124 = 1 mm; 125–127 = 0.5 mm.
TAJIKISTAN
:
syntype
♀
, “
Stalinabad
” [=
Dushanbe
,
38.53° N
,
68.78° E
], summer 1933,
A. Alparov
leg. (
ZIN
).
TURKMENISTAN
: unspecified number of
syntypes
and non-types, “Ashkhabad” [=
Ashgabat
,
37.93° N
,
58.36° E
], spring 1933, E. Mel‘nikova leg. (
syntypes
) and
16 Apr. 1934
,
M.K. Laptev
leg. (non-types) (
ZIN
);
unspecified number of non-types, same locality, in room,
5 Sep. 1936
, collector not given (
ZIN
);
1 ♂
,
syntype
, “
Krasnovodsk
” [=
Türkmenbasy
,
40.01° N
,
52.96° E
], summer 1900,
Ahnger
leg. (
ZIN
);
1 juv.
,
syntype
,
Repetek
, “
Transcaspian Province
” [
38.56° N
,
63.18° E
], 1907,
Dolgopolov
leg. (
ZIN
);
1 ♂
,
syntype
,
Akhal-Teke
[~
38.1° N
,
58.0° E
], 1896,
Ahnger
leg. (
ZIN
);
1 ♂
,
2 ♀♀
,
syntypes
(?), “
Regio Transcaspica
”, date and collector not given (these are possibly part of the
specimens
from
Ashkhabad
collected in 1933 by Mel’nikova) (
MNHN
Ar
10178).
UZBEKISTAN
:
1 ♀
(non-type), “
Andizhan
” [=
Andijan
,
40.80° N
,
72.30° E
], in house, winter 1938,
Karpovich
leg. (
ZIN
).
Figs 128–133.
Artema transcaspica
Spassky, 1934
, male chelicerae in lateral and frontal views.
128– 131
. ♂♂, Uzbekistan, Zarafshon (ZMMU).
132
. ♂, Turkmenistan, Badkhyz, Kushka (NHMW 13.677).
133
. ♂, Uzbekistan, 36.5 km SSW of Uchkuduk (ZMMU). Arrows = absence of proximal projections on frontal processes. Scale lines: 128–130 = 0.5 mm; 131–133 = 0.2 mm.
Other material
TURKMENISTAN
:
1 ♂
,
1 ♀
,
Badkhyz
,
Kushka
[
35.68° N
,
62.00° E
],
12 Apr. 1985
,
S. Zonstein
leg. (
NHMW
13.677);
1 ♀
,
Kopetdag
,
Parkhai
[~
38.25° N
,
57.8° E
], in house,
19 Dec. 1992
,
V.I. Perepechaenko
leg. (
ZFMK
Ar
15245).
UZBEKISTAN
:
1 ♂
,
Navoi Area
,
Uchkuduk District
,
Kyzylkum Desert
, ca
36.5 km
SSW of
Uchkuduk
, ca
6 km
SWS of
Tasbulak Well
,
120 m
a.s.l., sands (
41.85° N
,
63.30° E
),
2 Jun. 2003
,
A.V. Gromov
leg. (
ZMMU
);
3 ♂♂
,
3 ♀♀
,
Kafirnighan River Valley
,
Ak-Mechet
[
38.01° N
,
68.29° E
], in house,
7 May 1994
,
S. Ovchinnikov
leg. (
ZMMU
);
2 ♂♂
,
5 ♀♀
,
1–2 km
SE
“
Zeravshan Town
” [=
Zarafshon
,
41.57° N
,
64.24° E
],
20 Apr.–19 Jul. 1998
,
A.V. Gromov
leg. (
ZMMU
);
1 ♀
,
Bukhara Area
[
39.51° N
,
64.84° E
],
33 km
SE of
Bukhara
,
19–20 May 1994
,
A.A. Zyuzin
leg. (
ZMMU
).
TAJIKISTAN
:
1 ♂
,
Vaksh River Valley
, “
Tigrovaya Balka
”
State Res.
[
38.35° N
,
69.18° E
],
Korolevskaya Dacha
,
3 Aug. 2006
,
S.V. Ovchinnikov
leg. (
ZMMU
);
1 ♀
, in pure ethanol,
Khatton Area
,
Shaartuz Distr
.,
Khushody
(
37.152° N
,
68.070° E
),
378 m
a.s.l., edge of sandy desert, shrub litter,
20 Apr. 2015
,
Y.M. Marusik
leg. (
ZFMK
Mar 60
);
2 ♂♂
,
3 ♀♀
,
Kafirnigan River
,
10–15 km
NNE of
Tartki
(
37.69° N
,
68.15° E
), inside solitary abandoned farmer house near riverbank,
12 Jun. 1989
,
S. Zonstein
leg. (
SMNH
).
Material assigned tentatively
(see Notes below)
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
:
1 ♀
, N of
Ajman
(
25.43º N
,
55.48º E
), in water traps,
21 Sep.–25 Oct. 2007
,
A. van Harten
leg. (
ZFMK
Ar
15246).
Figs 134–145.
Artema transcaspica
Spassky, 1934
, intraspecific variation of epigynum.
134
. Uzbekistan, SE Bukhara (ZMMU).
135
. Uzbekistan, Ak-Mechat (ZMMU).
136–137
. Uzbekistan, SE Zarafshon (ZMMU).
138
. Turkmenistan, Badkhyz, Kushka (NHMW 13.677).
139–145
. Unspecified data: Tajikistan\Turkmenistan\Uzbekistan (ZIN type vials). Scale lines: 0.5 mm.
Description
Male
(unspecified origin; ZIN
type
vial)
MEASUREMENTS. Total body length 5.7, carapace width 3.1. Leg 1: 39.1 (10.1 + 1.3 + 11.5 + 14.0 + 2.2), tibia 2: 9.0, tibia 3: 7.0, tibia 4: 9.3; tibia 1 L/d: 38. Distance PME–PME 150 μm, diameter PME 190 μm, distance PME–ALE 90 μm, distance AME–AME 60 μm, diameter AME 180 μm.
COLOR. Carapace light ochre with large brown radial marks, with brown median band that splits at posterior margin of ocular area; ocular area ochre to brown, clypeus with dark brown rim and light brown band below AME enlarged at base of clypeus to triangular shape (as in
Fig. 121
); legs ochre yellow without dark rings on femora, patellae, and tibiae; sternum ochre to light brown with narrow brown margins; abdomen without distinct pattern.
BODY. Ocular area slightly elevated; carapace with distinct posterior furrow and distinct median pit close to posterior margin of ocular area; clypeus unmodified; sternum wider than long (2.1/1.7); chelicerae as in
Figs 128–130
, with frontal row of ~25 modified (cone-shaped) hairs on each side, situated on elevated process (as in
Figs. 146–148
); cheliceral proximal incline in lateral view without ridge or small process above modified hairs but followed smoothly by first modified hair (as in
Fig. 131
); without stridulatory ridges (unlike some other specimens; see variation below); abdomen globose and high; gonopore with five epiandrous spigots.
PALPS. As in
Figs 122–124
; coxa unmodified, trochanter with short ventral projection, femur with distinct retrolateral process proximally, ventral membranous area proximally bordered on both sides by heavily sclerotized ridges, and small dorsal projection proximally; femur-patella hinges close together dorsally; patella very short; procursus with proximal dorsal process, with weakly developed ventral pocket, and distal dorsal notch on prolateral sclerotized margin; bulb with membranous embolus rising from base of process a; process a with subdistal hump; process b narrow, elongated, and pointed; process c triangular; process d is a distinct small ventral projection (as in
Figs 125, 127
,
149
).
LEGS.Without spines;with long curved hairs, especially on tibiae and metatarsi; retrolateral trichobothrium on tibia 1 at 10%; prolateral trichobothrium present on all tibiae; pseudosegmentation not visible.
Male
(variation)
Tibia
1 in
13 other males: 10.6–18.1 (mean 13.1); color pattern on abdomen varies from pale without any marks to light brown with lateral stripes; leg color varies from light brown to ochre; ocular area usually light brown; carapace pattern varies from wide brown lateral marks to pale carapace with median band only; two brown bands at base of ocular area sometimes absent; clypeus dark rim and dark band sometimes absent; procursus distal dorsal notch on prolateral margin sometimes slightly elevated and not a distinct indentation (
Fig. 126
); process c sometimes curved and pointing towards prolateral; lateral stridulatory ridges sometimes absent (as in specimen described above) or very indistinct but sometimes present (
Figs 128, 131
,
153
); cheliceral proximal incline usually without ridge or small process above modified hairs in lateral view (
Figs 131, 133
); sometimes present but indistinct (
Fig. 132
). Epiandrous spigots were counted in five additional males and varied from 4 to 7.
Female
In general similar to male; tibia
1 in
24 females
: 7.0–12.8 (mean 10.8); stridulatory files laterally on chelicerae always present (
Fig. 154
); epigynal plate square-shaped (
Figs 134–145
,
150
), consisting of two sclerotized lateral rectangular areas that are gently swollen posteriorly and depressed medially anteriorly, pale median area with long dark median sclerite, usually fused at posterior epigynal margin with lateral sclerotized plates, small median indentation in posterior rim; anterior epigynal projections oval, not prominent in lateral view.
Figs 146–154.
Artema transcaspica
Spassky, 1934
, ZMMU, Ak-Mechet (♂) and near Zarafshon (♀).
146–148
. Male chelicerae with frontal rows of modified (cone-shaped) hairs.
149
. Male left bulbal processes.
150
. Epigynal plate.
151
. Male left bulbal processes.
152
. Wrinkled area between processes b and c on male bulb.
153
. Male stridulatory ridges.
154
. Female stridulatory ridges. Scale lines: 146 = 0.3 mm; 147, 149, 153–154 = 0.1 mm; 148 = 0.03 mm; 150 = 0.4 mm; 151 = 0.2 mm; 152 = 0.06 mm.
Distribution
The species is distributed from the Kopet Dag Mountain Range in the south of
Turkmenistan
to
Tajikistan
in the East (
Fig. 1
). The species is also found north of this range and in
Uzbekistan
. It is likely that
A. transcaspica
occurs also in Kyrgystan and
Kazakhstan
. The single record from the
United Arab Emirates
is dubious (see below) and not shown in the map.
Notes
Artema transcaspica
is very similar to
A. doriae
and to
Artema
sp. c from
Pakistan
,
India
, and
Sudan
(see below). While males of
A. doriae
and
A. transcaspica
are barely distinguishable, females differ slightly in their epigynum structure. For this reason, we decided to be conservative and not to synonymize
A. doriae
and
A. transcaspica
.
The single female from the
United Arab Emirates
is assigned tentatively because it does not seem to fit the distribution of this species.