New species of Taual a Wanless, 1988 from Australia (Araneae: Salticidae: Astioida: Astiae), with a redefinition of the genus
Author
Żabka, Marek
Author
Patoleta, Barbara M.
text
Zootaxa
2015
4000
5
501
517
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4000.5.1
d91caf19-60c7-4db8-a8aa-cccd913dd7b0
1175-5326
253624
C1A4B923-ABCB-47F2-93FE-7FB5C3C15D61
Genus
Tauala
Wanless, 1988
Tauala
Wanless, 1988
: 120
–132;
Davies & Żabka 1989
: 206
, 209;
Gardzińska 1996
: 299
–304;
Patoleta & Żabka 1999
: 230
, 233–234;
Maddison
et al
. 2008
: 53
–54, 58– 59;
Peng & Li 2002
: 340
–342.
Type
species
:
Tauala lepidus
Wanless, 1988
, by original designation.
List of valid species
.
T
.
alveolatus
Wanless, 1988
,
T
.
athertonensis
Gardzińska, 1996
,
T
.
australiensis
Wanless, 1988
,
T
.
bilobatus
sp. nov.
,
T
.
daviesae
Wanless, 1988
,
T
.
lepidus
Wanless, 1988
,
T
.
minutus
Wanless, 1988
,
T
.
ottoi
sp. nov.
,
T
.
palumaensis
sp. nov.
,
T
.
setosus
sp. nov.
,
T
.
splendidus
Wanless, 1988
,
T
.
zborowskii
sp. nov.
Remark.
T
.
elongata
, described from
Taiwan
(
Peng & Li 2002
), is geographically and morphologically distant and is considered here a non-congener. Because the species is known only from the female, we do not propose any formal placement for it before the male is described.
Diagnosis.
The genus differs from the related
Jacksonoides
by the following combination of characters: epigyne with two separate depressions and a small posterior pocket (most species). Embolus small or minute, fixed. Tegulum pear-shaped, with retrolateral apophysis (in most species). Tibial apophysis single or bi-lobate, hooked in ventral view.
Description
(after
Wanless 1988
, modified). Spiders about
2.40 to 7 mm
long. Sexes similar in appearance (
Figs 1
,
6
, 17, 25 for females;
Figs 14
,
32
,
41–42
,
51
for males), but male chelicerae more robust and first legs sometimes fringed (
T
.
lepidus
,
T
.
alveolatus
,
T
.
daviesae
,
T
.
palumaensis
;
Fig. 32
). Cephalothorax rather high, longer than broad, with distinctive thoracic slope and with depression between PLE. Fovea placed behind PLE. Eyes on moderately pronounced tubercles, PME small, set midway between ALE and PLE. Male chelicerae robust, their anterior surface rugose (
Fig. 35
) and sometimes with depression (
Fig. 34
) or with tooth-like apophysis (
T
.
lepidus
,
T
.
splendidus
,
T
.
daviesae
,
T
.
palumaensis
,
T
.
bilobatus
;
Fig. 41
). Promargin with 1–3 teeth, retromargin with 7–10 teeth. Cheliceral fang sometimes with a keel (
T
.
bilobatus
;
Fig. 45
). Female chelicerae less robust, anterior surface with rugose sculpturing, pro- and retromargin with pluridentate dentition (
1–3 and 7–11
, respectively). Maxillae rather long, sometimes with antero-lateral projection (
T
.
palumaensis
;
Fig. 36
). Abdomen elongate ovoid, spinnerets not modified. Tracheal spiracle sometimes accompanied by a patch of dark stiff setae (
T
.
athertonensis
,
T
.
palumaensis
,
T
.
zborowskii
,
Figs 7–8
, 22, 33). Legs I the strongest, in males sometimes with ventral fringe (
T
.
lepidus
,
T
.
daviesae
,
T
.
australiensis
,
T
.
palumaensis
;
Fig. 32
), tibiae and metatarsi usually with 4 and 2 pairs of ventral spines, respectively (modifications possible). Male palpal cymbium elongate, flange missing or slightly marked (
Figs 16
,
39
,
49
). Tibial apophysis hooked (ventral view), sometimes bi-lobate (lateral view in
T
.
bilobatus
,
T
.
setosus
;
Figs 50
,
57
). Tegulum more or less pear-shaped, sometimes with retrolateral apophysis [
T
.
lepidus
,
T
.
splendidus
,
T
.
alveolatus
,
T
.
daviesae
,
T
.
palumaensis
(
Figs 16
,
37
). According to
Wanless (1988, p. 121)
, the apophysis is part of subtegulum rather than tegulum, but the former is only apparent in some species and is visible either on pro- or retrolateral sides. Embolus minute or small. Epigyne simple, elongate, usually bordered by lightly sclerotised margins, sometimes with posterior small pocket (
T
.
lepidus
,
T
.
splendidus
,
T
.
daviesae
,
T
.
ottoi
;
Figs 4–5
, 23–24, 30–31), copulatory openings accompanied by slit-like edge; insemination ducts usually long and slender, wavy or bent (except for
T
.
minutus
), with distinctive accessory glands; spermathecae rounded.
Relationships
.
Wanless (1988)
placed
Tauala
within the Astieae group and suggested that
Jacksonoides
Wanless, 1988
was its closest relative. Indeed, both genera share similarities in habitus, leg spination and cheliceral dentition, and some species (e.g.
Tauala setosus
sp. nov.
vs
Jacksonoides distinctus
) show intermediate genitalic patterns.