Phylogenomic re-evaluation of Triaenonychoidea (Opiliones: Laniatores), and systematics of Triaenonychidae, including new families, genera and species
Author
Derkarabetian, Shahan
Museum of Comparative Zoology, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
sderkarabetian@gmail.com
Author
Baker, Caitlin M.
Author
Hedin, Marshal
Department of Biology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182, USA
Author
Prieto, Carlos E.
Departamento de Zoología y Biología Celular Animal, Universidad del País Vasco – EHU, Leioa, E- 48940 Bizkaia, Spain.
Author
Giribet, Gonzalo
text
Invertebrate Systematics
2021
2021-02-08
167
1
277
288
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/is20047
journal article
8330
10.1071/is20047
081f8fb0-0af9-4e5e-8637-0dac4316b719
4531309
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:81683834-98AB-43AA-B25A-C28C6A404F41
Family
LOMANELLIDAE
Mendes & Derkarabetian
,
fam. nov.
ZooBank
LSID
:
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
B2825A44-1616-4103-91F1-A2BFF07BBC3F
Included genera
:
Lomanella
Pocock, 1903,
Abaddon
Derkarabetian & Baker
,
gen. nov.
Type
genus
:
Lomanella
Pocock, 1903
.
Type
species
:
Lomanella raniceps
Pocock, 1903
, by original designation
Diagnosis
This Australian family (
Fig. 5
) is most closely related to the morphologically unique
Synthetonychiidae
from
New Zealand
, but differs from the family-level diagnosis of
Forster (1954)
by the presence of an obvious eye mound and shorter pedipalps bearing tubercles, which are sometimes more robust.
Synthetonychiidae
are diagnosed by their lack of an eye mound and elongate pedipalps that are slender and without tubercles (e.g.
Forster 1954
, fig. 708).
Lomanellidae
can be distinguished from
Triaenonychidae
by their relatively simple palps with weak spination (
Fig. 6
E
) (
Hunt and Hickman 1993
, fig. 1), a process on the dorsal surface of coxae II, and lateral projections on the carapace above coxae II associated with the ozopore. Additionally, compared to male triaenonychid genitalia, which typically possess the full complement of plates (dorsal, dorsolateral, and ventral), the male genitalia of lomanellids are extremely attenuated and show a complete loss of the dorsal plate (
Fig. 7
A
) (
Hunt and Hickman 1993
, fig. 3).
Distribution
Lomanellids are restricted to
Australia
(
Fig. 5
). The genus
Lomanella
is widespread in the temperate forests of southern
New South Wales
,
Victoria
and
Tasmania
, with a single species that is restricted to a small region of south-western
Western Australia
. The new genus
Abaddon
,
gen. nov.
is extremely restricted in distribution, known only from two localities in south-western
Western Australia
, an area where other arthropod taxa inhabiting these temperate rainforests show similar species distribution patterns (e.g.
Rix
et al
. 2015
;
Sato
et al
. 2018
;
Schwentner and Giribet 2018
).
Remarks
Amanda Mendes is included as a taxon author for this family to acknowledge her previous work, being the first to identify, recognise, and name this family in her unpublished dissertation. Although the morphological analyses of
Mendes (2009)
recovered
Pyenganella
in
Lomanellidae
, she expressed caution about the recovered relationship of
Pyenganella
with
Lomanella
and
Synthetonychia
. Simultaneously, she was certain that
Lomanella
represented a new family-level lineage as it was the only new name proposed based on her extensive morphological phylogenetic analyses. She approved the family diagnosis and agreed to authorship.