New Linyphiidae spiders associated with playas in the Southern High Plains (Llano Estacado) of Texas (Arachnida: Araneae)
Author
Cokendolpher, James C.
Author
Torrence, Shannon M.
Author
Smith, Loren M.
Author
Dupérré, Nadine
text
Zootaxa
2007
1529
49
60
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.177656
cad850f1-070d-44c7-9468-feced23febca
1175-5326
177656
Erigone denticulata
Chamberlin & Ivie
(
Figs 7
,
9
,
17–23
)
Erigone denticulata
Chamberlin & Ivie 1939
, 57, fig. 2;
Levi & Levi 1951
, 220;
Levi & Levi 1955
, 36;
Buckle
et al
.
2001
,
116
;
Platnick
2007
.
Type
material
.—
U.S.A.
:
Utah
: Summit County: Mirror Lake, Uintah Mountains,
N40°42'
W110°49'
,
22 Sept. 1932
, W. Ivie, male
holotype
(not examined). Mirror Lake,
N40°43'
W110°53'
,
28 July 1936
, Wilton Ivie,
3 males
labeled by Ivie as
paratypes
(
AMNH
, examined).
Material examined
.—
U.S.A.
:
Colorado
: Grand County: Hot Sulphur Springs,
N40°6'
W106°9'
,
24 Aug. 1935
, W. Ivie,
1 male
,
1 female
(
AMNH
).
Idaho
: Payette County: N.E. Fruitland,
N44°1'
W116°55'
,
1 July 1938
, W. Ivie,
4 males
,
1 females
(
AMNH
).
Nevada
: Elko County: Ruby Valley,
N40°15'
W115°25'
,
Sept. 1937
, R.V. Chamberlin,
4 males
,
3 females
(
AMNH
).
Oregon
: Malheur County:
8 km
south of Adrian,
N43°40'
W117°,
19 Sept. 1943
, W. Ivie,
3 males
,
1 female
(
AMNH
).
Texas
: Lubbock County, Lubbock,
N33° 32'2"
W101°53'23"
,
Sept. 2006
, J.C. Cokendolpher, in wet greenhouse next to man-made pond,
1 female
(TTU-Z 29,680); same locality & collector, on waterfall of man-made pond,
11 June 2007
(
AMNH
); Briscoe County:
Playa
Br5,
N34°29'4.91999"
W101°9'54.359"
,
17 June 2005
, S.M. Torrence, L.M. Smith,
1 female
(
AMNH
);
Playa
Br13,
N34°32'12.336"
W101°17'37.212"
,
15 June 2005
, S.M. Torrence, L.M. Smith,
1 female
(
CPAD
).
Playa
Br13,
N34°32'12.336"
W101°17'37.212"
,
17 June 2005
, S.M. Torrence, L.M. Smith,
1 female
(TTU-Z 29,683).
Playa
Br19,
N34°28'19.01999"
W101°15'
32.616',
22 June 2005
, S.M. Torrence, L.M. Smith,
1 male
,
1 female
(TTU-Z 29,681 and 29,679);
26 June 2005
, S.M. Torrence, L.M. Smith,
1 female
(TTU-Z 29,682). Swisher County:
Playa
S6,
N34°32'37.644"
W101°34'14.808"
,
21 June 2005
, S.M. Torrence, L.M. Smith,
1 male
(
CPAD
).
Utah
: Summit County: Mirror Lake, Uintah Mountains,
N40°43'
W110°53'
,
22 Sept. 1932
, W. Ivie,
3 females
(
AMNH
).
Wyoming
: Albany County: southeast of Laramie,
N41°10'5"
W 105°21'0"
,
July 1961
, W.D. Fronk,
1 male
,
1 female
(
AMNH
).
Diagnosis
.—
Male
with marginal rows of large and smaller sharp pointed denticles on the sides of carapace (
Figs 7
,
9
,
17
); pedipalpal patella with large and long distal apophysis, with single small denticle at about midpoint (
Figs 7
,
18
); pedipalpal tibia straight across distodorsal end, not notched or otherwise modified in center (
Fig. 16
). Female epyginum with only slightly rounded lobes posteriorly (
Fig. 21
); spermathecae elongate and compressed in center (
Figs 22, 23
).
Description
(Briscoe County, specimens illustrated).
—
Male
(
Fig. 9
): Total length:
2.18 mm
; carapace length:
1.05 mm
; carapace width (excluding denticles):
0.77 mm
; carapace with lateral row of denticles with a small ridge above row (
Fig. 7
; similar to
Hormiga 2000
, fig. 86a). Sternum darker brown. Chelicera depressed basally on retrolateral marginal face, with 8 large, distally curved denticles on anteriolateral margins and 10– 12 denticles scattered over promargin basally, also few short thick macrosetae basal to stridulatory file, promargin with 1 mega denticle and 1 large denticle, retromargin with 3 denticles plus 1 smaller distal denticle; cheliceral stridulatory file as large striae on posteriolateral surface (visible with dissection microscope). Cheliceral fang thickened on basal half and with a brush of very fine denticles centrally. Abdomen
1.13 mm
long, uniformly colored, no patterns. Legs, tibia I–IV with one dorsal macroseta; metatarsus I with dorsal trichobothrium, TmI 0.43, TmIV 0.52. Pedipalpal femur curved mesally, then dorsally, recurved at distal end (
Figs 9
,
18
), mesal side with longitudinal row of denticles; patella with a thick, stout, apophysis (
Figs 7
,
18
); tibia straight across distodorsal end, not notched or otherwise modified in center, mesal side (about 2/3 from basal end) with raised area tipped with small spur-like point (
Fig. 18, 19
); embolus thick, straight, pointed at tip (
Figs 18, 19
); other details of pedipalp as in
Fig. 19
.
Female
: Total length:
2.65 mm
, carapace length:
1.05 mm
, carapace width:
0.75 mm
; carapace coloration as in male, pattern 3 erect setae along midline. Carapace and chelicerae dark amber to yellowish-brown, sternum darker brown; carapace elevated in anterior third; posteriolateral margins of carapace with noticeable small granules to minute denticles; without ridge laterally as in male. Chelicera slightly enlarged basally, with 6–8 denticles in a row on anteriolateral margin; promargin of cheliceral fang furrow with 2 larger and 3 smaller denticles (distal most minute), retromargin with 3 denticles (one distal smaller denticle on each chelicera); stridulatory file not visible with dissection microscope (present as striae on posteriolateral margin at 200X). Abdomen unpatterned, darker brown to gray brown, darker than carapace; length
1.60 mm
, densely covered with semi-erect setae. Legs light yellow to amber, tibia I–IV each with one dorsal macroseta; metatarsus I with dorsal trichobothrium, TmI 0.57, TmIV absent. Posterior portion of the epigynal plate sclerotized (
Fig. 21
). Spermathecae only slightly visible through the cuticle and not extending much beyond the epigynal plate (
Figs 22, 23
). Spermathecae oval and oriented obliquely, fertilization ducts only slightly curved, copulatory ducts long and curved (
Fig. 23
).
Distribution
.—Known from Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming in the central and northwestern
U.S.A.
Habitat
.—In the present study we only found specimens in the canopy of emergent aquatic vegetation within
playa
wetlands and next to a man-made pond in a wet greenhouse.
Levi & Levi (1951)
stated that this species was also collected at Moran (Grand Teton National Park, Teton County, Wyoming) from an aspen grove.
Remarks
.—In the original description of this species,
Chamberlin & Ivie (1939)
stated that
E. denticulata
was related to
Erigone ostiaria
Crosby & Bishop
, but differed by being larger in size and by the details of the pedipalpus. By comparing
Crosby & Bishop (1928)
figs 149–151 to our
Figs 13–15
the pedipalpal differences are apparent. Also,
E. ostiaria
is thus far only known from Washington State,
U.S.A.
In having a mid-position denticle on the pedipalpal patella, this species could be confused with
Erigone dentosa
O
. Pickard-Cambridge
(from British
Columbia
south to
Guatemala
); however, the denticle on
E. dentosa
is noticeably larger and distinctly curved distally (
Crosby & Bishop 1928, fig. 42
). These are not very closely related species, but the denticle is used in the diagnoses presented by
Crosby & Bishop (1928)
.
Crawford (in
Buckle
et al.
2001 p
. 116) stated that this species is probably the same as
Erigone aletris
Crosby & Bishop. These
two species appear similar, especially in the details of the pedipalp in ventral view, but we are able to separate the two taxa.
As
illustrated by
Paquin & Dupérré (2003, figs 958–963)
E. aletris
differs from
E. denticulata
in features of the male and female genitalia.
Erigone aletris
occurs throughout much of the northern Holarctic region and appears to be absent from the plains of the central
U.S.A.