Mr. Darwin’s mysterious spider: on the type species of the genus Leucauge White, 1841 (Tetragnathidae, Araneae)
Author
Dimitrov, Dimitar
Author
Hormiga, Gustavo
text
Zootaxa
2010
2396
19
36
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.193975
4119246b-586f-46c6-8619-f0fc2e978b13
1175-5326
193975
Genus
Leucauge
White, 1841
Type
species (by monotypy)
Linyphia (Leucauge) argyrobapta
White, 1841
, a junior synonym of
Epeira venusta
Walckenaer, 1841
In his field notes Darwin suggested the new genus name
Leucauge
for
argyrobapta
(see
Keynes, 2000
), but nevertheless
White (1841)
described
argyrobapta
as a species of
Linyphia
and treated
Leucauge
as a subgenus, not as a new genus. This should be hardly surprising given that in his paper
White (1841: 471)
explicitly expressed reluctance to erect new genera:
“I describe them without any systematic order, but having necessarily numbered each species, intend afterwards giving a classified index: the descriptions are in many instances prolix, and I have in most cases given the
generic
character of each species. I have done this because, at present, I am unwilling to propose new names if I can possibly refer the species I describe to any of ties established genera.”
There is no hint in Darwin’s field book suggesting that
argyrobapta
had close affinities with
Linyphia
. In fact, Darwin’s entry (page 38 of this particular field book, as transcribed in
Keynes, 2000
) starts with the following text: “Spider, orbilates [orbitéles]; closely allied to
Epeira
(
Leucauge
.
[illeg.]
)”. Thus the generic placement in
Linyphia
must be entirely attributed to White. Although Waterhouse’s (1902:198)
Index Zoologicus
provides the first use of
Leucauge
as a genus name, the first arachnologists to use Darwin’s name at the genus rank were F. O. P.-
Cambridge (1902a
,
1903
) and
E. Simon (1903)
. In one of his papers on the
type
species of the genera of
Araneae,
Cambridge (1902b: 16)
explicitly discusses the rank of
Leucauge
and quite openly expresses his dislike for Darwin’s new name:
“No one that has ever been in a tropical Brazilian forest will hesitate one moment in recognizing this as a species of the
Argyroepeira
group of Emerton.
One feels sorry at the necessity of sacrificing so beautiful a name for the ugly one
Leucauge
proposed by Darwin, but priority lies with the latter.”
Cameron
(2005:302)
deciphered the etymology of
Leucauge
(which means “with a bright gleam”, in reference to the characteristic silvery guanine abdominal marks) and pointed out how
Bonnet (1957)
also grumbled about the replacement of the more recent genus name
Argyroepeira
Emerton, 1884
by the older one
Leucauge
after having been forgotten for sixty years. We join Professor
Cameron
(2005:302)
in rejoicing the preservation of “the only spider name which can be attributed to Charles Darwin.”