From the lowlands to the highlands of Ecuador, a study of the genus Masteria (Araneae, Mygalomorphae, Dipluridae) with description of seven new species Author Dupérré, Nadine Zoological Museum Hamburg, Leibniz-Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change (LIB), Center for Taxonomy and Morphology Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146, Hamburg, Germany. & Research Associate, American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA. Author Tapia, Elicio Fundación OTONGA, Calle Rither N ° 20 - 10 y Bolivia, Quito, Ecuador. Author Quandt, Dietmar Nees Institute for Plant Biodiversity, University of Bonn, Meckenheimer Allee 170, 53115 Bonn, Germany. & Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research (IPK), Corrensstrasse 3, 06466 Gatersleben, Germany Author Crespo-Pérez, Verónica Laboratorio de Entomología, Museo de Zoología QCAZ, Escuela de Ciencias Biológicas, Author Harms, Danilo Zoological Museum, Center of Natural History, Universität Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146, Hamburg, Germany. text Zootaxa 2021 2021-07-28 5005 4 538 568 journal article 10.11646/zootaxa.5005.4.4 1175-5326 5142039 43AB6083-4E39-47DD-819E-8EC21F3B3C90 Masteria jatunsacha Dupérré & Tapia , new species Figs 2A, B , 3A–D , 20B , 22A , map. 1. FIGURES 2A, B . Masteria jatunsacha n. sp. (holotype). A. Male habitus, dorsal view. B. Male habitus, ventral view. Scale bars: 0.5mm. Type material. Male holotype from Napo Province , Ecuador , Jatun Sacha Natural Reserve ( -01.666464 -77.617192 ) 400–430m , 10–15 Mar. 2020 , pitfall , E.E. Tapia , N. Dupérré , A.A. Tapia ( QCAZ ) . Paratypes : 2♂ same data as the holotype ( ZMH-A0014697 , QCAZ ) . Etymology. The specific name is a noun in apposition taken from the type locality Jatun Sacha Natural Reserve, Napo , Ecuador . FIGURES 3A–D. Masteria jatunsacha n. sp. (holotype). A. Male palp, prolateral view. B. Male palp, retrolateral view. C. Male palpal bulb, prolateral view. D. Male leg I, prolateral view. Scale bars: 0.1mm. Diagnosis. Males most resemble M. chalupas n. sp. and M. papallacta n. sp. due to the presence of spines on the retrolateral side of the male palpal tibia but can be distinguished from M. papallacta n. sp. by the grouped spines positioned on the apical half ( Fig. 3B, C ), whilst they are positioned on the basal half in the latter species ( Fig. 9B, C ); from M. chalupas n. sp. by the presence of 21 grouped spines ( Fig. 3C ) vs. 14 grouped spines in the latter species ( Fig. 7B, C ) and basal spine of metatarsus I shorter ( Fig. 22A ), clearly longer in M. chalupas n. sp. ( Fig. 22B ). Description. Male ( holotype ): Total length: 2.79; carapace length: 1.37; carapace width: 1.07; abdomen length: 1.42. Carapace yellow with reticulation in the cephalic groove and pars thoracica, covered with long setae ( Fig. 2A ). Chelicerae yellow; promargin with 11 teeth and ~10 smaller mesobasal teeth. Endites yellow without cuspules. Labium yellow without cuspules. Sternum yellow, covered with long setae ( Fig. 2B ). Eyes: six eyes grouped; AME absent; ALE the largest; PLE oval; PME small and oval; posterior row slightly recurved ( Figs 2A , 20B ). Abdomen elongated, uniformly beige covered with long setae ( Fig. 2B ). Spinnerets: PLS 1.15 (0.39/0.41/0.35). Legs coloration uniformly pale yellow. Leg formula 4123; leg measurements: I 4.44 (1.27/0.63/1.03/0.80/0.72); II 3.54 (1.02/0.43/0.81/0.69/0.59); III 3.38 (0.92/0.35/0.82/0.72/0.57); IV 4.55 (1.24/0.29/1.12/1.09/0.61). Leg spination: I: femur d1-1-1-1-1; tibia v1, p-1ap; metatarsus v1-1; II: femur d1-1-1-1-1, p1; patella v1, p1; tibia v1-1-1ap, p1; metatarsus v1-1-1; III: femur d1-1-1-1, p1; patella p1; tibia d1-1, v1-1-1-3ap, p1-1, r1-1; metatarsus d1-2, v2-2-3ap, p1, r1-1; IV: femur d1-1-1-1-1; patella v-1ap, r1; tibia d1, v2-1ap, p1-1-1, r1-1, metatarsus d1, v2-2-2ap, p1-1, r1-1- 1. Tibia I: P1 absent; P2 with an apical, narrow strong spine; P3 with two apical spines ( Fig. 22A ). Metatarsus I with small basal spine ( Fig. 22A ). Palp: palpal tibia 2x the length of cymbium, 2.6x longer than wide, with 21 grouped long spines on retrolateral side, positioned on apical half ( Fig. 3B, C ); cymbium 2x longer than wide, with four apical spines; bulb rounded, with laminar twisted embolus ( Fig. 3C ). Female : unknown. Distribution. Ecuador : only found at the type locality. Natural History. Specimens were collected by pitfall between 400–430m in an evergreen lowland forest of the Napo-Curaray region ( Guevara et al . 2013b ).