Revision of Helvetia (Araneae: Salticidae: Heliophaninae)
Author
Gustavo R. S. Ruiz
Author
Antonio D. Brescovit
text
Revista Brasileira de Zoologia
2008
2008-03-31
25
1
139
147
journal article
10.1590/S0101-81752008000100018
10c257cd-4869-4667-86fb-9ff9b671ada1
3678502
Helvetia rinaldiae
sp. nov.
Figs 21-22
Types.
Female
holotype
from
Serra do Cachimbo
,
Novo Progresso
,
Pará
,
Brazil
, deposited in
MPEG
2088
;
female
paratype
from
Fazenda Gold Farm
,
Vitoriana
,
Botucatu
,
São Paulo
,
Brazil
,
01.X.1986
,
I.M.P. Rinaldi & L.C. Forti
leg.
, deposited in
UBTU
2658
.
Etymology. The species is named in honour of the Brazilian arachnologist Isabella M.P. Rinaldi, who collected one of the type specimens.
Diagnosis. Females of this species can be easily distinguished from others by the wide deep epigynal atrium (
Figs 21 and 22
).
Description. Female (holotype). Total length: 4.35. Carapace dark brown, 1.75 long, 1.10 wide, 0.65 high. Cephalic area black. Ocular quadrangle 0.85 long. Anterior eye row 0.90 wide and posterior 0.95 wide. Chelicera brown. Endite, labium and sternum dark brown. Legs 4132, yellow, I-II with longitudinal brown stripes. Length of femur: I 0.80, II 0.65, III 0.65, IV 1.00; patella + tibia: I 1.00, II 0.75, III 0.70, IV 1.15; metatarsus + tarsus: I 0.55, II 0.55, III 0.75, IV 0.95. Spination. Femur I, II, III, IV d1-1-1; tibia I, II
v1
pr, III
v2
di, IV
v2
di, p1; metatarsus I, II
v2-2
, III, IV
v1
, p2di, r1di. Abdomen cream colored with a pair of wide longitudinal brown stripes laterally and a narrow longitudinal brown one; ventrally grayish. Epigynum as in figures 21 and 22. Spinnerets dark brown.
Male. Unknown.
Variation. Two females: total length: 4.35-4.45; carapace length: 1.75-1.80.
Additional material examined.
BRAZIL
,
Pará
:
Novo Progresso
(
Serra do Cachimbo
,
Campo de Provas Brigadeiro Velloso
),
1 female
,
8.IX-25.V.2003
,
A.B. Bonaldo
leg.
(
IBSP
81049
, ex- MPEG 1364)
.
Distribution. Known from the states of Pará and São Paulo, Brazil.
Note. This species has an epigynum much modified, but the remaining morphological characters are very similar to those of the group in which the type species is located. Its inclusion in the genus may be corroborated with the future description of the male.