New species of Chilean Hexathelidae (Araneae, Mygalomorphae)
Author
T, Duniesky Rios
Author
Goloboff, Pablo A.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3422
32
51
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.281994
9ed4f1e5-ffdd-4db6-b83f-bff541492839
1175-5326
281994
Mediothele
Raven & Platnick, 1978
: 74
.
Until now, the genus
Mediothele
included a single species,
M. australis
, described from a single male from Southern
Chile
; no further males are known of the genus. The genus was originally included in
Dipluridae
, but later transferred (
Raven, 1985
) to
Hexathelidae
, proposing
Scotinoecus
as its sister group.
In this genus, morphological differences between species are more marked than in
Scotinoecus
, especially in leg, cephalothorax and sternum shape, and chaetotaxy. The much simpler spermathecae have only minor differences between species (often within the observed range of individual variation among specimens of a single locality).
Type
species.
Mediothele australis
Raven & Platnick, 1978
Diagnosis.
Differs from
Scotinoecus
in the labium and maxillae having few (female) or no (male) cuspules; fangs with basal outer tooth. PLS spinnerets short, ALS two-segmented much shorter than PMS; thickened femora III; patellae III with strong prolateral spines; patellae III and IV with many prolateral and dorsal anterior strong setae. Male tibia I with one large and one small spur, and associated thorn on metatarsus; bulb pyriform, without conductor.
Many of these somatic characters (fang tooth, shorter spinnerets, thickened femora, and patellae with strong spines and setae) are probably associated with a burrowing lifestyle.
Habits.
Spiders of all known species live in small silk-lined burrows with an open entrance.
Monophyly.
By out-group comparison, essentially all of the characters in which it differs from
Scotinecus
are synapomorphies of
Mediothele
. The monophyly of the genus is thus well established. The low numbers of labial (and maxillary) cuspules are best interpreted as a reversal, as (according to Raven’s 1978, 1985 hypotheses of hexathelid relationships) they occur in several successive sister groups.