An update on the spider genus Caponina Simon (Araneae: Caponiidae) with descriptions of three new six-eyed species from Colombia
Author
Sánchez-Ruiz, Alexander
D312037D-5F2B-4F86-A822-F0BAD1BEF20A
Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Coordenação de Zoologia, Laboratório de Aracnologia. Av. Perimetral, 1901, Terra Firme, CEP 66077 - 830, Belém, Pará, Brazil. Grupo de Investigación Biodiversidad del Caribe Colombiano, Semillero de Investigación Sistemática de Artrópodos Neotropicales, Departamento de Biología, Universidad del Atlántico, Barranquilla, Colombia.
alex.sanchezruiz@hotmail.com
Author
Martínez, Leonel
C3E9FDB9-4381-4ED3-AB0C-6C7F739CCCED
leonelmarbio@gmail.com
Author
Bonaldo, Alexandre B.
118CFCBA-BD7E-4F15-8412-4979159298BA
Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Coordenação de Zoologia, Laboratório de Aracnologia. Av. Perimetral, 1901, Terra Firme, CEP 66077 - 830, Belém, Pará, Brazil. Grupo de Investigación Biodiversidad del Caribe Colombiano, Semillero de Investigación Sistemática de Artrópodos Neotropicales, Departamento de Biología, Universidad del Atlántico, Barranquilla, Colombia.
bonaldo@museu-goeldi.br
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2022
2022-04-14
813
87
102
http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2022.813.1735
journal article
55898
10.5852/ejt.2022.813.1735
35a7baba-68b7-43fe-bb68-ab0c4620f5ea
2118-9773
6468222
8FF7D8D9-A18B-4C1A-9F2D-301EBFEA8B26
Genus
Caponina
Simon, 1892
Caponina
Simon, 1892: 573
(
type
species
C. testacea
Simon, 1892
by monotypy).
Bruchnops
Mello-Leitão, 1939: 629
;
type
species
B. notabilis
Mello-Leitão
(by monotypy), synonymized by
Platnick (1994a)
.
Emended diagnosis
Members of
Caponina
can be distinguished from all genera of Nopinae by having the tarsi entire, lacking adesmatic joins; and from other non-nopine genera with six or four eyes such as
Nasutonops
Brescovit & Sánchez-Ruiz, 2016
,
Iraponia
Kranz-Baltensperger, Platnick & Dupérré, 2009
and
Notnops
Platnick, 1994
as follows: from the six-eyed
Nasutonops
by the lack of a clypeal horn on the carapace; from the six-eyed
Iraponia
by the lack of a postepigastric scutum on the abdominal venter in males and by having a pair of sclerotized bars on the female internal genitalia, lacking the anteromedian receptaculum; and from the four-eyed
Notnops
by having the embolus protruding ventrally from the apical median area of the tegulum in males (instead of from the posterior area), and by the lack of an anteromedian receptaculum in the female internal genitalia. Other representatives of non-nopine genera such as
Calponia
Platnick, 1993
and
Caponia
Simon, 1887
have eight eyes;
Diploglena
Purcell, 1904
,
Laoponia
Platnick & Jäger, 2008
,
Taintnops
Platnick, 1994
and
Tisentnops
Platnick, 1994
have only two eyes, and
Carajas
Brescovit & Sánchez-Ruiz, 2016
is completely devoid of eyes.
Key for all species of
Caponina
Simon, 1892
1. Four eyes (rarely three) ..................................................................................................................... 2
– Six eyes (rarely five) ......................................................................................................................... 3
2. Female internal genitalia with anterior expansions on the pair of sclerotized bars; sclerotization around spiracles narrow, widely separated from each other (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 22) ....................... .........................................................................................
C. testacea
Simon, 1892
(males unknown)
– Female internal genitalia lacking anterior expansions on the pair of sclerotized bars; sclerotizations around spiracles widened, almost touching each other (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 23) ............................... ..........................................................................................
C. tijuca
Platnick, 1994
(males unknown)
3. Males (those of
C. chinacota
and
C. cajabamba
, unknown) ........................................................... 4
– Females (those of
C. bochalema
sp. nov.
and
C. huila
sp. nov.
, unknown) ....................................11
4. Cymbium short, length not reaching twice palpal tibia length (
Fig. 3E, G
) ..................................... 5
– Cymbium long, length more than twice as long as palpal tibia length (
Fig. 3H, J
) ......................... 8
5. Palpal femur with pronounced dorsal tubercle (
Fig. 1E–G
) ............................................................. 6
– Palpal femur without dorsal tubercle (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 29, 31) ................................................... ........................................................................................................
C. notabilis
(Mello-Leitão, 1939)
6. Tegulum round or oval, large, length greater than or equal to cymbium length (
Fig. 3E–G
) .......... 7
– Tegulum pear-shaped, small, length shorter than cymbium (
Fig. 1E–G
) ........
C. alejandroi
sp. nov.
7. Tegulum round, embolus with very thin and long tip and small opening (
Brescovit & Sánchez-Ruiz 2013
: figs 5, 7–9) ...................................................
C. papamanga
Brescovit & Sánchez-Ruiz, 2013
– Tegulum oval, embolus with thick, short and sharp tip and large opening (
Fig. 3E–G
) .................... .........................................................................................................................
C. bochalema
sp. nov.
8. Embolus base anteriorly directed (
Fig. 3H–J
) .................................................................................. 9
– Embolus base posteriorly directed (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 39–41) ..............
C. paramo
Platnick, 1994
9. Tegulum pear-shaped, small; palpal femur with dorsal tubercle .................................................... 10
– Tegulum oval, large; palpal femur without dorsal tubercle (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 26– 28) ................................................................................................................
C. alegre
Platnick, 1994
10. Palpal femur with a pronounced dorsal tubercle; cymbium very thick with pronounced curvature and squared tip (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 36–38) .................................................
C. chilensis
Platnick, 1994
– Palpal femur with a moderate dorsal tubercle; cymbium cylindrical with moderate curvature and rounded tip (
Fig. 3H–J
) .............................................................
C. huila
sp. nov.
(females unknown)
11. Internal genitalia with concave or straight sclerotization around spiracles on posterior plate (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 24–25, 35) .................................................................................................................... 12
– Internal genitalia with convex sclerotization around spiracles on posterior plate (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 32–34) ...................................................................................................................................... 14
12. Sclerotization around spiracles on posterior plate concave; pair of sclerotized bars with anterolateral extensions (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 24, 35) ......................................................................................... 13
– Sclerotization around spiracles on posterior plate straight; pair of sclerotized bars without anterolateral extensions (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 25) ...............................................
C. notabilis
(Mello-Leitão, 1939)
13. Sclerotization around spiracles on posterior plate broad; pair of sclerotized bars anteriorly widened, with long and thin anterolateral extensions (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 35) ...
C. chinacota
Platnick, 1994
– Sclerotization around spiracles on posterior plate narrow; pair of sclerotized bars anteriorly narrow, with short and thick anterolateral extensions (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 24) .......
C. alegre
Platnick, 1994
14. Anterolateral extensions on the pair of sclerotized bars elongated, size reaching at least a third or more of the pair of sclerotized bars (
Figs 1I
,
2E
;
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 33) ..................................... 15
– Anterolateral extensions on the pair of sclerotized bars absent or short, size not reaching a fifth of the pair of sclerotized bars (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 32, 34) ............................................................... 16
15 Sclerotization around spiracles touching at middle of abdomen, forming a single piece of sclerotization; pair of sclerotized bars broad with club-shaped anterolateral extensions fused in the apical third of the pair of sclerotized bars (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 33) ....
C. cajabamba
Platnick, 1994
– Sclerotization around spiracles not touching; pair of sclerotized bars narrow with elongated, thin, boomerang-shaped anterolateral extensions fused from the base to the middle of the pair of sclerotized bars (
Figs 1H–I
,
2D–E
) .................................................................
C. alejandroi
sp. nov.
16. Sclerotization around spiracles not touching (
Platnick 1994a
: figs 32;
Brescovit & Sánchez-Ruiz 2013
: fig. 10) ................................................................................................................................... 17
– Sclerotization around spiracles touching at middle of abdomen, forming a single piece of sclerotization (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 34) ............................................................................
C. paramo
Platnick, 1994
17 Pair of sclerotized bars wide and dorsolaterally folded; anterolateral extensions absent (
Platnick 1994a
: fig. 32) ..........................................................................................
C. chilensis
Platnick, 1994
– Pair of sclerotized bars narrow, with club-shaped apical ends; anterolateral extensions very short (
Brescovit & Sánchez-Ruiz 2013
: fig. 10) .............
C. papamanga
Brescovit & Sánchez-Ruiz, 2013