But wait, there's more! Descriptions of new species and undescribed sexes of flattie spiders (Araneae, Selenopidae, Karaops) from Australia Author Crews, Sarah C. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9360-6236 California Academy of Sciences, Department of Entomology, 55 Music Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA, 94118, USA screwsemail@gmail.com text ZooKeys 2023 2023-02-27 1150 1 189 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1150.93760 journal article http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1150.93760 1313-2970-1150-1 A38C5FB69F664F858788AAA53D21704D 2D0F861C78665B9BABB241437CA5ED53 Karaops feedtime Crews, 2013 Fig. 73G , Maps 1 , 9A, B Karaops feedtime Crews, 2013: 454, figs 13, 14 (♀, examined). Diagnosis. This species is unique from all other species in the Pilbara/Gascoyne group by having a long median lobe that isn't as strongly sclerotized posteriorly as the rest of the lobe. Additionally, it has asymmetrical, long ducts with several curves. The accessory bulb is erroneously labeled as a spermatheca in fig. 14 of Crews (2013) . The spermathecae are very long, with small bulbs on either end. The accessory bulbs are on the copulatory duct, with a small duct and a small bulb at each end of the spermathecae ( Crews 2013 : figs 13, 14). Description. The description of the female can be found in Crews (2013) . Male. Unknown. Distribution. Known only from the type locality on the border of the Chichester and Fortescue subregions of the Pilbara, Western Australia (Map 9A, B ). Natural history. Karaops feedtime occurs in the Fortescue subregion of the Pilbara bioregion, close to the border of the Chichester subregion, around an area that has been altered extensively by mining operations. In the central part of the region where the specimen was collected, the habitat is bunch grass and short grass communities on and around mesas ( Kendrick 2001b ). The climate is semi-desert tropical, with rainfall occurring mostly during summer cyclone events. This species may be an SRE. March is quite a bit wetter than April and because this species was collected in a pitfall trap over both months, it is difficult to determine the climate at the time. The Fortescue subregion is conspicuously empty of Karaops (Map 9B ). This could be because there are more plains and grasses and less rocky areas or less areas to survey because of a lack of mining operations in the subregion (Suppl. material 2: table S1). Discussion. Karaops feedtime is known from a single specimen that was collected in a pitfall trap that was left out from late March to late April. It is one of the many species known from a single specimen that falls within the range of the widespread K. nyiyaparli , which was the only species that was collected on a recent field trip to the type locality of K. feedtime . Karaops feedtime and K. nyiyaparli are not morphologically similar in genitalic characteristics. The type is damaged (Fig. 73G ).