A revision of the spider genus Raveniola (Araneae, Nemesiidae). I. Species from Western Asia
Author
Zonstein, Sergei
Author
Kunt, Kadir B.
Author
Yağmur, Ersen A.
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2018
2018-01-30
399
1
93
journal article
30873
10.5852/ejt.2018.399
b389e1f3-82be-4258-9b09-b7ef9d839f99
1163422
E836E138-D6E2-4F62-B4B3-CE2E073F2B24
Raveniola nana
sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:C3C6CE26-9C99-4A76-9A63-46779FEFF1CA
Figs 89
,
122
,
204
,
221
Diagnosis
The structure of the spermathecae of
Raveniola nana
sp. nov.
resembles that of
R. turcica
sp. nov.
(the female of
R. birecikensis
sp. nov.
is unknown), but differs in having the median and lateral receptacles situated considerably closer to each other (
Fig. 204
; cf.
Fig. 205
). Additionally,
R. nana
sp. nov.
is considerably smaller and has a paler coloration than both the latter species.
Etymology
The specific epithet (a variable adjective from Ancient Greek νᾶνος, meaning ‘dwarf’) refers to the very small size of this species.
Material examined
Holotype
TURKEY
:
♀
,
Hatay Province
,
Hassa District
,
Küreci Village
,
36°42′36.89″ N
,
36°27′14.44″ E
,
499 m
,
15 Nov. 2010
,
Anlaş
and
Yağmur
leg. (
AUZM
).
Description
Female
(holotype)
MEASUREMENTS. TBL 10.97, CL 3.69, CW 2.82, LL 0.29, LW 0.65, SL 1.84, SW 1.62.
COLOUR. Most parts of body pale brownish; eye tubercle with partially fused dark brown rings surrounding AMEs and lateral eyes; chelicerae light red; abdomen uniformly light yellowish grey without dorsal pattern, spinnerets pale yellowish grey.
PROSOMA. Carapace and chelicerae as shown in
Fig. 89
. Clypeus and eye group as in
Fig. 122
. Eye diameters and interdistances: AME 0.09(0.12), ALE 0.13, PLE 0.10, PME 0.08, AME–AME 0.08(0.06), ALE–AME 0.05(0.04), ALE–PLE 0.05, PLE–PME 0.02, PME–PME 0.23. Each cheliceral furrow with 8 promarginal teeth and 7 mesobasal denticles. Maxillae each with 5–7 cuspules along heel.
LEGS. Scopula: distal on metatarsi I–II, entire on tarsus I and palpal tarsus, widely divided on tarsus II, elsewhere absent. Trichobothria: 2 rows of 8–9 each on tibiae, 9–10 on metatarsi, 10–11 on tarsi, 8 on palpal tarsus. Paired tarsal claws with 7–10 teeth on each margin. Palpal claw with 6 teeth on inner margin.
LEG MEASUREMENTS.
Femur |
Patella |
Tibia |
Metatarsus |
Tarsus |
Total |
Palp |
1.82 |
1.24 |
1.26 |
– |
1.15 |
5.47 |
Leg I |
2.24 |
1.53 |
1.85 |
1.50 |
1.12 |
8.24 |
Leg II |
2.17 |
1.35 |
1.65 |
1.45 |
1.16 |
7.78 |
Leg III |
2.07 |
1.15 |
1.45 |
1.95 |
1.19 |
7.81 |
Leg IV |
2.58 |
1.37 |
2.35 |
2.83 |
1.36 |
10.49 |
SPINATION. Femora I–IV with one basodorsal spine and 3 dorsal bristles alongside midline; palpal femur dorsally with 3 bristles; palpal patella and patellae I–II aspinose. Palp: femur pd0–0–1; tibia v1–1–2; tarsus v2–0–0. Leg I: femur pd0–0–1; tibia v1–1–2; metatarsus v1–2–2. Leg II: femur pd0–0–1; tibia p0–0–1, v1–2–2; metatarsus v1(0)–1–2. Leg III: femur pd1–1–1, rd1–1–1; patella p1, r1; tibia d1–1(0)– 0, p1–1–1, r1–1–1, v2–2–3; metatarsus pd0–1–0, p1–1–1, r1–1–1, v2–2–3. Leg IV: femur pd0–0–1, rd0–0–1; patella r1; tibia d1–0–0, p1–1–1, r1(0)–1–1, v2–2–3; metatarsus d0–1–1–0, p1–1–1–1, r1–1– 1–1, v2–2–3.
SPERMATHECAE. Moderately broad with receptacles close to each other (
Fig. 204
).
SPINNERETS. PMS: length 0.36; diameter 0.16. PLS: maximal diameter 0.31; length of basal, medial and apical segments 0.55, 0.35, 0.34; total length 1.24; apical segment shortly digitiform.
Ecology
The holotypic female was found in open forest under a stone.
Distribution
South-Eastern Turkey (
Fig. 221
).
Note
There is a possibility that the holotype of
Raveniola nana
sp. nov.
is the unknown female of the allopatric
R. biresekensis
sp. nov.
However, both these species differ in size and colouration (
R. nana
sp. nov.
is noticeably smaller and considerably paler than the latter species), as well as in the relative size of AMEs and PMEs (larger vs smaller, respectively). We thus prefer to consider these names as belonging to different species, until the currently missing males of
R. nana
sp. nov.
and the unknown females of
R. biresekensis
sp. nov.
are collected and identified.