A survey of East Palaearctic Gnaphosidae (Araneae). 3. On new and poorly known Gnaphosa Latreille, 1804
Author
Marusik, Yuri M.
Author
Omelko, Mikhail M.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3894
1
journal volume
10.11646/zootaxa.3894.1.4
1bff28d0-db79-4a0f-8cfa-fc6cd82ce2ae
1175-5326
251800
70B9B045-9C14-47B1-B0C7-8DDA09AFE02B
Gnaphosa mandschurica
Schenkel, 1963
Figs 92–94
, Map 2.
Gnaphosa mandschurica
:
Ovtsharenko et al. 1992
: 45
, figs 151–152, 155–158 (♂♀); Marusik & Logunov 1995: 187, figs 53–54 (♂);
Song et al. 1999
: 450
, figs 261N, 262D (♂♀);
Song et al. 2004
: 110
, figs 62A–D (♂♀).
Gnaphosa glandifera
Schenkel
: Marusik & Logunov, 1995: 187, figs 38–39 (♀,
holotype
).
For complete synonym listing and references see
Platnick (2014)
.
Material examined
.
KAZAKHSTAN
,
Kokchetav
[now
Akmola
]
Area
:
3♂
(
ISEA
), Kuibyshevsk Dist., Rudeevskiy State Farm, ca 67°N, 53°E, 1982 (I.V.Knor).
Comments
.
Schenkel (1963)
described this species under six different names. Five species were described on the basis of females, and one by male (
G. braendegaardi
). This species seems have the longest embolus of the Palaearctic species. Teeth or ridge on the basis of embolus are lacking or strongly reduced.
Distribution.
This species was recently reported from
Kazakhstan
for the first time by
Gromov (2011)
. His record lies
250 km
east from the current record, which is the northeasternmost in the whole range.
Gnaphosa mandschurica
is known from northern
Kazakhstan
to Eastern
Mongolia
and neighbouring Inner
Mongolia
, and from
Nepal
to Gansu.