On the clubionid spiders (Araneae, Clubionidae) from Xishuangbanna, China, with descriptions of two new genera and seven new species
Author
Zhang, Jianshuang
School of Life Sciences, Guizhou Normal University, Guiyang, Guizhou, China
Author
Yu, Hao
School of Biological Sciences, Guizhou Education University, Guiyang, Guizhou, China
insect1986@126.com
Author
Li, Shuqiang
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3290-5416
Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
text
ZooKeys
2021
2021-10-14
1062
73
122
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1062.66845
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1062.66845
1313-2970-1062-73
310272E8F5DD4DAB84603AFCCD2E9C45
2BCBF5DF56B450B1A9A88480A9F8B9CE
Genus
Matidia Thorell, 1878
Matidia
Thorell, 1878: 182.
Kakaibanoides
Barrion & Litsinger, 1995: 149 (type
K. paranga
Barrion & Litsinger, 1995, considered as junior synonym of
Matidia
by Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001: 156).
Type species.
Matidia virens
Thorell, 1878 from Moluccas, Sulawesi.
Diagnosis.
Species in this genus differ from all other clubionids by the following: the pars cephalica is 2
x
narrower than the pars thoracica (Figs
4E, G
,
6E-G
) (vs. wider), leg I is longest (vs. not longest), and there is a dark ventral abdominal spot in males (Fig.
4F
) (vs. absent).
Matidia
resembles
Malamatidia
,
Nusatidia
, and
Ramosatidia
gen. nov. by the slender, greenish body but is consistently separable by the shape of the copulatory organs: the male palp has a ribbon-shaped embolus (Figs
3A, C-F
,
5A, C-F
) (vs. embolus not ribbon-shaped), the epigyne has one or two depressions (or an atrium) and no septum (Figs
4A, B
,
6A, B
) (vs. depression lacking in
Nusatidia
and
Ramosatidia
gen. nov., or present but with a septum in
Malamatidia
).
Figure 3.
Male palp of
Matidia spatulata
A
prolateral view
B
retrolateral view
C
bulb, prolateral view
D
bulb, ventral view
E
bulb, ventrolateral view
F
bulb, retrolateral view. Abbreviations: C = conductor; E = embolus; EB = embolic base; PTA = prolateral tibial apophysis; RTA = retrolateral tibial apophysis; TA = tegular apophysis. Scale bars: 0.10 mm (equal for
A, B
, equal for
C-F
).
Figure 4.
Matidia spatulata
, epigyne (
A-D
), male habitus (
E, F
) and female habitus (
G, H
)
A
intact, ventral view
B
cleared, ventral view
C
cleared, dorsal view
D
cleared, dorsal view; path of copulatory duct marked
E
dorsal view
F
lateral view
G
dorsal view
H
ventral view. Arrow (
F
) point at dark ventral abdominal spot in male. Abbreviations: BS = bursa; CD = copulatory duct (dashed line showing schematic course of copulatory duct, dorsal); CO = copulatory opening; FD = fertilization duct; SP = spermatheca. Scale bars: 0.10 mm (equal for
A-D
); 2 mm (equal for
E, F
, equal for
G, H
).
Comments.
Based on the two newly discovered species, the description should be extended from
Deeleman-Reinhold (2001)
: the epigyne of
M. spatulata
Chen & Huang, 2006 with 2 depressions, copulatory ducts relatively long (longer than epigyne) (Fig.
4A-D
) (vs. one central atrium and short ducts (shorter than epigyne) in all other congeners (e.g.,
M. xieqian
sp. nov.; Fig.
6A-D
)); an additional exceptional feature in
M. xieqian
sp. nov. is that the cheliceral promarginal teeth are farther from the fang base than the retromarginal ones (vs. promarginal teeth nearer the fang base in all other known
Matidia
species). Both
M. spatulata
and
M. xieqian
sp. nov. have anteriorly located bursae (vs. bursae located laterally or posteriorly).
Note.
Deeleman-Reinhold (2001)
considered
Matidia
putatively polyphyletic. In the same work, she established three new, similar closely related genera (
Nusatidia
,
Pristidia
, and
Malamatidia
) to accommodate 12 new species from SE Asia, and placed them in the subfamily
Clubioninae
. She also transferred four
Matidia
species to
Nusatidia
. The similar somatic characters and sympatric distribution strongly suggest close relationships between the four genera. However, the phylogenetic relationships remain unresolved (
Versteirt et al. 2010
).