Two new species of spiders of the genus Selenops Latreille, 1819 (Araneae: Selenopidae) and redescription of Selenops scitus Muma, 1953 from Mexico
Author
Valdez-Mondragón, Alejandro
text
Zootaxa
2010
2334
47
58
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.275495
c5560885-0fd2-4d6f-ba81-da9578473181
1175-5326
275495
Selenops aztecus
new species
Figures 1–4
Type
material:
Holotype
:
male,
14 km
from Coatzacoalcos-Villa Hermosa, Tabasco; on bromeliad
Aechmea bracteata
(Sw.) Griseb.
(
Poales
:
Bromeliaceae
) in the corolla, at 5 meters above the ground [Veracruz,
Mexico
],
1 February 1971
, (CNAN-T0414).
FIGURES 1–4.
Selenops aztecus
new species
. Male (Holotype). 1 Habitus, dorsal view; 2 Left chelicera, teeth of promargin and retromargin view; 3 Left palp, ventral view; 4 Left palp, retrolateral view. Scales= 1 mm.
Other material examined.
One immature specimen, same data as
holotype
(
CNAN
3229).
Etymology.
The specific name is dedicated to the Aztecs, a Mesoamerican culture centered in
Mexico
from about
1428 to 1521
.
Diagnosis.
Male can be distinguished by the exclusive shape of the VTA, which is bifurcated, the inner lobe is longer and tongue-shaped and the external lobe is shorter and triangular (
Fig. 3
). The RTA is long and thin distally, it has an upside-down boot-shape (
Fig. 3
), and curved slightly in retrolateral view (
Fig. 4
).
Description. Male (
Holotype
):
Carapace orange, circular, ocular region darker (
Fig. 1
). Carapace with numerous setae on the margin, and shallow longitudinal fovea. Clypeus slightly shorter than diameter of ALE. Chelicerae dark brown. Promargin of the chelicerae with only three teeth, separated by the same distance, the middle one bigger; retromargin with two teeth, widely separated (
Fig. 2
). Sternum round, yellow, orange in the margins. Labium dark orange, paler basally, wider than long, not merged with the sternum. Gnathocoxae orange, paler than labium, lighter distally, trapezoidal in shape. Opisthosoma pale gray dorsally, dark gray around the edges, ventrally pale orange. ALS and PLS gray in retrolateral part.
Palps.
Curved RTA, as long as tibia (
Figs 3, 4
). Embolus short, near to prolateral part of cymbium (
Fig. 3
).
Legs.
Coxae orange, longer than wide. Femora and tibiae orange, with faint dusky bands. Patellae basally dark orange. Spine formulae: Tibiae I: v2.2.2; [leg II missing on both sides]; III-IV: v1.1; metatarsi I: v2.2; [leg II missing]; III-IV: v2.1. Femora I: d1.1.1; II missing; III-IV: d1.1.1.
Measurements.
Total length (prosoma + opisthosoma): 8.60, prosoma: 3.95 long, 4.40 wide. Diameter of eyes: AME 0.32, ALE 0.16, PME 0.30, PLE 0.42. Leg lengths: I: femur 4.85/ patella 2.10/ tibia 4.60/ metatarsus 4.25/ tarsus 1.90/ total 17.70; [leg II missing]; III: 6.00/ 2.08/ 5.15/ 4.60/ 1.80/ 19.63; IV: 5.30/ 2.00/ 5.25/ 4.58/ 1.75/ 18.88. Formula: 2341?
Female:
Unknown.
Distribution.
Only known from the
type
locality (
Fig. 20
).
Remarks.
Following
Muma (1953)
,
Selenops aztecus
sp. nov.
belongs to the
mexicanus
group by having RTA long, slender, extending beyond the base of the cymbium; the median apophysis has two hook-shaped projections, located medially near to retrolateral margin; by having a thin, sheet-like, terminal apophysis extending beyond the embolus, near the distal part of the cymbium (
Figs 3, 4
), and maybe by the leg formula 2341 characteristic for this group. Four species belong to the
mexicanus
species group:
Selenops mexicanus
Keserling, 1880
;
S. galapagoensis
Banks, 1902
;
S. gracilis
Muma,1953
and
S. tehuacanus
Muma, 1953
;
Selenops aztecus
resembles
S. tehuacanus
in the shape of the median apophysis and in total size, but in this new species the RTA is shorter than in
S. tehuacanus
, where it extends distally almost to the positionof MA. The VTA in the new species is bifurcated and wider than in
S. tehuacanus
.
The new species has carapace and legs with light color, whereas
S. tehuacanus
has dusky color pattern.
Note:
Muma (1953)
did not illustrate the male palp of
S. tehuacanus
. The
holotype
is deposited in the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), New York; and was compared with
Selenops aztecus
by means of photographs amiably provided by Nadine Dupérré, assistant of the Dr. Norman I. Platnick (AMNH). These images corroborate the specific distinctiveness of
S. aztecus
sp. nov.