Taxonomic revision of the spider genera Agyneta and Tennesseellum (Araneae, Linyphiidae) of North America north of Mexico with a study of the embolic division within Micronetinae sensu Saaristo & Tanasevitch 1996
Author
Dupérré, Nadine
text
Zootaxa
2013
3674
1
1
189
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3674.1.1
9c8e7b58-7cc0-407f-a8e9-d76311dcd290
1175-5326
283954
981F80ED-96D7-40C7-8A3C-677954416A2E
Agyneta catalina
new species
Figs 376–379
, map 24
Type
material:
Male
holotype
from Arizona, Pima County,
Catalina
Mts., Molino Basin,
27 Nov. 1976
, V. Roth, Shoroepfer (
AMNH
).
EXAMINED
.
Etymology:
The specific name is a noun in apposition taken from the
type
locality,
Catalina
Mountains, Arizona,
USA
.
Diagnosis:
Males are distinguished from all
Agyneta
species by their extremely large, rounded dorsal and ventral cymbial tubercles (
Fig. 377
). From
A. tuberculata
by the elongated process of the posterior terminal apophysis (
Fig. 379
), short in the latter (
Fig. 372
).
Description:
Male
:
Total length 1.91; carapace length 0.90, width 0.60.
CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace orange, shiny, finely reticulate; lightly suffused with gray along margin. Sternum suffused with dark gray. Clypeus height 3. Chelicerae orange, apical part lighter, excavated; ~ 15 setatipped tubercles; promargin four denticles, retromargin three tiny denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ visible ~60 striae, narrowly spaced. ABDOMEN: Uniformly light gray. LEGS: Orange; leg I total length: 4.08; leg III total length: 2.63; Tm I: 0.27, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Palpal retrolateral tibial apophysis short, tip slightly rugose; dorsal tibial apophysis wide, smooth; two retrolateral trichobothria and one dorsal (
Fig. 376
). Cymbium pointed; glabrous depression present (
Fig. 376
); dorsal cymbial tubercle with rounded tip, smooth; ventral cymbial tubercle long, with extra process basally and smooth rounded tip; prolateral notch medium (
Fig. 377
). Paracymbium apical pocket medium, anterior pocket medium creating a small cover, posterior pocket absent (
Fig. 376
). Embolus tip wide and pointed, with wide and dentate prong; ventrally rugose; Fickert’s gland absent; ventral lamella transparent, spiny; thumb reaching over embolus proper (
Fig. 378
). Embolus proper set apically, small and of equal part (
Fig. 378
). Anterior terminal apophysis wide with numerous long and short protrusions; terminal apophysis narrow, tip pointed with one long spur basally (
Fig. 379
arrow); lamella characteristica wide, tapering into a small, pointed tip with dentate prong retrolaterally (
Fig. 379
).
Female
:
Unknown.
Other material examined:
None.
Distribution:
Southwestern
USA
, Arizona.
The
micaria
group includes five species,
A. micaria
(
Emerton 1882
)
,
A. fabra
(
Keyserling 1886
)
,
A. hedini
Paquin & Dupérré 2009
,
A. ledfordi
n. sp.
and
A. platnicki
n. sp.
All members of the group share three unique characters, the male palpal cymbium is expanded dorsally in a conical apex (
Figs 380
,
390
,
402
,
412
,
421
), the prolateral notch is very deep and hides the tip of the embolus (
Figs 381
,
391
,
403
,
422
) and finally the tip of the embolus is bent apically (
Figs 382
,
392
,
404
,
414
,
423
). The group has intriguing morphology, the embolus proper is either set medially or apically, but definitely not related to the embolus tip. Furthermore,
A. fabra
is the only known
Agyneta
species thus far to have a mastidion (
Fig. 395
). In three species in the group
A. fabra
,
A. hedini
and
A. platnicki
the Fickert’s gland is present (
Figs 392
,
404
,
414
) and two species have a seta-tipped tubercles on the endites
A. ledfordi
and
A. hedini
. In addition, males of
A. micaria
, have an elongated abdomen with an abdominal pattern that suggests possible ant mimicry.
The group is characterized as such: males with excavated chelicerae; palpal tibia with two retrolateral and one dorsal trichobothria; paracymbium with apical pocket, anterior pocket long and curved (
Fig. 380
). Ventral lamella of the embolus absent; thumb very long, reaching well beyond the embolus proper (
Fig. 382
); the radical division sclerites are complex and difficult to distinguish (
Figs 405
,
424
). The females are characterized by the position of the genital pores in the median part of scape (
Figs 389
,
411
); short but wide lateral lobes and small stretcher (
Figs 400
,
420
).