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 sandia
new species
Figs 283–290
, map 19
Type
material:
Male
holotype
from New
Mexico
, Bernalillo County,
Sandia
Mountains, C.C. Hoff (
AMNH
).
EXAMINED
.
Etymology:
The specific name is a noun in apposition taken from the
type
locality
Sandia
Mountains, New
Mexico
,
USA
.
Diagnosis:
Males are diagnosed from all
Agyneta
species by their straight, Y-shaped lamella characteristica (
Fig. 283
). From other species of the group by the large gap between the dorsal and ventral cymbial tubercles (
Fig. 284
), narrower in all other species (
Figs 255
,
266
,
275
). Females are diagnosed from all
Agyneta
by their basally narrow proximal part of scape enlarging in a spatula-shaped plate (
Fig. 287
). To distinguish it from
A. barfoot
see diagnosis of the latter.
Description:
Male
:
Total length 1.90; carapace length 0.84, width 0.72.
MAP. 19.
Localities of
Agyneta sandia
n. sp.
CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace yellow, shiny, finely reticulate; margin, radiating lines suffused with dark gray. Sternum suffused with dark gray. Clypeus height 2. Chelicerae yellow, excavated; ~ 11 seta-tipped tubercles; promargin two teeth, retromargin three tiny denticles; both margins with rounded projection at base of fang, smaller on promargin. Cheliceral stridulatory organ ~ 58 striae, well spaced slowly getting close together basally. ABDOMEN: Oval, uniformly light to dark gray. LEGS: Yellow; leg I total length: 3.63; leg III total length: 2.47; Tm I: 0.20, Tm IV absent. GENITALIA: Palpal retrolateral tibial apophysis curved, smooth; dorsal tibial apophysis absent; two retrolateral, one dorsal trichobothria (
Fig. 283
). Cymbium triangular; glabrous depression present (
Fig. 283
); dorsal cymbial turbercle sharp and rugose; ventral cymbial tubercle elongated, pointed and smooth; prolateral notch shallow (
Fig. 284
). Paracymbium apical pocket medium, anterior pocket short and curved, posterior pocket angled (
Fig. 283
). Embolus tip pointed and thin; small spines apically; basally with two spikes; Fickert’s gland basal, slightly enlarged; ventral lamella slender and pointed; thumb short, reaching below the embolus proper (
Fig. 285
). Embolus proper set apically, of equal part (
Fig. 285
). Anterior terminal apophysis long, narrow with thin long protrusions, no extra process; posterior terminal apophysis with two sharp pointed tip; lamella characteristica long, ending in two large well sclerotized point, with a transparent lamella in between (
Fig. 286
).
Female
:
Total length 1.99; carapace length 0.75, width 0.59.
CEPHALOTHORAX: Coloration as in male. Chelicerae promargin five teeth, retromargin four denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ ~ 51 striae, narrowly spaced. ABDOMEN: Oval, uniformly light to dark gray. LEGS: Coloration as male; palpal tarsal claw absent; leg I total length: 3.00; leg III total length: 2.13; Tm I: 0.22, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Epigynum with proximal part of scape narrow basally, enlarging (2.5x) and spatula-shaped; epigynal slits large, not reaching the anterior part of epigynum; pit hook depression absent (
Fig. 287
); lateral lobes long and folded; stretcher minuscule; pit deep (
Fig. 288
). Median part of scape narrow, short, wrinkled; genital pores situated at base of lateral lobes pockets (
Fig. 289
). Internal genitalia with an oval ventral receptacula and an elongated horizontally positioned dorsal one (
Figs 288, 289
).
Other material examined:
USA
:
Arizona
:
45km
E Douglas,
Guadalupe
Canyon,
13.vii.1972
, 4Ƥ (
CAS
);
Chiricahua
Mountains,
11.vi.
1973
, 2743m, 23, V. Roth (
CAS
);
Chiricahua
Mountains,
Barfoot
Meadows,
05.vii.1975
, 131Ƥ, D. Ubick (
DUC
);
Chiricahua
Mountains, Cave Creek Canyon,
28.viii.1982
, 1554–
1615m
, pitfall, 23, V. Roth (
CAS
);
Chiricahua
Mountains, Cave Creek Canyon, outside of Woodcutter’s Cave,
26.vii.1996
,
5200ft
, 2Ƥ, P. Craig, V. Roth, D. Ubick (
DUC
);
Chiricahua
Mountains, E
Turkey
Creek,
10.viii.1991
, under rocks, 237Ƥ, A. Jung (
DUC
);
Chiricahua
Mountains, Upper Cave Creek,
1828-2286m
, can traps,
27.vii.1984
, 73,
22.viii.1984
, 23, V. Roth (
CAS
); Flagstaff,
16.vi.1934
, 13, W. Ivie, H.A.R (
AMNH
); Hualpal Mountains,
6500ft
,
04.viii.1956
, 1Ƥ, R. Schick (
AMNH
); Santa
Catalina
Mountains, Nugget Cave,
21.vii.1993
, 13, R. Pape (
DUC
); Santa
Catalina
Mountains, Mount Bigelow,
24.vii.1965
, 1Ƥ, W. Gertsch, R. Hastings (
AMNH
).
New
Mexico
: Emory Pass Summit, Mimbres Mountains,
06.ix.1941
, 13, W. Ivie (
AMNH
);
Sandia
Mountains, 13, C. Hoff (
AMNH
).
Texas
: 6.4km N Lockhart,
13.iv.1963
, 6Ƥ, W. Gertsch, W. Ivie (
AMNH
); Bastrop State Park,
24– 27.v.1983
, oak woods, 1Ƥ, S., J. Peck (
AMNH
); Bill Haney Pecan Orchard, FM 1476, 3.2km E
US
377/67,
02
- 09.v.2001, pitfall in pecan orchard, 232Ƥ, A. Calixto (
TAMU
); Constant Sorrow Cave, Camp Bullis,
17.iv.2001
, 1Ƥ, J. Reddell, J. Reyes (
TMM
); Get a Rope Cave, Camp Bullis,
23.viii.2000
, 1Ƥ, G. Veni (JCC); Mastodon Pit,
17.vi.1993
, 1Ƥ, S. Harden, G. Veni (JCC).
Utah
: Verdure,
12.v.1933
, 13, W. Ivie (
AMNH
).
FIGURES 283–289.
Agyneta sandia
n. sp.
283–286, Male. 287–289, Female.
283.
Palp, retrolateral view.
284.
Palp, prolateral view.
285.
Embolus, prolateral view.
286.
Radical division, retrolateral view.
287.
Epigynum, ventral view.
288.
Internal genitalia, ventral view.
289.
Internal genitalia, dorsal view.
FIGURES 290–299.
Agyneta parva
(Banks 1896)
. 290–294, Male. 295–299, Female.
290.
Palp, retrolateral view.
291.
Palp, prolateral view.
292.
Embolus, prolateral view.
293.
Radical division, retrolateral view.
294. 295.
Abdomen, dorsal view.
296.
Epigynum, ventral view.
297.
Internal genitalia, ventral view.
298.
Internal genitalia, dorsal view.
299.
Internal genitalia, lateral view.
Distribution:
Southwestern
USA
(Arizona to Texas).
The
parva
group is the largest and includes eleven species, the group contains some Eastern species,
A. parva
(
Banks 1896
)
,
A. evadens
(
Chamberlin 1925
)
,
A. unimaculata
(
Banks 1892
)
,
A. barrowsi
(
Chamberlin & Ivie 1944
)
, and
A. regina
(
Chamberlin & Ivie 1944
)
, and some Southwestern species,
A. spicula
n. sp.
,
A. grandcanyon
n. sp.
,
A. chiricahua
n. sp.
,
A. crista
n. sp.
,
A. tuberculata
n. sp.
and
A. catalina
n. sp.
The group is defined by two unique characters. The first is the presence of a prong (serrated or not) at the tip of embolus (
Figs 292
,
311
,
318
,
339
,
371
; note that this prong is not an extension of the embolus proper like in the
A. fillmorana
group). Second, the embolus proper set vertically and not related to the tip of the embolus (
Fig. 292
).
Within the group we can easily cluster some similar species,
A. parva
(
Banks 1896
)
,
A. evadens
(
Chamberlin 1925
)
,
A. unimaculata
(
Banks 1892
)
,
A. spicula
n. sp.
,
A. grandcanyon
n. sp.
,
A. chiricahua
n. sp.
and
A. regina
(
Chamberlin & Ivie 1944
)
. They all share non-excavated chelicerae without seta-tipped tubercles in males and the none serrated prong at the tip of the embolus.
In
A. barrowsi
(
Chamberlin & Ivie 1944
)
,
A. crista
n. sp.
,
A. tuberculata
n. sp.
and
A. catalina
n. sp.
, males have excavated chelicerae with seta-tipped tubercles, a serrated prong at the tip of the embolus (
Figs 356
,
363
,
371
,
378
) and an associated prong at the base of the posterior terminal apophysis (
Figs 357
,
364
,
372
,
379
).
Members of the
parva
group can be characterized as such, palpal tibia with two retrolateral trichobothria and a dorsal one; very well developed retrolateral and dorsal tibial apophyses (
Fig. 290
); embolus with apical prong; Fickert’s gland absent; ventral lamella reduced to absent. Note that the ventral lamella in this group is sometimes difficult to observe. Females have long lateral lobes (sometimes folded) and long stretchers (
Figs 297
,
314
,
353
).