Systematic revision and total evidence phylogenetic analysis of the Andean family Metasarcidae Kury, 1994 (Opiliones: Laniatores), with description of two new genera and twenty new species
Author
Benedetti, Alipio Rezende
Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biociencias, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Caixa Postal: 11.461, 05422 - 970, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil & Instituto Federal de Minas Gerais, campus Sao Joao Evangelista, Av. Primeiro de Junho, 1043, Sao Joao Evangelista, MG, Brazil
alipiobenedetti@gmail.com
Author
Pinto-da-Rocha, Ricardo
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3959-2205
Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biociencias, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Caixa Postal: 11.461, 05422 - 970, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil
text
Arthropod Systematics & amp; Phylogeny
2022
2022-08-16
80
309
388
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/asp.80.e73829
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/asp.80.e73829
1864-8312-80-309
D5C0468B99A14EF39237D9BC51A8BDA3
11907D1B6F665D96B5FD2F9751431366
3.9.
Metasarcidae Kury, 1994
Phalangodidae
Tricommatinae
[part]:
Mello-Leitao
1926
: 330 (key);
Roewer 1927
: 536 (cit, key); 1935: 45 (cit, key);
Mello-Leitao
1935
: 92 (key); 1938: 137 (key);
Roewer 1949
: 56 (cit);
Rambla 1978
: 305 (cit).
Prostygninae
[part.]:
Roewer 1913
: 140 (desc, key); 1923: 449 (rdesc, key); 1943: 30 (cit);
Mello-Leitao
1926
: 348 (key);
Roewer 1952
: 57 (cit);
Soares et al. 1992
: 1 (rdesc, key)
Mitobatinae
[part.]:
Roewer 1913
: 284;
1923
: 508 (rdesc, key);
Mello-Leitao
1932
: 390 (rdesc, key);
Soares and Soares 1949
: 224 (rdesc), 225 (key).
Metasarcinae
Kury, 1994: 349 (desc);
Kury and Maury 1998
: 144; (cit);
Kury 2003
, 144 (cat);
Acosta 2002
: 72 (cit), 78 (biog);
Giribet and Kury 2007
: 82;
Kury 2007
: 168 (cit);
Kury and Pinto-da-Rocha 2007a
:185 (cit);
Kury and Pinto-da-Rocha 2007b
: 196 (cit), 198 (biol), 199 (biol), 201 (key), 203 (biog);
Pinto-da-Rocha and Giribet 2007
: 91 (cit);
Yamaguti and Pinto-da-Rocha 2009
: 319 (syst), 320 (biol), 321-324 (cit), 324 (syst), 325 (cit), 326-329 (syst), 358 (syst);
Ferreira and Kury 2010
: 706 (biol).
Mendes 2011
:437 (cit), 439 (cit), 441 (cit), 479 (syst).
Metasarcidae
:
Pinto-da-Rocha et al. 2014
: 525 (cit), 527 (syt), 532 (syst);
Kury and Villarreal 2015
: 3-5, 10, 14, 23, 26, 29-30, 38 (cit);
Kury and Carvalho 2020
: 55 (cit);
Benavides et al. 2021
: 655 (syst).
Type genus.
Metasarcus
Roewer, 1913.
Genera composition.
Ayacucho
Roewer, 1949;
Huancabamba
gen. nov.
;
Incasarcus
Kury and Maury, 1998;
Lumieria
gen. nov.
;
Metasarcus
Roewer, 1913; and
Tschaidicancha
Roewer, 1957.
Diagnosis.
Metasarcidae
can be easily diagnosed by other
Gonyleptoidea
by only one feature, the penis with lateral finger-like sacs. Only one genus (
Metalibitia
,
Cosmetidae
) of
Gonyleptoidea
possess lateral sacs on ventral plate but its shape and position is different from it and not homologous. It differs from
Stygnidae
by having ocularium undivided; by
Gonyleptidae
by pedipalpal femur with long spines; by
Cosmetidae
by pedipalpus somewhat cylindrical and with spines; by
Agoristenidae
by having tarsal process; by
Cranaidae
by pedipalpal femur smooth or small-tuberculate.
Redescription.
Gonyleptoidea
with eye mound tall and rounded (
Ayacucho
) or low, medially depressed (the other genera); ocularium with a pair of low tubercles, a pair of high spines or unarmed. Chelicerae swollen in males of some species (also in some females of
A. titschacki
).
Pedipalpus
long and robustly armed; femur sub cylindrical, not flattened (slightly flattened in
Ayacucho
); femur and patella in males with a proapical spine (except
Ayacucho
). Alpha-type DSS (
Incasarcus
and majority of
Ayacucho
), gamma-type DSS (
Metasarcus fellinii
sp. nov.
and
Ayacucho spielbergi
sp. nov.
), gamma-P-type DSS (some
Metasarcus
and
Tschaidicancha joseochoai
sp. nov.
) and kappa-type DSS (
Huancabamba
gen. nov.
,
Lumieria
gen. nov.
,
Tschaidicancha
and some
Metasarcus
). DS moderate to densely granulate. Scutal area I undivided or divided (
Lumieria
gen. nov.
and some
Metasarcus
and
Tschaidicancha
); area III generally armed with a pair of high spines, a pair of low spines (
I. argenteus
) or tubercles (most
Ayacucho
,
Metasarcus trispinosus
sp. nov.
) or unarmed (some
Ayacucho
,
I. ochoai
,
Metasarcus vacafloresae
sp. nov.
). Male coxa IV generally unarmed; armed with an acute long prolateral tubercle in most
Ayacucho
or with a retrolateral armature in
Metasarcus bergmani
sp. nov.
and
M. limachii
sp. nov.
Femur IV shorter than DSL in most
Ayacucho
, about same size in
Huancabamba
gen. nov.
and much longer in the other genera. Tarsal process present. VP of penis well defined, generally subrectangular, without cleft, with three to many (more than 13) pairs of MS C, and lateral finger-like sacs. Stylus long and generally laterally flattened, dorsoventrally widened (broad and sturdy
Lumieria
gen. nov.
and cylindrical in some species); generally with swollen apex and with a caruncle. Dorsal process of glans absent or present.
Distribution.
The family
Metasarcidae
occurs in Andean Mountains of Bolivia and Peru, the southern limit being the border with Argentina and the northern limit the
Huancabamba
depression, situated in northern Peru (Figs
28
-
31
). Most species are found in moderate to high altitudes (circa 4,000 m above sea level). The only exception to is
Metasarcus beni
sp. nov.
(about 170 m above sea level) which occurs in the mountain foothills. A second species, the type-species of the genus
Metasarcus
,
M. bolivianus
, has been attributed to the Bolivian lowland region, the Chaco Province, without mention of a more precise locality.
Most species (28 spp.) are known only from their type-locality, and those known from a few records of distribution (6 spp.) are endemic to small areas, where the maximum distance between two records is 150km. A few localities possess sympatric species, such as: Parque Nacional
Yanachaga-Chemillen
/Peru (
T. chaplini
sp. nov.
,
T. joseochoai
sp. nov.
,
A. pasolinii
sp. nov.
,
T. scorsesei
sp. nov.
), Centro Turistico Ilpa/Peru (
L. woodyalleni
gen. et sp. nov.
,
L. antonionii
gen. et sp. nov.
), Zongo/Bolivia (
M. kurosawai
sp. nov.
,
M. vacafloresae
sp. nov.
), Cutervo/Peru (
A. uniseriatus
comb. nov.
,
H. kubricki
gen. et sp. nov.
,
A. spielbergi
sp. nov.
).
Ayacucho titschacki
, which occurs in the Peruvian Central Andes, (near to Ocollo, Virgem de Cacharras de Cocha) and
Ayacucho tapacocha
nom. nov.
, which occurs in northern Peru, are the species with the largest distributions recorded in the
Ayacucho
and Ancash areas, respectively. This high level of endemism is comparable to the eastern coast of South America, where most species occupy small areas of endemism (see Da-Silva et al. 2017). However, the harvestmen fauna from Peru and Bolivia is poorly sampled, which prevents a more detailed comparison with other regions.
All Bolivian species of
Metasarcidae
belong to the type genus,
Metasarcus
, and occur in the eastern Andes from La Paz to Tarija Province (
M. fellinii
sp. nov.
is the southernmost species of the family), the Altiplano being the northern distribution limit. Its sister genus,
Incasarcus
is present only in the Peruvian Cusco Department, in Montane tall grass vegetation (Puna) and scrub and montane Rain Forest. Both genera are separated by Puna Seca and Titicaca lake, which means the Altiplano.
Ayacucho
is widespread in most of the Peruvian Andean region, from
Cajamarca
to
Ayacucho
departments, the Rio Apurimac being the southern limit of its distribution. The only metasarcid species recorded from the western Andean foothills is
A. roeweri
nom. nov.
, from Rio Fortaleza (2700 m above sea level, Ancash, Cajacay, Peru), where the riparian forest El Bosque de Fortaleza is found. Most species can be found in two types of vegetation, the Mountain short grass and Andean wastes (Quechua) and Mountain tall grass and scrub (Puna). One species,
A. pasolinii
sp. nov.
was recorded from the Mountain Rain Forest (Parque Nacional
Yanachaga-Chemillen
, Oxapampa, Peru).
The monotypic genus
Huancabamba
gen. nov.
is recorded only in Cutervo (
Cajamarca
Department), in Mountain Rain Forest.
Lumieria
gen. nov.
has only two species, sympatrically distributed at Centro Turistico Ilpa (Junin Department - Bolivia). This locality is covered by Mountain tall grass and scrub.
Tschaidicancha
has four species recorded in only three regions, two of which are very close to each other.
T. scorsesei
sp. nov.
,
T. joseochoai
sp. nov.
, and
T. chaplini
sp. nov.
occur in Mountain Rain Forest, and
T. weyrauchi
in areas with scrubs of Mountain Tall Grass and Scrub.