A revision of the African wolf spider genus Amblyothele Simon
Author
Russell-Smith, Tony
,,
Author
Jocqué, Rudy
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:
Royal Museum for Central Africa, B- 3080 Tervuren, Belgium & -
Author
Alderweireldt, Mark
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:
Royal Museum for Central Africa, B- 3080 Tervuren, Belgium & -
text
ZooKeys
2009
2009-07-29
16
16
149
180
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.16.233
7838bb10-6ff5-4333-823c-cb5debdb973c
1313–2970
576480
AC717D1B-B74E-4C1D-86D8-0F3030C3C4F9
Amblyothele
Simon, 1910
Amblyothele
Simon, 1910
.
Type
species
,
Amblyothele albocincta
Simon, 1910
, by original designation.
Small wolf spiders (males 3.08-4.17, females 3.33-5.17) without pronounced carapace pattern, sometimes with pale median band and darker striae radiating from fovea (
Fig. 1
). Anterior eye row (
Fig. 2
) usually either straight or, more often, recurved, with AME ranging in size from equal to twice diameter of ALE. PME 1.40- 2.25 times diameter apart; PLE 0.66-0.86 times diameter of ALE. Eye region normally suffused with black. Chelicerae pale, mottled or streaked with grey, clothed in long dark setae; posterior margin with two teeth, proximal one normally larger, anterior margin normally with three minute teeth with middle one largest although in some species anterior margin lacks teeth altogether. Labia and maxillae coloured as chelicerae with maxillae 1.75 to 2.0 times longer than labium. Sternum pale, scutiform, moderately to strongly produced between hind coxae, with scattering of dark setae. Legs pale yellow to pale brown, clothed in short adpressed setae, noticeably longer and thinner than those of all other well-characterised piratine genera, with length/width ratio of femur I ranging from 5.60 to 10.50. Leg IV 1.25-1.35 times length of leg I. Ventral spines of leg I normally with three pairs on tibia and three on metatarsus, distal pairs normally reduced in size. All leg spines long, thin and pale. Tarsi with three claws (
Fig. 9
); paired claws with two to five long thin teeth and few tiny ones at base; unpaired claw small on raised pad, with four or five small teeth, having two long serrated bristles adjacent. Tarsal organ with keyhole shaped aperture (
Fig. 8
). Abdomen pale yellow to brown, sometimes suffused with grey and usually with paler dorsal folium (
Fig. 1
).
Type
species,
A. albocincta
, with row of four paired pale white spots on dorsal surface. Abdomen of males without dorsal scutum. Dorsal surface sometimes clothed in dark hairs. Ventrally pale yellow to white. Spinnerets long, ALS twice length of AMS, clearly 3 segmented (
Figs 1
,
4, 5
). Dorsally pale to dark brown or grey, ventrally pale white or cream. ALS in female with two major ampullate gland spigots near median margin, surrounded by numerous piriform gland spigots. PLS with numerous aciniform gland spigots.
Male palp longer and narrower than that of most piratine genera and cymbium without terminal claws. MA located distally on bulb, very large U or C-shaped sclerite with two branches (
Figs 6, 7
,
10
,
14
); larger, anterior branch directed antero-mesally, blade-shaped. Smaller posterior branch directed anteriorly, variable in shape: blunt lobe with rounded tip in
A. albocincta
, abruptly truncate in
A. togona
and
A. longipes
, pointed barb in
A. hamatula
. Course of E almost totally obscured by MA in unexpanded palp (
Figs 6, 7
) with only very tip visible near base of MA in
A. albocincta
,
A. latedissipata
and
A. togona
.
Sub-tegulum relatively large in most species, occupying from quarter to third of surface of bulb, but reduced in size in
A. hamatula
.
Figure 1.
Amblyothele togona
Roewer
, female, habitus (MRAC 223302). Scale =
1 mm
.
Figures 2-9.
Amblyothele togona
Roewer
(specimens from Masako,
Congo DR
) Scanning electron micrographs
2
female
carapace, frontal view
3
epigyne, ventral view
4
anterior lateral spinneret; retro-caudal view
5
posterior lateral spinneret, last segment, ventral view
6
male
palp, ventral view
7
male
palp, detail, ventral view
8
tarsal organ on leg 2
9
tarsal claws, leg 2. (E: embolus; MA: median apophysis; TA: tegular apophysis).
Female epigyne resembling that of other piratine genera in being simple plate (
Fig. 3
), often obscured by densely packed, long, barbed setae. Epigynal plate suboval in shape, shallowly (
A. latedissipata
) to deeply (
A. togona
) notched on posterior border. Spermathecae and their ducts visible to greater or lesser extent through lateral margins of epigynal plate. Viewed internally, genital openings visible to either side of central notch on posterior margin of epigyne with spermathecal ducts extending anteriorly, either straight or curving mesally. Spermathecae relatively small, either spherical or pyriform. With two small laterally-oriented glands at base of spermathecal ducts, near the posterior margin of the epigynal plate; gland ducts connect to spermathecal ducts.
Diagnosis of
Amblyothele
Simon, 1910
Pirata
, the nominate genus of the subfamily, is distributed throughout the world with the exception of SE Asia(?),
Australia
and the Pacific region. The tegular apophysis in
Pirata
varies widely in form (see, for example
Almquist (2005)
for European species,
Tanaka (1988)
for those of
Japan
and
Wallace (1978)
for Nearctic species). The tegular apophysis in
Amblyothele
resembles that of some species of
Pirata
(e.g.,
P. latitans
(Blackwall, 1841)
,
P. insularis
Emerton, 1885
,
Pirata uliginosus
(Thorell, 1856)
and among European species (see
Almquist 2005
, figs. 236 a-h, 237 a-e) but not that of the
type
species,
P. piraticus
(Clerck, 1757)
. The epigynes of
Amblyothele
species also resemble those of
Pirata
species but in several species have a conspicuous notch on the posterior margin. Despite the similarity of the male palp in at least some
Pirata
species and
Amblyothele
, the two genera differ significantly in somatic characters. The legs of
Amblyothele
are much longer and thinner than those of
Pirata
species with the length/width ratio of Femur I of three
Pirata
species ranging from 3.21 to 3.33 and that for three
Amblyothele
species from 5.67 to 10.45. Furthermore, the legs of
Pirata
species are more or less densely clothed in semi-erect setae while those of
Amblyothele
species have only a sparse clothing of short, adpressed setae. Overall, most
Amblyothele
species are smaller than
Pirata
species although the smallest
Pirata
(e.g.
P. latitans
) overlap in size with the largest
Amblyothele
.
In the palp of the genera
Proevippa
,
Trabea
and
Pterartoria
, the basal part of the tegulum bears one or more, more or less translucent, poorly sclerotised membranous extensions (see
Fig. 10b
in
Russell-Smith 1981
and
Fig. 1a
in
Russell-Smith 1982
) which are lacking in
Amblyothele
.
Furthermore, the terminal apophysis in
Proevippa
Purcell, 1903
and
Trabea
Simon, 1876
is much larger than that in
Amblyothele
and has a characteristic tongue-shaped form with a sharply reflexed distal portion (
Russell-Smith 1981
,
1982
).