A new species and new records of Hentzia (Araneae: Salticidae: Dendryphantinae) from the United States
Author
David B. Richman
text
The Journal of Arachnology
2010
38
73
78
journal article
Hentzia alamosa
new species
Figs. 1–10, 17
Type
material.
—
Female
holotype
,
USA
:
Texas
:
Cuevas Amarillas, Big Bend Ranch State Park
,
Presidio County
, Texas (
29°29ʹ41.5ʺN
104° 0 6ʹ 0 0ʺW
,
1094.5 m
),
28 March 2004
,
D.B. Richman
, beating cottonwood along wash east of caves, deposited in the collection of Texas A & M Insect Collection (
TAMUIC
), College Station
,
Texas
.
Male
and
female
paratypes
: same data as holotype. Male paratype deposited in
TAMUIC
;
female
paratype
deposited in the
Florida State Collection of Arthropods
, Gainesville, Florida
.
Other material.
—
USA
:
Texas
:
2 females
,
Ojito Adentro, Big Bend Ranch State Park
,
Presidio County
(29°29ʹ28.8ʺN
,
104°0 3ʹ42ʺW
,
1162 m
),
14 October 2000
(
TAMUIC
)
and
27 March 2004
(Arthropod Museum, New Mexico State University -
NMSU
),
D.B. Richman
. Beating cottonwoods.
Distribution.
—Known only from Big Bend area.
Etymology.
—The name is taken from the Spanish alamo for cottonwood, the trees on which this species has so far been collected.
Diagnosis.
—Males of this species would key out to
Hentzia palmarum
in Richman (1989), but the females have a very distinctive flattened to normal U-shaped atrium above the bell-like central structure (
Figs. 4, 5
,
9, 10
).
Hentzia palmarum
has either two separate openings or these are connected as an upside-down, U-shaped depression (
Figs. 11–15
and Richman (1989, figs. 24, 26).
Females so far collected, with the exception of one from Ojito Adentro (TAMUIC), which had three sets of distinct paired brown spots on the dorsum, lack a pattern on their abdomen except for a few tiny spots and occasionally vague
73 streaks, whereas most
H. palmarum
females have at least a faint, but distinct, set of blotches and chevrons (see Kaston 1978; Richman 1989). Females of
H. alamosa
also have all pale legs, whereas in
H. palmarum
females the front pair is darker than the rest. The male chelicerae (
Figs. 6
,
17
) differ from those of
H. fimbriata
, in which the teeth are evenly spaced (Richman 1989, fig. 37), and more closely resembled those of
H. palmarum
. However, in
H. palmarum
the retromarginal tooth is usually slightly more proximal than the proximal promarginal tooth (Richman 1989, figs. 18, 19), while in
H. alamosa
the proximal promarginal and retromarginal teeth are almost exactly in line when viewed ventrally (
Fig. 17
). The one male collected also had a very light band on the tip of its abdomen, which has not been seen in
H. palmarum
. This is the first
Hentzia
reported from the Chihuhuan Desert, and the
type
locality is approximately
385 km
southwest of the nearest known records for
Hentzia palmarum
in Edwards County, Texas.
Figure 1.—Habitat of
Hentzia alamosa
new species
near Cuevas Amarillas, Big Bend Ranch State Park, Presidio County, Texas. Adults were collected in the cottonwood trees in the background.
Figure 2.—Female holotype of
Hentzia alamosa
new species
from Big Bend Ranch State Park, Presidio County, Texas. Note light legs and general lack of distinct markings.
Figure 3.—Male allotype of
Hentzia alamosa
new species
from Big Bend Ranch State Park, Presidio County, Texas. Note white band on dorsal abdomen anterior to spinnerets.
Female.
—Female
holotype
from Presidio County, Texas: Total length 4.2, carapace length 1.9, carapace width 1.6. Ventral spines on first tibiae 2-2-2. Leg formula 1423. Chelicerae with 2 promarginal teeth and one larger retromarginal tooth. Body almost unicolored yellowish, with two dark speckles (4–6 on
paratype
females) on the dorsum of the abdomen [very faint slanted bands laterally in
paratype
female from Cuavas Amarillas, and one female from Ojito Adentro had dark brown markings similar to those found on females of
Hentzia mitrata
(Hentz)
(see Richman 1989, fig. 30)]. Chelicerae red-brown, endites lighter red-brown with pale distal portion. Sternum brown anteriorly, fading to yellow toward the posterior. Legs and palpi pale yellow.
Male.
—Male allotype (
paratype
) from Presidio County, Texas. Total length 4.5, carapace length 2.0, carapace width 1.7. Leg formula 1423. General description close to
H. palmarum
, with 2 promarginal teeth and one larger retromarginal tooth, all acute and the latter almost exactly in line with the proximal promarginal tooth (
Figs. 6
,
17
). Abdominal pattern distinctive, with light band (appearing as spot) at tip of abdomen. However, as only one male is known this may not be a diagnostic character.
Natural History.
—This species seems to be closely associated with tall trees, especially, if not exclusively, cottonwoods (
Fig. 1
). Attempts to collect it on associated trees and shrubs along the wash at Cuevas Amarillas on the same date as the
types
failed, despite numerous attempts. Males are only known from March and females from March and October. Adults may be found (like
H. palmarum
) throughout the year.
Remarks.
—An illustration by Kaston (1948, fig. 1814) bares some slight resemblance to the epigynum of this species, but resembles the epigynum of
H. fimbriata
even more closely. On the other hand illustrations of the epigynum of
H. palmarum
in Peckham & Peckham (1909, plate 42, fig. 1b) and in Chickering (1944, fig. 42), as well as unpublished drawings by Wayne Maddison (see Proszynski 2007), all agree with the illustrations of Richman (1989). It is not certain exactly what species Kaston was actually illustrating, since none of the specimens examined for the revision of the genus (Richman 1989) appeared to match this drawing, which was presumably of a female from Connecticut.