A new species of whip spider, Sarax sinensis sp. nov., from Fujian, China (Arachnida: Amblypygi: Charinidae)
Author
Wu, Shi-Yang
0000-0001-6812-1878
Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 94720, USA. https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 6812 - 1878
Author
Zhu, Xiao-Yu
0000-0001-9221-2673
School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China. https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 9221 - 2673
Author
Liu, Yi-Jiao
0000-0002-2169-5628
School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China. https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 2169 - 5628 Entomology Department, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560, USA.
Author
Miranda, Gustavo Silva
Author
Román-Palacios, Cristian
School of Information, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA.
Author
Li, Zheng
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin 78705, USA.
Author
He, Zhu-Qing
Museum of Biology, School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-07-08
5162
4
397
409
journal article
93237
10.11646/zootaxa.5162.4.4
d5fac901-db5b-4e59-bb13-42eb1649c706
1175-5326
6810390
7EA85D03-EEFB-4D45-9B7F-D31C0A87C8B0
Sarax sinensis
Wu, Zhu, Li & He
sp. nov.
Figs. 4–9
Holotype
.
ECNU-IV-0004, adult male,
Fuzhou City
,
Fujian Province
,
China
,
26.03 °N
,
119.30 °E
,
39m
a.s.l.
,
Yu Lin-rui
and
Wang Ya-fei
leg.
Paratype
.
All immature, unknown sex, same data as holotype, ECNU-IV-0003, ECNU-IV-0005, ECNU-IV-0006, ECNU-IV-0007.
Carapace.
Seven frontal setae; frontal process triangular. Small granules densely and evenly scattered between ocular triads and among sulci. Median eyes and median ocular tubercle well developed; pair of setae on median ocular tubercle; lateral eyes well developed, pale. Three pairs of furrows reach the middle line; fovea oval (
Figs. 4A
,
5A
).
FIGURE 4.
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
from Fujian, China. Holotype, ECNU-IV-0004, male. A: Dorsal; B: Ventral.
Sternum.
Three well-sclerotized segments. Tritosternum with round base, elongated and conical, ten setae on the basal region. Pair of setae close to apical setae, in the middle of the projection. Tetrasternum rounded, convex, with a pair of setae. Pentasternum rounded, convex, smaller than tetrasternum, with a pair of setae (
Fig. 6A
).
Abdomen.
Flat and oblong. Many tiny punctuations evenly distributed on the surface, smaller than those on the carapace. Genital operculum with 37 setae randomly on the surface. Ventral sac presents. Abdomen narrower than the carapace (
Figs. 4A, 4B
,
5B
).
Chelicera.
Dorsum covered with many fine setae and three frontal setae (ectal view). Cheliceral furrow with four internal teeth. First distal tooth (upper) bifid; Ia and Ib subequal. Second tooth subequal to the first and third ones. Fourth tooth longest. Claw with eight denticles (mesal view) (
Figs. 6B, 6C
).
FIGURE 5.
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
A: Frontal process of holotype, ECNU-IV-0004; B: Ventral sac of paratype ECNU-IV- 0006.
FIGURE 6.
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
Holotype, ECNU-IV-0004, male. A: Sternum, ventral view; B: Chelicera, mesal view; C: Chelicera, ectal view.
Pedipalp.
Coxa: Fourteen setae encircle around the carina. Many fine setae on the ventral surface and denser near the ventral mesal region. Trochanter: many rufous setae on antero-dorsal side. Two small subequal ventral spines. Ventral apophysis small and setiform. Femur: finely granulated. Four dorsal spines, decreasing in length. One prominent setiferous tubercle between spine I and proximal margin. Four ventral spines, decreasing in length. Patella: finely granulated. Four dorsal spines. Prominent spine distal to spine I. Three setae on spine I. One seta on spine II. One short secondary spine between spine III and IV. Spine II three-fourths of spine I, spine III half of spine II, spine IV one-third of spine III. Three ventral spines, decreasing in length. Spine II two-thirds of spine I, and spine III half of spine II. Many setae on posterodorsal side, opposite to spine series. Tibia: two large dorsal spines present with many rufous setae near the bottom of the spine, one ventral spine. Many setae on the posterodorsal side, opposite to spines. Tarsus: two dorsal spines. Distal spine long, about one-third length of tarsus, proximal spine one-third length of the distal spine. Many long setae randomly distributed throughout the segment. Ventral row of cleaning organ with 25–30 setae (
Figs. 7A, 7B, 7D
,
8B, 8C
).
FIGURE 7.
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
Holotype, ECNU-IV-0004, male. A: Pedipalp, ventral view; B: Pedipalp, dorsal view; C: Walking-leg tarsi with arolium, ventral view; D: Pedipalp ventral apophysis, ventral view.
Legs.
All setose. Leg I elongated, 20 segments in tibia, 34–35 segments in tarsus. Basitibia IV with three pseudo-articles. Walking-leg tarsi with arolium. Distitibia IV trichobothria
sc
and
sf
series each with 5 trichobothria (
Figs. 7C
,
8A, 8D
).
Color pattern.
Pedipalp, carapace, abdomen, and legs mostly dark gray. The margin of carapace pinkish. Spines on the pedipalp black, tips light red. All setae brown (
Figs. 4A, 4B
).
Male genitalia.
Paired lobes covered ventrally by genital operculum. LoL1 with 2 grooves and small spines at the base. LoL2 larger than LoL1 with many small spiculate projections. LoD cuspid with smooth surface at the tip. The surface of LoD base with many spiniform projections, larger than those of LoL2. Spiniform projections wider and 3-5 projections share a base near the bottom of LoD. Surface of Fi has a large smooth area with about fifteen grooves parallel with each other diagonally (
Fig. 9
).
Measurements
: see
Table 2
.
TABLE 2.
Measurements (mm) of the carapace, abdomen, pedipalp segments, and femora of the legs of the holotype (ECNU-IV-0004).
ECNU-IV-0004
|
Sex
|
Male |
Total length with chelicerae
|
6.86 |
Carapace
|
Maximum width
|
3.31 |
Maximum length
|
2.26 |
Abdomen
|
Maximum width
|
2.74 |
Maximum length
|
3.75 |
Right |
Left |
Pedipalp lengths
|
Trochanter
|
0.62 |
0.60 |
Femur
|
4.12 |
4.07 |
Patella
|
4.82 |
4.77 |
Tibia
|
1.10 |
1.02 |
Tarsus and claw
|
1.48 |
1.47 |
Femur length
|
Leg I
|
22.94 |
22.98 |
Leg II
|
9.89 |
9.98 |
Leg III
|
10.98 |
11.02 |
Leg IV
|
12.49 |
12.68 |
No. segments tibia I
|
21 |
21 |
No. segments tarsus I
|
35 |
34 |
No. segments basitibia IV
|
3 |
3 |
Distribution.
China
(
Fujian
)
Etymology.
The species is named after
China
. This is the first
Amblypygi
species found in the mainland of
China
. The other two species described from
China
are restricted to islands.
Natural History
:
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
is found in
Fuzhou
city of
Fujian
,
China
.
They
inhabit abandoned houses and hide under rocks and crevices on walls.
The
range of their habitats remains to be studied.
This
species is oviparous, and the female carries the egg sac that contains 12–
13 eggs
. The egg sac has a transparent membrane that encircles spherical white eggs. During postembryonic growth, pedipalps develop allometrically
.
Phylogenetic position.
Higher-level phylogenetic relationships were equivalent between our study and the trees presented in both Miranda
et al
. (2021) and
Zhu
et al
. (2021
;
Figure 3
). The monophyly of major groups including the
Charinidae
(bootstrap=93%; posterior probability [pp hereafter]=0.94),
Sarax
(bootstrap=99%; pp=0.98) and
Charinus
(bootstrap=99%; pp=1) were highly supported as found in Miranda
et al
. (2021). Phylogenetic relationships between congeneric species in
Weygoldtia
and
Charinus
were also similar between this study and the phylogenetic trees presented in
Zhu
et al
. (2021)
, and Miranda
et al
. (2021). Specifically, the reciprocal monophyly of the samples analyzed in this study and assigned to
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
was recovered and highly supported (bootstrap=100%; pp=1). Furthermore,
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
is consistently found nested within
Sarax
. We recovered
Sarax ioanniticus
as the sister species to
Sarax sinensis
sp. nov.
in both Bayesian and maximum likelihood inference frameworks (bootstrap=83%; pp=0.97).