Labahitha spiders (Arachnida: Araneae: Filistatidae) from islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans
Author
Magalhaes, Ivan L. F.
799DF5B9-9085-4E58-BE36-371CFADED8AA
División Aracnología, Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales ‘ Bernardino Rivadavia’, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Av. Ángel Gallardo 470, C 1405 DJR, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Department of Biological Sciences, Butler University, Indianapolis, Indiana 46208, USA. National Biodiversity Centre, National Parks Board, 259569, Singapore. Australian Museum, 1 William St, Darlinghurst NSW 2010, Australia.
magalhaes@macn.gov.ar
Author
Berry, James W.
382ECB13-A41F-4BE9-BB80-429F160A1BA3
berryjw@ufl.edu
Author
Koh, Joseph K. H.
1558FA15-A467-447E-838C-CE77CEA7BE4C
josephkhkoh@gmail.com
Author
Gray, Michael R.
AD6E6ED2-297B-4403-8A45-4FD0F5AE4C58
mrbgray7@gmail.com
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2022
2022-03-16
805
1
1
51
http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2022.805.1693
journal article
20128
10.5852/ejt.2022.805.1693
7f51a014-78c1-4d19-bbd7-1d7e3d255475
2118-9773
6373826
B43262BE-6FC4-45D9-8DBF-BF6DCACBF97E
Labahitha fuscata
(
Nakatsudi, 1943
)
comb. nov.
Figs 2A–B
,
4–6
,
29C
Filistata fuscata
Nakatsudi, 1943: 148
, fig. 1a–c. Female
holotype
from
Palau
,
Koror
Island,
Aug.1941
, T. Ogata leg., presumably deposited in the Tokyo University of Agriculture (
Ono 2011
), not examined.
Filistata fuscata
Kishida, 1947: 999
, fig. 2839.
Syntypes
from Japanese
Micronesia
, currently untraceable (
Ono 2011
), not examined. First considered a junior synonym and homonym of
Filistata fuscata
Nakatsudi, 1943
by
Ono (2011)
.
Nr.
Wandella
sp.
–
Gray 1995: 84
, figs 15, 19
.
Tricalamus fuscatus
–
Ono 2011: 185
, figs 1–11; 2013: 19.
Notes
Although neither
Ono (2011)
nor we have examined the
type
specimens, we have seen plenty of specimens from the
type
locality and neighbouring islands that tally with the original descriptions of this species.
Ono (2013)
recorded this species in the Ogasawara Islands in
Japan
.
Gray (1995
: fig. 15) was the first to figure the male of this species. See
Ono (2011)
for a discussion regarding the correct authorship of this species and the priority of
Nakatsudi’s (1943)
name over
Kishida’s (1947)
.
Diagnosis
The male is similar to that of
Labahitha gibsonhilli
in the sharp, triangular apex of the paraembolic lamina and the gently curved distal portion of the sperm duct. It differs by the shorter, more stout palpal bulb and the relatively larger paraembolic lamina (
Fig. 5B, J–L
) (vs palpal bulb longer and slender, with smaller paraembolic lamina in
L. gibsonhilli
). Females can be distinguished from all congeners by the very small median receptacles, which are reduced to a bump with pores, placed posteriorly to the larger, oval lateral receptacles (
Fig. 6
). The deep brown and uniform colouration is also characteristic (
Fig. 4
), although also present in
L. ryukyuensis
(
Ono 2013
)
.
Material examined
AUSTRALIA
•
1 ♂
;
Queensland
,
Torres Strait
,
Darnley Island
; [
9.59747° S
,
143.76142° E
];
AM
.
BRUNEI
•
1 ♀
;
Tutong
,
Tasek Merimbun Park HQ
; [
4.59444° N
,
114.67083° E
];
13 Feb. 2013
;
J.K.H. Koh
leg.;
wooden wall crevices
;
JK 130213.1101
•
1 ♀
; same collection data as for preceding;
16 Apr. 2011
;
JK 110416.1907
.
FIJI
•
1 ♀
;
Vanua Levu
,
Lasema
; [
16.62682° S
,
179.01793° E
];
W.M. Mann
leg.; MCZ 40200
.
MARSHALL ISLANDS
•
1 ♀
;
Kwajalein Atoll
,
Ennugarret Island
; [
9.38452° N
,
167.4881° E
];
9 Jul. 1968
;
J.W. Berry
leg.;
beating trees
in
Pandanus
forest
;
JBJB
•
1 ♂
;
Majuro Atoll
,
Woja
; [
7.09171° N
,
171.38268° E
];
26 Jul. 1968
;
J.W. Berry
leg.;
in coconut litter
;
JBJB
.
MICRONESIA
•
1 ♀
;
Caroline Islands
, “
Truk Islands
” [
Chuuk Island
], “
Moen Island
” [
Weno Island
]; [
7.45575° N
,
151.84985° E
];
12 Jun. 1978
;
J. Berry
and
Beatty
leg.;
in crevices on buildings
;
JBJB
•
1 ♀
;
Caroline Islands
,
Yap Island
,
Yap District
,
Fedor
; [
9.45056° N
,
138.06269° E
];
1 Feb. 1980
;
J.W. Berry
leg.;
in banana leaves
;
JBJB
•
1 ♀
;
Caroline Islands
,
Yap Island
,
Yap District
,
Fedor
; [
9.45056° N
,
138.06269° E
];
13 Apr. 1980
;
J.A. Beatty
leg.;
in web on tree trunk
;
JBJB
•
1 ♂
,
1 ♀
;
Caroline Islands
,
Yap Island
,
Yap
,
near Gilman Point
; [
9.45056° N
,
138.06269° E
];
15 Apr. 1980
;
webs in crevices on mango tree bark
;
JBJB
.
NEW CALEDONIA
•
2 ♀♀
,
1 imm.
;
Nord
,
Poum
; [
20.23333° S
,
164.01667° E
];
13 Feb. 1993
;
N.I. Platnick
,
R.J. Raven
and
M.S. Harvey
leg.;
coastal cliffs
;
AMNH
IFM-0917
,
IFM-0918
.
PALAU
•
1 ♂
;
Caroline Islands
,
Koror Island
; [
7.34068° N
,
134.4792° E
];
17 Mar. 1973
;
J. Berry
and
Beatty
leg.;
in cave entrance rock cracks
;
JBJB
•
1 ♀
; same collection data as for preceding;
JBJB
•
1 ♀
;
Caroline Islands
,
Koror Island
; [
7.34068° N
,
134.4792° E
];
17 Mar. 1973
;
J. Berry
and
J. Beatty
leg.;
in crevices of tree trunk bark
;
JBJB
•
1 ♂
,
1 ♀
;
Caroline Islands
,
Koror Island
, on
Entomology Lab building
; [
7.34068° N
,
134.4792° E
];
7 Mar. 1973
;
J.A. Beatty
leg.;
JBJB
•
1 ♀
; same collection data as for preceding;
6 Mar. 1973
;
J. Berry
and
J. Beatty
leg.;
JBJB
.
Fig. 2.
Labahitha
Zonstein, Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017
, live specimens.
A–B
.
Labahitha fuscata
(
Nakatsudi, 1943
)
comb.nov.
, from Brunei, Tutong.
A
. Female.
B
. Female with juveniles.
C–E
.
Labahitha garciai
(
Simon, 1892
)
comb. nov.
, from Singapore.
C
. Male.
D
. Female (arrow) in her web.
E
. Female. Photos by Joseph Koh, except D by Chris Ang.
Fig. 3.
Labahitha marginata
(Kishida, 1936)
comb. nov.
, females.
A–B
. Brazil, Pernambuco, Tamandaré.
A
. House wall with webs.
B
. Female and prey remains on web.
C
. Mexico, Campeche, Calakmul.
D
. Original illustration included in the description of
Filistata marginata
. Photos: A–B by Leonardo Carvalho; C by Fabián Vol; D reproduced from
Komatsu (1936)
.
Fig. 4.
Labahitha fuscata
(
Nakatsudi, 1943
)
comb. nov.
, females.
A
. Brunei, Tutong, habitus, dorsal (JK 130213.1101).
B
. Papua New Guinea, Bismarck Islands, habitus, dorsal (ZMB).
C–G
. New Caledonia, Poum (AMNH IFM-0917).
C
. Habitus, dorsal.
D
. Habitus, ventral.
E
. Habitus, lateral.
F
. Genital region, ventral.
G
. Spinnerets, ventral.
H–J
. Female from the same locality (AMNH IFM- 0918).
H
. Sternum, ventral.
I
. Carapace, dorsal.
J
. Left calamistrum, retrolateral. Scale bars = 1 mm, except where noted.
Fig. 5.
Labahitha fuscata
(
Nakatsudi, 1943
)
comb. nov.
, males.
A–I
. Palau, Koror (JBJB), left palp.
A
. Retrolateral.
B
. Prolateral.
C
. Dorsal.
D
. Prolateral, detail.
E
. Tarsal organ.
F
. Trichobothria base.
G
. Detail of tegular spines.
H
. Detail of arrays of micro-teeth combs.
I
. Semi-plumose seta.
J
. Marshall Islands (JBJB), prolateral.
K–L
. Torres Strait, Darnley Island (AM), prolateral. Figures not to scale.
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
•
2 ♀♀
;
Bismarck Islands
; [
5.55234° S
,
150.13883° E
];
18 Nov. 1896
;
ZMB
.
Description
Male
(from
Palau
,
Koror
Island, Entomology Laboratory, JBJB)
COLOURATION (in ethanol). Carapace grey-brown, with darker irregular patterning in the median postocular area and the weakly defined mid-lateral and lateral marginal bands. Chelicerae, labium, endites and sternum brown. Legs with dark grey-brown pigmentation on femora, paler on tibiae and reduced to absent on remaining segments. Abdomen colour brownish grey with and several indistinct chevrons, but patterning poorly preserved.
HABITUS. Anterior margin of carapace subrounded, sclerotized but apical part with an unsclerotized curved edge. Sternum subrounded, posteriorly bluntly pointed, a pair of posterior sigilla present.
Fig. 6.
Labahitha fuscata
(
Nakatsudi, 1943
)
comb. nov.
, endogyne, dorsal, lactic acid cleared.
A
. Brunei, Tutong (JK 110416.1907).
B
. Same locality (JK 130213.1101).
C
. Papua New Guinea, Bismarck Islands, habitus, dorsal (ZMB).
D
. New Caledonia, Poum (AMNH IFM-0918).
E
. Palau, Koror (JBJB) (not to scale).
MEASUREMENTS. Total length 3.23. Carapace length 1.37, width 1.13. Clypeus length 0.33. Eye diameters and interdistances: AME 0.05, PME 0.08, ALE 0.09, PLE 0.09, AME–AME 0.05, PME–PME 0.09. Sternum length 0.95, width 0.71. Palp: femur length 0.77, height 0.23; tibia length 0.49, height 0.22. Legs 1423. Leg I: 6.33 (1.63, 0.49, 1.80, 1.42, 0.99). II: 4.63 (1.24, 0.43, 1.14, 1.18, 0.64). III: 4.26 (1.10, 0.39, 0.95, 1.07, 0.75). IV: 5.41 (1.41, 0.49, 1.43, 1.44, 0.64). Abdomen length 1.86, width 0.86.
LEG MACROSETAE. Metatarsus (Mt) I 1 a.vr.
PALP (
Fig. 5
). Cymbium horseshoe shaped; bulb enlarged with a median constriction, sperm duct Nshaped with a single coil; tegulum with a large prolateral excavation, its surface adorned with strongly spined short ridges (each typically bispinate); large crest-like paraembolic process with a fimbriated dorsal margin bent more or less prolaterally, and narrowing distally to end in an extension above the embolus; comb-like microtooth arrays present on paraembolic process; embolus slender, slightly curved.
Female
(from
Palau
,
Koror
Island, Entomology Laboratory, JBJB)
COLOURATION. Carapace similar to male, but anterior margin of carapace pigmented. Abdomen greyish brown with a longitudinal pale patch mid-dorsally and several indistinct pale chevrons laterally. One pair of posterior sternal sigilla present.
MEASUREMENTS. Total length 4.75. Carapace length 1.69, width 1.33. Clypeus length 0.29. Sternum length 0.95, width 0.71. Palp: femur length 0.91, height 0.3; tibia length 0.42, height 0.3. Leg I: 5.71 (1.45, 0.52, 1.49, 1.32, 0.93). II: 4.22 (1.16, 0.49, 0.95, 0.95, 0.67). III: 3.7 (1.05, 0.48, 0.78, 0.85, 0.54). IV: 4.92 (1.41, 0.60, 1.25, 1.05, 0.61). Abdomen length 3.06, width 2.07.
LEG MACROSETAE. Absent. Calamistrum with three rows.
EPIGASTRIC FURROW. Unmodified.
ENDOGYNE (
Fig. 6
). Median lobes very small with a few clustered pores; lateral lobes large, ovoid in side view, with scattered pores.
Variation
Male genitalia is similar across islands (
Fig. 5
). The shape of the lateral receptacles varies from rounded to oval, and the pores in the lateral receptacles may be concentrated in the ectal side or dispersed throughout the receptacle (
Fig. 6
).
Natural history
Specimens have been collected in habitats as diverse as wooden wall crevices, in coconut litter, in crevices on buildings, by beating trees in
Pandanus
forest, in banana leaves, in web on tree trunk, in webs in crevices on tree bark, in coastal cliffs and in cave entrance rock cracks.
Distribution
Widespread in
Micronesia
and Melanesia, extending into Borneo and
Japan
(
Fig. 1
).