Cybaeus (Araneae: Cybaeidae): the consocius species group of the Californian clade
Author
Bennett, Robb
0000-0002-6587-7079
ennett@shaw.ca
Author
Copley, Claudia
0000-0002-8184-5819
ccopley @ royalbcmuseum. bc. ca; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 8184 - 5819
ccopley@royalbcmuseum.bc.ca
Author
Copley, Darren
0000-0002-1944-4272
dcopley @ royalbcmuseum. bc. ca; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 1944 - 4272
dcopley@royalbcmuseum.bc.ca
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-04-29
4965
3
401
436
journal article
7001
10.11646/zootaxa.4965.3.1
6cadad22-abf2-4abe-9165-156d5c63ece3
1175-5326
4752531
94FB89CF-2083-4FAC-AE60-B8CCF1D5FE8E
Cybaeus vulpinus
Bennett
Figs 40–41
,
57
,
80–83
,
86
Bennett in
Copley
et al.
2009: 387
, figs 79–84.
World Spider Catalog 2021
.
Type material examined.
U.S.A.
:
California
:
Holotype
male
.
Tuolumne County
,
Fox Gulch
,
1.5 miles
north of
Columbia
, 2200’,
6.xii.1986
,
D. Ubick
(
CAS
)
.
Paratypes
:
Specimens (including one non-paratype female) and locality data in
Copley
et al.
(2009)
.
Notes.
Camp Connell is in Calaveras County, not El Dorado County as recorded in
Copley
et al.
(2009)
.
Other material examined
.
U.S.A.
:
California
:
Amador.
1♀
,
3 mi.
W of
Volcano
,
25.iii.1995
,
D. Ubick
(
CAS
)
.
Diagnosis.
Among the males of the
consocius
group species,
C. vulpinus
is only likely to be confused with
C. pan
spec. nov.
Distinguishing the males of these two species is discussed under the diagnosis of
C. pan
spec. nov.
Among the females of the
consocius
group, the female of
C. vulpinus
is only likely to be confused with the other species which lack U-shaped copulatory ducts:
C. ubicki
spec. nov.
,
C. penedentatus
,
C. opulentus
spec. nov.
,
C. pan
spec. nov.
, and
C. simplex
. The females of
C. vulpinus
and
C. pan
spec. nov.
are very similar; distinguishing them is discussed under the diagnosis of the latter. The females of the other four species are more easily distinguished; separating females of
C. ubicki
spec. nov.
,
C. opulentus
spec. nov.
, and
C. simplex
from females of
C. vulpinus
is discussed under the diagnoses of those species. Females of
C. vulpinus
and
C. penedentatus
are easily separated by atrial morphology: broad in
C. vulpinus
(
Fig. 40
)
versus
very small in
C. penedentatus
(
Figs 46–47, 49–50
,
52
).
Description
. See
Copley
et al.
(2009)
.
Distribution and natural history
. Western slopes of the south central Sierra
Nevada region
of eastern
California
in Amador, Calaveras, and Tuolumne Counties (
Fig. 86
). A very rarely encountered species known only from the
holotype
male, collected in December, and four individually collected females.