On Venezuelan pholcid spiders (Araneae, Pholcidae)
Author
Huber, Bernhard A.
33607F65-19BF-4DC9-94FD-4BB88CED455F
Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Bonn, Germany.
b.huber@leibniz-zfmk.de
Author
Villarreal, Osvaldo
679C385E-B068-4351-9D2F-97753E534C26
Museo del Instituto de Zoología Agrícola, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Maracay, Venezuela. & Museu Nacional / UFRJ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
osvaldovillarreal@gmail.com
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2020
2020-10-01
718
1
317
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2020.718.1101
4069574
F9E9A91E-488C-4DB1-9361-E788E9AC5BC1
Mecolaesthus cordiformis
(
González-Sponga, 2009
)
Figs 215
,
266–270
,
274–276
, 1042
Carbonaria cordiformis
González-Sponga, 2009: 2
, figs 1a–j (♂
♀
).
Mecolaesthus cordiformis
–
Huber
et al.
2014a: 417
.
Notes
The
types
of this species seem to originate from the same locality as those of the very similar
M. azulita
Huber, 2000
. We do
not
have precise coordinates of this locality, but we assume that the actual collecting spots of the
types
of both nominal species are within ~
1 km
from the coordinates given for
the
M. cordiformis
type
specimens below; the coordinates given in the original description are certainly wrong (~
370 km
N).
The newly collected material listed below is from very close to the
type
locality, presumably less than
1 km
SW, at almost the same altitude. Nevertheless, there seem to be small morphological differences between these new specimens and the
types
of both
M. cordiformis
and
M. azulita
as well as between the two described species. The two described species are known from very small samples (2 ♂♂ and 1 ♂,
1 ♀
, respectively), and we were
not
able to directly compare the specimens under the microscope. As a result, we consider the available data insufficient to decide on the species status of the two described species and the newly collected specimens. We chose a conservative approach in leaving both described species as valid and tentatively assign the newly collected specimens to
M. cordiformis
. Future collecting should cover several forest patches in the area and combine morphological and molecular data to reevaluate this unsolved complex.
Diagnosis
Distinguished from very similar
M. azulita
by male chelicerae (indistinct humps below main apophyses rather than small but distinct apophyses; median distal area without distinct sclerotized plates), by genital bulb distal dorsal part straight (curved toward dorsal in
M. azulita
), and by larger procursus (distal part beyond ventral ‘knee’ longer); female of
M. azulita
unknown.
Figs 266–267.
Mecolaesthus cordiformis
(
González-Sponga, 2009
)
; holotype from Mérida, La Carbonera (MIZA 105601; MAGS 1064); left male pedipalp, prolateral and retrolateral views. Scale line: 0.5 mm.
Type
material
VENEZUELA
–
Mérida
•
♂
holotype
,
1 ♀
paratype
,
MIZA 105601
(
MAGS 1064
),
La Carbonera
(“frente a el Hato La Carbonara, carretera Mérida-Jaji”) [approximately
8.633° N
,
71.366° W
],
19 Jun. 1987
(
A.R. Delgado, M.A
.
González S.
); examined
.
New record/material assigned tentatively
VENEZUELA
–
Mérida
•
5 ♂♂
,
3 ♀♀
,
ZFMK
(Ar 21890), and
1 ♀
in pure ethanol,
ZFMK
(Ven20- 111),
forest near La Carbonera
(
8.6276° N
,
71.3688° W
),
2380 m
a.s.l.
,
8 Feb. 2020
(
B.A. Huber
,
O. Villarreal M., Q. Arias C.
)
.
Notes on newly collected specimens
As indicated above, the newly collected specimens do neither fit perfectly
M. cordiformis
nor
M. azulita
. Complicating the situation further, they also resemble
M. tabay
in certain aspects. In particular, the male chelicerae seem indistinguishable from those of
M. tabay
(cf.
Huber 2000
: fig. 1040). The procursus also resembles
M. tabay
(cf.
Figs 259–261
) but there is only a single dorsal process proximally at the transition between tarsus and procursus. The genital bulb lacks the curved dorsal sclerite of
M. azulita
and it lacks the distinctive prolateral sclerite of
M. tabay
. The epigynum appears identical to that of the
paratype
of
M. cordiformis
(compare
Figs 269
and
274
), i.e., it is
not
triangular like that of
M. tabay
but rather evenly curved posteriorly; the internal female genitalia resemble those of
M. tabay
but the lateral sclerites are
not
strongly bent at their lateral extremes (compare
Figs 273 and 276
). Tibia
1 in
five males: 4.6–5.1 (mean 4.8); in three females: 3.1, 3.3, 3.5.
Figs 268–270.
Mecolaesthus cordiformis
(
González-Sponga, 2009
)
; holotype and paratype from Mérida, La Carbonera (MIZA 105601; MAGS 1064).
268
. Male ocular area, clypeus, and chelicerae, oblique frontal view.
269–270
. Epigynum, ventral and lateral views. Scale lines: 0.5 mm.
Figs 271–276.
Mecolaesthus
Simon, 1893
; epigyna, ventral views and cleared female genitalia, ventral and dorsal views.
271–273
.
M. tabay
Huber, 2000
; from Mérida, El Valle (ZFMK Ar 21888).
274– 276
.
M. cordiformis
(
González-Sponga, 2009
)
; from Mérida, near La Carbonera (ZFMK Ar 21890).
Distribution
Known from
type
locality only, in
Venezuela
,
Mérida
(Fig. 1042).
Natural history
According to
González-Sponga (2009)
the
type
specimens were collected in rotten tree trunks. Most newly collected specimens were taken from the trunks of (alive) tree ferns.