The Genus Hadruroides Pocock, 1893 (Scorpiones: Iuridae), in Peru: New Records and Descriptions of Six New Species
Author
Ochoa, José A.
Author
Prendini, Lorenzo
text
American Museum Novitates
2010
2010-06-25
2010
3687
1
56
https://bioone.org/journals/american-museum-novitates/volume-2010/issue-3687/684.1/The-Genus-Hadruroides-Pocock-1893-Scorpiones--Iuridae-in-Peru/10.1206/684.1.full
journal article
2885
10.1206/684.1
9e73be91-fc4a-4e48-84ae-09453e2785a2
0003-0082
4735531
6AA8B6B2-45DB-4B2E-884C-78A1D507F5A1
Hadruroides aguilari
Francke and Soleglad, 1980
Figure 1
Hadruroides aguilari
Francke and Soleglad, 1980: 2–8
, figs. 1,
3–20
;
Kovařík, 1998: 135
;
Sissom and Fet, 2000: 411
;
Fet et al., 2004: 24
;
Ochoa and Chaparro, 2008: 5
.
TYPE MATERIAL
:
PERU
:
Lima
Department:
Lima Province
:
Holotype
♂,
2 ♀
paratypes
(
AMNH
), Cajamarquilla (11
°
57
'
S 76
°
54
'
W, ca.
800 m
),
3.i.1976
, O.F. Francke.
DIAGNOSIS:
Hadruroides aguilari
appears to be most closely related to
H. lunatus
and
H. juanchaparroi
, based on the similar carination of sternite VII and metasomal segments I–IV.
Haduroides
aguilari
may be separated from these species by the elongated metasomal segments, e.g., segment II is longer than wide and segment V (♂) approximately three times longer than wide in
H. aguilari
, compared with
H. lunatus
and
H. juanchaparroi
, in which segment II is as wide as long, and the length:width ratio of segment V (♂) varies from 2.04 to 2.59. Additionally, in
H. lunatus
and
H. juanchaparroi
, the pedipalp chela fixed finger of the adult male is curved, creating a distinct proximal gap with the movable finger when the fingers are closed, whereas the fixed and movable fingers of the adult male are straight, such that no proximal gap is evident when the fingers are closed, in
H. aguilari
.
DISTRIBUTION: This endemic Peruvian species is known only from the
type
series and, despite extensive searches, no additional material has been collected. The
type
locality is now an urban zone, close to the Peruvian capital of
Lima
(fig. 1), and no natural habitat remains there. However, it is possible that the species still occurs in adjacent areas of natural habitat.
ECOLOGY: According to
Francke and Soleglad (1980)
,
H. aguilari
has been collected at night from the tops of terrestrial bromeliads (
Tillandsia
sp.
,
Bromeliaceae
), and is sympatric with
H. lunatus
, found under stones and bromeliad mats.