Redescription of the poorly known genus Ikuma Lawrence, with synonymy and description of a new species from Namibia (Araneae, Palpimanidae)
Author
Zonstein, Sergei
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4515-0630
Steinhardt Museum of Natural History, Klausner 12, 69978 Tel-Aviv, Israel
serzon56@gmail.com
Author
Marusik, Yuri M.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4499-5148
Zoological Museum, Biodiversity Unit, University of Turku, FI- 20014, Finland & Department of Zoology & Entomology, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein 9300, South Africa
text
African Invertebrates
2022
2022-10-04
63
2
105
119
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/afrinvertebr.63.90530
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/afrinvertebr.63.90530
2305-2562-2-105
9043366D4428449ABC61D7310BA183D4
44F791AD583A5D77BC8671D2A04BD799
Subfamily
Palpimaninae
Notes.
This subfamily differs from the
Otiothopinae
by possessing accessory terminal sclerites in the male bulb (which are absent in the males belonging to the latter subfamily; see
Platnick 1975
). The
Palpimaninae
can be distinguished from the
Chediminae
in having eight eyes with widely spaced ALE and PLE vs. two, six or eight eyes with contiguous or lacking ALE and PLE in the chedimine spiders (
Zonstein and Marusik 2017
). The subfamily is distributed in the Old World, where its range is limited to the Mediterranean, Sahara-Sind region (including Middle East, Gujarat and Central Asia), and the mainland Sub-Saharan Africa. The record of
Palpimanus argentinus
Mello-Leitao
, 1927 in South America, based only on the types, has not been confirmed by later field studies, and may refer either to a sole introduced species (
Platnick 1975
) or, even more likely, to the incorrectly interpreted collection data (
Zonstein and Marusik 2017
). The
Palpimaninae
are divided between two sharply uneven groups of the genus rank: a species-rich
Palpimanus
Dufour, 1820, with 38 named species distributed throughout the entire subfamily range (WSC 2022), and a small Namibian genus
Ikuma
Lawrence, 1938, embracing only two species.