A review of the spider genus Haplodrassus Chamberlin, 1922 in Crimea (Ukraine) and adjacent areas (Araneae, Gnaphosidae)
Author
Kovblyuk, Mykola M.
Author
Kastrygina, Zoya A.
Author
Omelko, Mikhail M.
text
ZooKeys
2012
205
59
89
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.205.3491
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.205.3491
1313-2970-205-59
Haplodrassus Chamberlin, 1922
Type species:
Drassus hiemalis
Emerton, 1909.
Diagnosis.
Male palp with large terminal apophysis, thick embolus, hooked median apophysis and RTA flattened, often shifted dorsally. Epigyne with thick sclerotized lateral pockets and with one anterior hood. Posterior median eyes close together, separated by their radius or less (
Platnick and Shadab 1975
;
Levy 2004
).
Haplodrassus
is most related to
Orodrassus
Chamberlin, 1922 with three species from the Nearctic, but differs by having a flattened RTA (bifid or laterally expanded in
Orodrassus
), lacking a median epigynal projection (present in
Orodrassus
) and by the presence of lateral epigynal sclerites (absent in
Orodrassus
) (
Platnick and Shadab 1975
).
In terms of habitus and coloration
Haplodrassus
resembles only two other genera that occur in Crimea and the eastern Mediterranean:
Parasyrisca
Schenkel, 1963 and, to a lesser extent,
Drassodes
Westring, 1851. However,
Haplodrassus
is easily distinguished by having a large terminal apophysis (absent in the other genera), a flat retrolateral tibial apophysis widened dorsally (conical or flat and tapering in
Drassodes
and
Parasyrisca
), a broad embolus (cylindrical or hidden in the other genera), and the presence of heavily sclerotized lateral epigynal pockets (absent in
Drassodes
and
Parasyrisca
).
Distribution.
Holarctic and India (
Platnick 2012
).