Published April 18, 2011 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Trilacuna alces Eichenberger, n. sp.

Description

Trilacuna alces Eichenberger n. sp.

(Figs. 13–14)

Type material: Holotype male (PBI_OON 00012147): Thailand: Chiang Mai Province: Doi Pha Hom Pok, west of Fang, 20°02'42.9"N, 99°08'42.8"E, 2000 m, remnant patch of evergreen montane forest, 15. December 2002, leg. P. Schwendinger, deposited in MHNG. 1 female paratype (PBI_OON 00032047), collected with holotype, leg. P. Schwendinger, deposited in MHNG.

Etymology: The species epithet, a noun in apposition, is the Latin word for moose and refers to the shape of the embolus-conductor-complex which, when observed under a stereomicroscope from the dorsal side, looks like the antlers of an moose.

Diagnosis: Similar to Trilacuna rastrum Tong & Li 2007 but both sides of carapace smooth with sparse granules only (fig. 13. E), endites distally only slightly branched, palp with a different set of membranes around embolus (figs. 14. E–H).

Description: Description based on 1 male and 1 female.

MALE: Body length 1.6 mm, proportion carapace length:abdominal length 1:1.13. Uniformly orange-brown species (figs. 13. A–C).

Carapace ovoid to broadly oval, slightly elevated, without spikes, lateral margin straight, rebordered, with blunt denticles (figs. 13. E, F). Eyes posterior row straight from above, procurved from front. Sternum (fig. 13. D) with radial furrows of small pits between coxae, with striated impressions along midaxis, other surface smooth, anterior margin unmodified, setae abundant, needle-like, densest in the middle. Mouthparts: Labium rectangular, fused to sternum, anterior margin deeply incised (lid), (figs. 13. H–I); endites slender, distally only slightly branched (sdb), (fig. 13. I).

Abdomen: Ovoid, dorsal scutum not fused to epigastric scutum, postepigastric scutum long, semicircular, apodemes absent, posterior spiracles not connected by groove.

Legs: Ventral apex of tibiae III and IV with some specialized hairs with fine, plumose, curved hair tip (see fig. 16. H); metatarsi III, IV and tarsus IV with harpoon-like hairs (see fig. 2. G). Femora without spines.

Male genitalia: Epigastric region (fig. 14. A) with a strongly sclerotized, dark brown dot with a small opening (sld) at level of posterior spiracles, framed by lateral, needle-like hairs directed to center (lns). Male palp (figs. 14. C–H) embolus-conductor complex complicated, divided into two conspicuous branches with a retrolateral embolic part and a prolateral conductor-complex. Embolus (emb) long, slender, lamellar, curved mesially, distally framed by a broadish, smooth appendage with lateral, thick setae (ba) (figs. 14. E–H). Conductor-complex with a basal ovoid piece (bop) with one side smooth, other side covered with thin setae; with 3 basal, tongue-like, ventrally directed, dark brown lobes (tdl) and a medial pair of ventral-distally directed, light lobes (mpl), adjacent to a pair of long, dark brown lobes (ldl) and a distal lobe with widened base and pointed tip (dl); all lobes framed by sparse, thin hairs, with extensive dorsal brush of hairs (ebh) (figs. 14. E–H). Bulb more than two times as long as cymbium, pear-shaped, tapering apically, prolaterally abruptly narrowed, with a blunt angle (bla) (figs. 14. C–D). Femur enlarged, stout (figs. 14. C–D).

FEMALE: Body length 1.8 mm, proportion carapace length:abdominal length 1:1.17. Carapace broadly oval in dorsal view. Posterior eye row recurved from above, all eyes about subequal, roundish. Endites distally not branched. Sternum setae sparse, evenly scattered. Postepigastric scutum not fused to epigastric scutum, posterior spiracles connected by dark brown groove (gr), (fig. 14. B); with two strongly sclerotized, recurved arches (sar), (fig. 14. B) anterior to the posterior spiracles; posterior border of epigastric scutum and anterior border of postepigastric scutum with dark brown seam.

Female genitalia: Ventral view (fig. 14. B): Epigastric furrow anteriorly bordered by procurved fold of uterus externus (fo) ending in two lateral dark-brown knobs (dk); with a short, longitudinal structure in the middle (ls).

Distribution: Known only from type locality, the Doi Pha Hom Pok (the second highest mountain of the country) in northern Thailand.

Notes

Published as part of Eichenberger, Beata & Kranz-Baltensperger, Yvonne, 2011, New Trilacuna species from Thailand, Malaysia and Sumatra (Araneae, Oonopidae), pp. 1-31 in Zootaxa 2823 on page 18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.277240

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
MHNG
Event date
2002-12-15
Family
Oonopidae
Genus
Trilacuna
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
PBI_OON 00012147 , PBI_OON 00032047
Order
Araneae
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Eichenberger
Species
alces
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype , paratype
Verbatim event date
2002-12-15
Taxonomic concept label
Trilacuna alces Eichenberger, 2011

References

  • Tong, Y. & Li, S. (2007) One new genus and four new species of oonopid spiders from southwest China (Araneae: Oonopidae). Annales Zoologici (Warszawa), 57 (2), 331 - 340.