Published December 31, 2013 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Agyneta lophophor Chamberlin & Ivie 1933

Description

Agyneta lophophor (Chamberlin & Ivie 1933)

Figs 450–458, map 30

Microneta lophophor Chamberlin & Ivie 1933: 35, pl. 10, f. 103–106. (Description Ƥ). Meioneta lophophor Chamberlin & Ivie 1947: 59. (Transferred Ƥ from Microneta, recorded 3). Agyneta lophophor Buckle et al. 2001: 100. (Transferred from Meioneta).

Type material: Microneta lophophor Chamberlin & Ivie 1933, Ƥ HOLOTYPE from South Fork of Raft River (AMNH). Not found. NOT EXAMINED.

Diagnosis: Males are diagnosed from all Agyneta by their elongated lamella characteristica, reaching the tip of the cymbium (Fig 450), from A. girardi, by their large, angular embolus (Fig. 452), rounded in the latter (Fig. 460). Females are diagnosed from all species by their extremely large epigynal slits with lateral lobes not filling the furrows (Fig. 455), from A. girardi by the extremely long lateral lobes (Fig. 457), much shorter in the latter (Fig. 465).

MAP. 30. Localities of Agyneta lophophor (Chamberlin & Ivie 1933), Agyneta girardi n. sp.

Description: Male: Total length 1.79; carapace length 0.78, width 0.65.

CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace light yellow-orange, shiny, finely reticulate; margin, radiating lines and pars cephalica lightly suffused with dark gray; trident mark present. Clypeus height 2. Sternum strongly suffused with dark gray. Chelicerae light yellow-orange, excavated, transversely suffused with gray; ~ 23 seta-tipped tubercles; promargin three teeth, retromargin three denticles, both margins with projection near base of fang. Cheliceral stridulatory organ ~ 38 striae, well spaced throughout. ABDOMEN: Uniformly light to dark gray. LEGS: Light yellow; leg I total length: 3.11; leg III total length: 2.22; Tm I: 0.27, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Palpal retrolateral tibial and dorsal tibial apophysis absent; two retrolateral trichobothria and a dorsal one (Fig. 450). Cymbium rounded; glabrous depression present (Fig. 450); cymbial turbercles absent; prolateral notch absent (Fig. 451). Paracymbium apical pocket small, anterior pocket small and curved, posterior pocket small, spine-like (Fig. 450). Embolus tip pointed; base of embolus enlarged with large spur; apico-ventrally with large process; Fickert’s gland bulbous, set medially; ventral lamella large, transparent and serrated; thumb large, reaching well beyond the embolus proper (Fig. 453). Embolus proper set apically on a short horizontal ridge, of equal part (Fig. 453). Anterior terminal apophysis long with a few long protrusions; posterior terminal apophysis tip twisted, base striated; lamella characteristica long and thin, with median triangular extension (Fig. 454).

Female: Total length 2.11; carapace length 0.83, width 0.61.

CEPHALOTHORAX: Same as in male. Chelicerae promargin five teeth, retromargin four teeth. Cheliceral stridulatory organ ~29 striae, well spaced. ABDOMEN: Same coloration as male. LEGS: Same coloration as male; palpal tarsal claw absent, palpal tibia and metatarsus suffused with dark gray; leg I total length: 2.98; leg III total length: 2.24; Tm I: 0.24, Tm IV: absent. GENITALIA: Epigynum with narrow proximal part of scape constricted medially; epigynal slits extremely large; pit hook depression shallow and wide (Fig. 455); lateral lobes long, not filling the epigynal slits; stretcher indistiguishable; pit small (Figs 455, 457). Median part of scape narrow; genital pores situated in the middle of lateral lobes (Figs 457, 458). Internal genitalia with large oval ventral receptacula and a small dorsal one (Figs 456, 457).

Other material examined: CANADA: Alberta: Elkwater Lake Provincial Park, 09.vi.1963, under stones ingrass, hillside, 339Ƥ, A. Turnbull (CNC); Lethbridge, 28.v–04. vi.1981, 13, 04–11. vi.1981, 13, K. Richards (DBC). Saskatchewan: 17km SW Simmie, 22–27.v.1995, pitfalls in paririe, 1Ƥ, J. Pepper (DBC); 8km NE Saskatoon, 11–26.v.1967, 43, E. Gorin (DBC); 9.6km WSW Dundurn, 22.vii.1972, pine plantation in sandhill, 132Ƥ, D. Buckle (DBC); Estevan, 28.vii.1965, 13, J., W. Ivie (AMNH); Fort Qu’Apelle, iv.1969, 13, R. Hooper (DBC); Hanley, 09–30. v.1995, 13, hedge row by field, 30.v–19. vi.1995, 13, cultivated land, 02–26.vi.1996, 131Ƥ, 26.vi–13. vii.1996, 2 Ƥ, hedge row by field, K. Pivnick (DBC); Katepwa, 13.vi.1962, beating chokecherry, 13, A. Turnbull (CNC); North Battleford, 06–26.v.1997, pitfalls, fescue with trees, 1Ƥ, K. Pivnick (DBC); Radisson, 11.ix.1968, 131Ƥ, W. Ivie (AMNH); Saskatoon, 18.x.1971, 13, 24.v.1976, 13, viii.1981, 13, 01– 31.x.1981, 133Ƥ, 26–30. iv.1982, 1 Ƥ, 15–30. vi.1982, 23, 01–15.vii.1982, 33, 15–30. vii.1982, 13, 01– 30.viii.1982, 33, 19.viii.1982, 1Ƥ, 01–15. ix.1982, 1 Ƥ, 15–30. ix.1982, 1 Ƥ, 01–15. x.1982, 1 Ƥ, 23.iv.1983, 13, pitfalls in urban yard, D. Buckle (DBC); Saskatoon, 16.vii.1971, 13, 05.iv.1972, 131Ƥ, 20.ix.1980, 13, in house, 16.iv.1972, 1Ƥ, shrub covered hillside, leaf litter, 01.v.1978, 23, in garden surface litter, 01–03.v.1978, 234Ƥ, surface litter, D. Buckle (DBC); St. Denis, 31.v–21.vi.1995, 131Ƥ, 04–24. vi.1996, 13, pitfalls, cultivated trees, D. Buckle (DBC). Yukon Territory: Carcross, vi– 07.vii.1981, pitfall, sand dune, 431Ƥ, C. Dondale (CNC); Kluane National Park, 06.vi–06.vii.1981, pitfall, clay-sage slope, 1Ƥ, C. Dondale (CNC). USA: Alaska: Alaska Highway, mile post 835, viIi.1968, 1 Ƥ, W. Ivie (AMNH). Colorado: West of Cascade, 22.vi.1940, 131Ƥ, W. Ivie (AMNH); Wyoming: Yellowstone Park, Bridge Bay, 20.vi.1938, 23, W. Ivie (AMNH); Yellowstone Park, Mount Washburn, north of summit, 13.viii.1940, 431Ƥ, W. Ivie (AMNH).

Distribution: Western North America, south to Colorado, east to Saskatchewan.

Notes

Published as part of Dupérré, Nadine, 2013, Taxonomic revision of the spider genera Agyneta and Tennesseellum (Araneae, Linyphiidae) of North America north of Mexico with a study of the embolic division within Micronetinae sensu Saaristo & Tanasevitch 1996, pp. 1-189 in Zootaxa 3674 (1) on pages 138-141, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3674.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/283954

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Linyphiidae
Genus
Agyneta
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Araneae
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Chamberlin & Ivie
Species
lophophor
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Agyneta lophophor Chamberlin, 1933 sec. Dupérré, 2013

References

  • Chamberlin, R. V. & Ivie, W. (1933) Spiders of the Raft River Mountains of Utah. Bulletin of the University of Utah, 23 (4), 1 - 79.
  • Chamberlin, R. V. & Ivie, W. (1947) The spiders of Alaska. Bulletin of the University of Utah, 10, 1 - 103.
  • Buckle, D. J., Carroll, D., Crawford, R. L. & Roth, V. D. (2001) Linyphiidae and Pimoidae of America north of Mexico: Checklists, synonymy, and literature. In: Paquin, P. & Buckle, D. J. (Eds.), Contributions a la connaissance des Araignees (Araneae) d'Amerique du Nord. Fabreries, Quebec, Supplement 10, pp. 89 - 191.