Published December 31, 2011 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Alpaida citrina Keyserling 1892

Description

Alpaida citrina (Keyserling, 1892)

(Figs. 1–4)

Epeira citrina Keyserling, 1892: 88, pl. 4, fig. 66 (Three females syntypes from Serra Vermelha, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, deposited at BMNH, not examined).

Araneus citrinus, Petrunkevitch, 1911: 285.

Aranea citrinella, Roewer, 1942: 839.

Metepeira citrine, Mello-Leitão, 1943: 187.

Alpaida citrina, Levi, 1988: 418 –420, figs. 204–206; Platnick, 2010.

Diagnosis. The male palp of Alpaida citrina (Keyserling, 1892) resembles that of A. pedro Levi, 1988 (see Levi 1988: fig. 252) by having a rectangular terminal apophysis without projections, differing from the other species of the genus. Alpaida citrina can be distinguished from A. pedro by the median apophysis with margin bearing numerous teeth and a shorter and wider embolus (Figs.1, 2).

Note. For the diagnosis and description of female see Levi (1988: 418–420).

Description. Male (MCN 47001, Maquiné, RS). Total length 2.85. Carapace length 1.35, width 1.30, height 0.89. Clypeus height 0.0 7. Sternum length 0.65, width 0.65. Abdomen length 1.50, width 1.25, height 1.0 0. Leg formula I/II/IV/III. Leg lengths (I/II/III/IV): femur 1.50/1.30/0.85/1.20; patella 0.60/0.55/0.35/0.44; tibia 1.25/ 0.95/0.55/0.95; metatarsus 0.95/0.80/0.55/0.85; tarsus 0.44/0.44/0.35/0.44. Total leg (I/II/III/IV): 4.74/4.04/2.65/ 3.88. Eye diameters and interdistances: AME 0.10, ALE 0.0 7, PME 0.0 7, PLE 0.07; AME-ALE 0.17, PME-PLE 0.20, AME-AME 0.10, PME-PME 0.12. Eyes with black borders (Fig. 4). Carapace, sternum, endites and chelicerae yellowish. Legs with thighs yellow, other segments brown and distal portion dark-brown. Abdomen longer than wide, cylindrical. Dorsal side yellowish dotted with many black and a few white dots. Ventral side yellow without black pigment, except around the spinnerets. Palp with terminal apophysis very sclerotized without bumps. Tegulum with projection on the margin (Figs. 1, 2). Median apophysis sclerotized, toothed and distally excavated (Figs. 1, 2). Paracymbium short, hook-like (Figs. 2, 3).

Variation. Total length (five males) range: 2.85 to 3.25. Some males with scattered black spots on the dorsum of the abdomen and in others abdomen all black.

Material examined. BRAZIL, Rio Grande do Sul: Maquiné, riparian forest of Maquiné river, seven males and three females, 18.IX.2007 – 09.XI.2008, all collected by E. N. L. Rodrigues leg. (MCN 47001-47004).

Distribution. Brazil (Rio de Janeiro and Rio Grande do Sul).

Notes

Published as part of Rodrigues, Everton Nei Lopes & Mendonça, Milton De S., 2011, Araneid orb-weavers (Araneae, Araneidae) associated with riparian forests in southern Brazil: a new species, complementary descriptions and new records, pp. 60-68 in Zootaxa 2759 on page 61, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.201134

Files

Files (3.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:8f376bef971e77d2b044d256bff7d4af
3.1 kB Download

System files (17.5 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:425c5650fc314671e18665dbdf3bb3c9
17.5 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Araneidae
Genus
Alpaida
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Araneae
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Keyserling
Species
citrina
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Alpaida citrina Keyserling, 1892 sec. Rodrigues & Mendonça, 2011

References

  • Keyserling, E. (1892) Die Spinnen Amerikas: Epeiridae. Vol. 4, Nurnberg, 208 pp.
  • Petrunkevitch, A. (1911) A synonymic index-catalogue of spiders of North, Central and South America with all adjacent islands, Greenland, Bermuda, West Indies, Terra del Fuego, Galapagos, etc. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 29, 1 - 791.
  • Roewer, C. F. (1942) Katalog der Araneae von 1758 bis 1940. Bremen, Kommissions-Verlag von " NATURA ". v. 1, p. 1 - 1040.
  • Levi, H. W. (1988) The Neotropical orb-weaving spiders of the genus Alpaida (Araneae: Araneidae). Bulletin of the Museum of the Comparative Zoology, 151 (7), 365 - 487.
  • Platnick, N. I. (2010) The world spider catalog, version 10. 5. American Museum of Natural History. Available from http: // research. amnh. org / entomology / spiders / catalog / index. html (accessed 16 April 2010).