Published September 2, 2024 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Yunguirius wangqiqiae Wei & Liu 2024, sp. nov.

  • 1. Hubeiate Key Laboratory of Regional Development and Environmental Response, Faculty of Re-sources and Environmental Science, Hubei University, Wuhan 430062, China
  • 2. Hubeiate Key Laboratory of Regional Development and Environmental Response, Faculty of Re-sources and Environmental Science, Hubei University, Wuhan 430062, China & The State Key Laboratory of Biocatalysis and Enzyme Engineering of China, School of Life Sciences, Hubei University, Wuhan 430062, Hubei, China

Description

Yunguirius wangqiqiae Wei & Liu sp. nov.

Figs 6, 7, 10

Type material.

Holotype ♀ (HBU-WM-24-004), 1 ♀ paratype (HBU-WM- 24-005): China: Yunnan Province, Zhaotong City, Weixin County, Houshan mountain, 27.8147 ° N, 104.8050 ° E, elevation: 1363 m, 1. X. 2018, C. F. Tao and H. Y. Chen leg.

Etymology.

The specific name is dedicated to Ms Qiqi Wang, at the desire of Caifu Tao, who provided the holotype; a noun (name) in genitive case.

Diagnosis.

The females of Yunguirius wangqiqiae sp. nov. resemble those of Y. subterebratus and Y. terebratus in that they have long blind sacs of the copulatory ducts, approximately equal to the length of the openings of the copulatory ducts, while the copulatory ducts are ventrally connected with the spermathecae (Figs 1 B, 6 B; fig. 245 B in Zhu et al. 2017). In contrast, other species such as Y. duoge, Y. parvus sp. nov., Y. trigonus sp. nov. and Y. xiangding have short blind sacs, shorter than the length of the openings of the copulatory ducts (Fig. 2 B, 4 B; figs 2 B, 4 B in Li et al. 2023), or have long blind sacs but the copulatory ducts are dorsally connected with the spermathecae such as Y. ornatus and Y. xiannushanensis sp. nov. (Fig. 8; fig. 3 B in Li et al. 2023). However, Y. wangqiqiae sp. nov. can be distinguished from the latter by the following characteristics: 1) the atrium is bowl-shaped, wider than long, and lacks the fold (Fig. 6 A), versus being trapezoidal in Y. subterebratus (fig. 245 A in Zhu et al. 2017) or being subrounded, with the width roughly equal to the length, and presenting the fold in Y. terebratus (Fig. 1 A); 2) the copulatory ducts featuring only the prototype of the secondary layers (Fig. 6 B), versus possessing advanced secondary layers in Y. terebratus (Fig. 1 B); 3) the spermathecal stalks are long and extend laterally with conch-shaped distal ends (Fig. 6 B), versus being extremely short in Y. subterebratus (fig. 245 B in Zhu et al. 2017), and in Y. terebratus, they are long but extend obliquely upward, with large and round distal ends (Fig. 1 B).

Description.

Female (holotype) (Fig. 7). Carapace reddish brown. Cervical and radial groove distinct. Cephalic region moderately raised and wide, lateral margin with distinct furrows. Chelicerae with 3 promarginal teeth and 2 retromarginal teeth, condyle red. Sternum longer than wide. Abdomen pale yellow, with 5 chevron-shaped patterns, covered by hairs. Legs red. Total length 14.48. Carapace 7.51 long, 5.03 wide, cephalic region 4.28 wide. Abdomen 7.95 long, 4.80 wide. Eye size and interdistance: AME 0.22, ALE 0.31, PME 0.32, PLE 0.38; AME – AME 0.16, AME – ALE 0.20, AME – PME 0.19, ALE – PLE 0.11, PME – PME 0.09, PME – PLE 0.45. Leg measurements: Leg I 19.71 (2.53, 0.93, 4.98, 2.11, 4.08, 3.47, 1.96), leg II 17.82 (2.21, 0.86, 4.44, 1.93, 3.23, 3.28, 2.11), leg III 14.82 (2.00, 0.92, 3.67, 1.73, 2.44, 2.85, 1.61), leg IV 19.73 (2.31, 1.11, 4.87, 1.87, 3.84, 4.13, 1.84). Epigyne (Fig. 6). Epigynal teeth absent. Atrium large, bowl-shaped, anterior margin incomplete. Posterior epigynal sclerite weakly sclerotized and opalescent. Hoods weak, situated laterally. Fold absent. Copulatory ducts broad, laterally originated, slightly folded, with the prototype of the secondary layers; blind sacs long and with distal tips overlapped. Spermathecal base small; spermathecal stalk long, with distal tip conch-shaped and extended laterally; spermathecal head only remaining a sclerotized end. Fertilization ducts posteriorly situated.

Male. Unknown.

Distribution.

China (Guizhou, Yunnan).

Notes

Published as part of Wei, Mian, Liu, Jie & Wang, Kai, 2024, Four new species of the genus Yunguirius (Araneae, Agelenidae) from China, pp. 1-15 in ZooKeys 1211 on pages 1-15, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1211.126487

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Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

Biodiversity

Material sample ID
HBU-WM-24-004, HBU-WM- 24-005
Event date
2018-10-01
Verbatim event date
2018-10-01
Scientific name authorship
Wei & Liu
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Araneae
Family
Agelenidae
Genus
Yunguirius
Species
wangqiqiae
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Type status
holotype
Taxonomic concept label
Yunguirius wangqiqiae Wei & Liu, 2024

References

  • Zhu MS, Wang XP, Zhang ZS (2017) Fauna Sinica: Invertebrata Vol. 59: Arachnida: Araneae: Agelenidae and Amaurobiidae. Science Press, Beijing, 727 pp.
  • Li B, Zhao Z, Okumura K, Meng K, Li SQ, Chen HF (2023) Yunguirius, a new genus of Coelotinae (Araneae, Agelenidae) spiders from southwest China. ARPHA Preprints. https://doi.org/10.3897/arphapreprints.e100836