Published June 6, 2025 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Acantholycosa sterneri

  • 1. Key Laboratory of Eco-environments in Three Gorges Reservoir Region (Ministry of Education), School of Life Sciences, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715, China

Description

Acantholycosa sterneri (Marusik, 1993)

Figs 5, 6, 13

Pardosa sterneri Marusik, 1993: 77, figs 1–3 (♂).

Acantholycosa sterneri: Kronestedt and Marusik 2002: 67, figs 2, 7, 8, 12, 13, 15–18, 21, 25–27 (♂ ♀); Marusik et al. 2004: 113, figs 66–72 (♂ ♀); Marusik and Omelko 2017: 599, fig. 12 (♂).

Material examined.

China: • 1 ♂, Inner Mongolia, Chifeng City, Balinyou Co., Saihanwula National Nature Reserve, top of Hanshan Mt., 44°10'27"N, 118°44'2"E, elev. 1828 m, 27. 06. 2015, Z. S. Zhang and L. Y. Wang leg. • 1 ♀, Saihanwula National Nature Reserve, 44°18'96"N, 118°75'31"E, elev. 1941 m, 15. 08. 2023, S. T. Shi et al. leg. • 1 ♂, Balinyou Co., Wulanba Mt, 44°26'33"N, 118°42'8"E, elev. 1846 m, 11.07. 2023, K. Yu et al. leg.

Diagnosis.

Acantholycosa sterneri is similar to A. solituda (Levi & Levi, 1951) (Kronestedt and Marusik 2002, figs 1, 3–6, 9–11, 14, 19, 20, 22–24) in having a similar conformation of the copulatory organs (Figs 5 A – D, 6 C – H), but it can be differentiated by the median apophysis with a reduced apical arm (Figs 5 A, 6 C, E) (vs. without apical arm); embolus basal part wider than apical part (Figs 5 A, 6 C, E) (vs. embolus basal part as wide as apical part); embolus with pointed tip ventrally (Figs 5 A, 6 C, E) (vs. blunt). Females can be distinguished by the septal width measuring 1.3 times its length (Figs 5 C, 6 G) (vs. 2.3 times its length), and spermathecae separated (Figs 5 D, 6 H) (vs. spermathecae close together).

Description.

See Kronestedt and Marusik (2002). Habitus as shown in Figs 6 A, B, male palp as in Figs 5 A, B, 6 C – F, epigyne as in Figs 5 C, D, 6 G, H.

Distribution.

China (Inner Mongolia), Russia (South Siberia), Mongolia.

Comment.

This species belongs to the A. solituda - group.

Notes

Published as part of Zhang, Xiang-Yun, Zhang, Zhi-Sheng & Wang, Lu-Yu, 2025, Review of the wolf spider genus Acantholycosa Dahl, 1908 from China (Araneae, Lycosidae), pp. 239-256 in ZooKeys 1240 on pages 239-256, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1240.146399

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
T
Event date
2015-06-27 , 2023-08-15 , 2023-11-07
Verbatim event date
2015-06-27 , 2023-08-15 , 2023-11-07
Scientific name authorship
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Araneae
Family
Lycosidae
Genus
Acantholycosa
Species
sterneri
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Acantholycosa sterneri (Marusik, 1993) sec. Zhang, Zhang & Wang, 2025

References

  • Marusik YM (1993) Three new wandering spider species (Aranei Lycosidae Gnaphosidae) from Mongolia. Arthropoda Selecta 2 (1): 77-81.
  • Kronestedt T, Marusik YM (2002) On Acantholycosa solituda (Levi & Levi) and A. sterneri (Marusik) (Araneae: Lycosidae), a pair of geographically distant allied species. Acta Arachnologica 51 (1): 63–71. https://doi.org/10.2476/asjaa.51.63
  • Marusik YM, Azarkina GN, Koponen S (2004) A survey of east Palearctic Lycosidae (Aranei). II. Genus Acantholycosa F. Dahl, 1908 and related new genera. Arthropoda Selecta 12 (2) [2003]: 101–148.
  • Marusik YM, Omelko MM (2017) A new species of Acantholycosa baltoroi - group (Araneae: Lycosidae, Pardosinae) from the Russian Far East. Zootaxa 4232 (4): 597–600. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4232.4.12