Masteria pasochoa Dupérré & Tapia, 2021
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5005.4.4 |
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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:43AB6083-4E39-47DD-819E-8EC21F3B3C90 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039EBE72-B520-AC7B-FF6F-FC892C34FE26 |
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Plazi |
scientific name |
Masteria pasochoa Dupérré & Tapia |
status |
sp. nov. |
Masteria pasochoa Dupérré & Tapia View in CoL , new species
Figs 12A, B View FIGURES 12 , 13A–D View FIGURES 13 , 14A, B View FIGURES 14 , 15A View FIGURES 15 , 20G, H View FIGURES 20 , 23A View FIGURES 23 , map 1.
Type material. Male holotype from Ecuador, Pichincha Province, Valle Chillos, Pasochoa Forest Reserve (- 0.443585 -78.507632) 3080m, June 2013, E.E. Tapia, N. Dupérré ( QCAZ) GoogleMaps .
Female allotype: Pichincha Province, Pululahua Geobotanical Reserve (00.059720 –78.509230), 2128m, 2 August 2015, E.E. Tapia, N. Dupérré, A.A. Tapia ( QCAZ) GoogleMaps .
Etymology. The specific name is a noun in apposition taken from the type locality the Pasochoa Reserve.
Diagnosis. Males most resembles M. colombiensis , M. lewisi and M. amarumayu but can be distinguished as such: from M. colombiensis by the presence of six eyes ( Fig. 12A View FIGURES 12 ), eight in the latter species ( Passanha & Brescovit 2018: fig. 13A); from M. lewisi by the absence of 4–6 short strong spines on palpal tibia ( Fig. 13B View FIGURES 13 ) that are present in the latter ( Passanha & Brescovit 2018: fig. 15B); and from M. amarumayu by the presence of P1 ( Fig. 23A View FIGURES 23 ) that is absent in the latter ( Passanha & Brescovit 2018: fig. 16C). Females are distinguished from all species by their unique internal genitalia with unilobed spermathecae, and large, triangular spermathecae bases ( Fig. 15A View FIGURES 15 ).
Description. Male (holotype): Total length: 4.10; carapace length: 1.95; carapace width: 1.38; abdomen length: 2.15. Carapace light brown with reticulation in the cephalic groove, radiating lines and pars thoracica; pars thoracica with arched row of long strong macrosetae ( Fig. 12A View FIGURES 12 ). Chelicerae yellow; promargin with nine teeth and ~15 smaller mesobasal teeth. Endites yellow without cuspules. Labium yellow without cuspules. Sternum yellow ( Fig. 12B View FIGURES 12 ). Eyes: six eyes grouped; AME absent, ALE oval; PLE the largest; PME the smallest, oval, posterior row recurved ( Figs 12A View FIGURES 12 , 20G View FIGURES 20 ). Abdomen elongated, whitish-gray covered with long setae ( Fig. 12B View FIGURES 12 ). Spinnerets: PLS 1.55 (0.58/0.43/0.54). Leg formula 4123; leg measurements: I 5.28 (1.45/0.71/1.35/0.94/083); II 4.37 (1.24/0.62/0. 88/0.89/074); III 4.13 (1.17/0.55/0.78/0.94/0.69); IV 5.53 (1.55/0.68/1.23/1.21/0.86). Leg spination: I: d1-1-1-1-1; tibiae v1-1; II: femur d1-1-1-1; patella v2ap, p1; tibia v1-2-1, p1; metatarsus v1-1-1, p1; III: femur d1-1-1; patella d2-2, p1, v2ap; tibia d1-1, v2-2, p2-2, r2-2; metatarsus d1-2, v1-1-2ap, p1, r1-1; IV: femur d1-1-1; patella pd1, v2ap; tibia d1-1-1, v1-1-2ap, p1-1-1, r1-1-1, metatarsus d1, v2-2-1ap, p1-1, r1-1-1. Tibia I: P1 triangular, P2 with an apical strong spine; P3 with a with two apical spines ( Fig. 23A View FIGURES 23 ). Metatarsus I with large, rounded basal spine ( Fig. 23A View FIGURES 23 ). Palp: palpal tibia 2x the size of cymbium, 3x longer than wide ( Fig. 13A View FIGURES 13 ); cymbium 2x longer than wide, with four apical spines ( Fig. 13A, B View FIGURES 13 ); palpal bulb elongated-oval, embolus short, straight with strongly bend tip ( Fig. 13C View FIGURES 13 ).
Female (allotype): Total length: 5.04; carapace length: 2.35; carapace width: 1.94; abdomen length: 2.69. Carapace light brown with reticulation in the cephalic groove, radiating lines and pars thoracica; pars thoracica with arched row of long strong macrosetae ( Fig. 14A View FIGURES 14 ). Chelicerae light brown; promargin with 10 teeth and ~18 small- er mesobasal teeth. Endites yellow without cuspules. Labium yellow without cuspules. Sternum yellow, without sigilla ( Fig. 14B View FIGURES 14 ). Eyes: six eyes grouped; AME absent, ALE and PLE almost equal; PME the smallest, oval; posterior row strongly recurved ( Figs 14A View FIGURES 14 , 20H View FIGURES 20 ). Abdomen elongated, grayish covered with long setae ( Fig. 14A View FIGURES 14 ). Spinnerets: PLS 1.81 (0.66/0.38/0.77). Legs coloration uniformly pale yellow. Leg measurements: I missing; II missing; III 4.96 (1.48/0.68/0.95/0.98/0.87); IV 6.69 (1.73/0.80/1.70/1.48/0.98). Leg spination: I and II missing; III: femur d1-1-1-1; patella d1-2, p1, v1ap; tibia d1-1, v2-2, p1-1, r1-1; metatarsus d1-2, v1-1-2ap, p1, r1-1; IV: femur d1-1-1-1; patella p1, v2ap, r1; tibia d1-1, v1-2-2ap, p1-1-1, r1-1, metatarsus d1, v2-1-1ap, p1-1, r1-1. Palpal claw with ~15 teeth.
Genitalia: unilobed spermathecae with large, oval ectal lobes (EcL), ental lobes (EnL) small and triangular; spermathecae bases wide, triangular; glandular region with large glands widely interspaced on the spermathecae bases ( Fig. 15A View FIGURES 15 ).
Distribution. Known from two localities in Pichincha Province.
Natural History. The male specimen was hand collected at 3080m in an inter-Andean humid montane forest ( Valencia & Jørgensen 2008) and the female was hand collected at 2128m, in an evergreen mountain shrubland of the northern Ecuadorian Andes ( Josse & Aguirre 2013).
Note. Even though the male and female were not collected at the same locality (~ 50km), the specimens were matched based on eyes configuration, size, and altitudinal range.
QCAZ |
Museo de Zoologia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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