Tupigea teresopolis Huber, 2000
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2010.524319 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887D8-FF99-FFA4-BB1D-DEA9FB93FCC9 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Tupigea teresopolis Huber, 2000 |
status |
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Tupigea teresopolis Huber, 2000 View in CoL
( Figures 3 View Figure 3 C–F, 4K–N, 10C–E, 11A–F)
Tupigea teresopolis Huber 2000: 317 View in CoL , figs. 1272–1277.
Notes
This species was previously known from a single male specimen from Teresópolis, without further locality information. The new material below was collected about 160 km west of Teresópolis but the distinctive morphology of the male palps appears indistinguishable. However, the male chelicerae consistently have an additional pair of small apophyses ( Figure 10C View Figure 10 ), which is here tentatively regarded as intraspecific variation.
Updated diagnosis
Even considering intraspecific variation (see Note above) the male chelicerae are highly diagnostic; further distinguishing characters are the male palpal femur (ventral apophysis; Figure 11D View Figure 11 ), the bulb with transparent dorsal projection ( Figure 11E View Figure 11 ), and the procursus with subdistal spine (fig. 1274 in Huber 2000); females have extremely simple external genitalia but internal structures are visible through the cuticle that make them distinguishable morphologically from close relatives ( Figures 4K View Figure 4 , 10D View Figure 10 ).
Male (see Huber 2000)
Newly collected male specimens with dark brown sternum, chelicerae with additional pair of small lateral apophyses ( Figure 10C View Figure 10 ), total length 1.8 rather than 1.4 as in holotype. Tibia 1 in 11 males: 4.7–5.6 (mean 5.2); tibia 1 L / d: 86; retrolateral trichobothrium on tibia 1 at 11%, tarsus 1 with> 20 pseudosegments; vertical hairs on femora and tibiae. Tarsus 4 comb-hairs as in Figure 11C View Figure 11 .
Female
Body shape similar to male but sternum whitish and carapace without brown Y-mark, clypeus mostly with pair of small light brown spots below triads, in two females entire clypeus light brown; tips of palps darkened, no vertical hairs on legs. Tibia 1 in six females: 3.2–3.7 (mean: 3.5). Epigynum very simple externally ( Figure 11B View Figure 11 ), internal greenish-brown structures visible through cuticle ( Figure 4K View Figure 4 , 10D View Figure 10 ); internal genitalia as in Figure 10E View Figure 10 . Some females with genital plugs.
Natural history
Leaf-dwelling species (see above).
Distribution
Known from two localities in Rio de Janeiro state ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ).
New record
BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: ∼ 4 km northwest Penedo (22 ◦ 24.5 ′ S, 44 ◦ 33.0 ′ to 33.4 ′ W), forest along river, 700–770 m a.s.l., 14–16 August 2007 (B.A. Huber), 12♂, 8♀ in MNRJ (1♂, 1♀) and ZFMK (11♂, 7♀) ; same data, 4♀ in pure ethanol, in ZFMK .
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