Umbyquyra, Gargiulo & Brescovit & Lucas, 2018

Gargiulo, Fabio de F., Brescovit, Antonio D. & Lucas, Sylvia M., 2018, Umbyquyra gen. nov., a new tarantula spider genus from the Neotropical region (Araneae, Mygalomorphae, Theraphosidae), with a description of eight new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 457, pp. 1-50 : 7-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2018.457

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:90509851-4A60-4A51-8D39-64457010B6EE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3818884

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4AE10C23-FC0A-4379-B255-22DE2FAF022C

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:4AE10C23-FC0A-4379-B255-22DE2FAF022C

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Umbyquyra
status

gen. nov.

Umbyquyra View in CoL gen. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:4AE10C23-FC0A-4379-B255-22DE2FAF022C

Type species

Umbyquyra paranaiba View in CoL gen. et sp. nov.

Diagnosis

Umbyquyra gen. nov. presents stridulatory bristles on the palpal trocanther and first leg as the genera Acanthoscurria , Cyrtopholis , Nesipelma and Longilyra . It differs from these genera by a projected and well marked cephalic region ( Fig. 5 View Fig ) and mainly by the aspect of the genitalia: male palpal bulb compact and globose, tegulum short, embolus, palpal bulb with a short embolus presenting four keels, tibial apophysis with two branches not originating from a common base, and metatarsus I, when flexed, touches the retrolateral branch laterally ( Figs 7C View Fig , 8D View Fig ); female spermathecae with SR connected to a sclerotized basal plate with conspicuous ducts ( Fig. 7D View Fig ).

Etymology

Umbyquyra gen. nov. originates from the Tupi Indian language and means ‘pointed bird beak’, relative to the aspect of the short embolus of the palpal bulb. The gender is neuter.

Description

Total length: males 18–40, females 20–44. General color is dark brown with legs lighter brown. The dorsal side of abdomen covered with long reddish or golden hairs with a dark patch ( Fig 16F View Fig ), ventral side of abdomen dark brown, legs with long yellowish or reddish hairs ( Fig. 16F View Fig ). Carapace longer than wide. Cephalic region with a projection slightly raised defined by the thoracic grooves. Fovea procurve ( Fig. 5 View Fig A–B, D), straight ( Fig. 5C, E View Fig ) or recurve ( Fig. 5F View Fig ), some species with projection over the fovea ( Fig. 15E View Fig ). Eye tubercle slightly raised, wider than long. Eight eyes, ringed with black. Anterior row of eyes procurved, posterior row slightly recurved or straight ( Fig. 16E View Fig ). Labium as wide as long, quadrate, with 130 cuspules ( Fig. 6E View Fig ). Endites with distinct anterior lobe, with 90–230 cuspules on internal basal angle. Sternum oval with six sigilla. Tarsal scopulae dense and integral, only tarsus IV with some bristles in longitudinal line. STC with 4–5 small teeth ( Fig. 6A View Fig ). Tarsi I–IV with two rows of clavate trichobotria ( Fig. 6 View Fig C–D). Scopulae on all tarsi and metatarsi I–II integral and only apical on metatarsi III–IV. Stridulatory bristles on palpal trochanter with 13–25 bristles and 30–38 on trocanther of leg I, sometimes with very long bristles similar as the described for Longilyra , occupying all the length of trochanter in other difficult to observe as in Umbyquyra acuminata (Schmidt & Tesmoingt in Schmidt, 2005) gen. et comb. nov. ( Fig. 14 View Fig E–F). Umbyquyra palmarum gen. et comb. nov. ( Fig. 12 View Fig E–F), U. tapajos gen. et sp. nov. ( Fig. 24 View Fig E–F), U. tucurui gen. et sp. nov. ( Fig. 26 View Fig E–F), U. caxiuana gen. et sp. nov. ( Fig. 28 View Fig E–F) have bristles long and very large, varying in size and number. PLS threesegmented with digitiform apical segment. Male palpal bulb with oval tegulum, short embolus, four or five keels resembles Acanthoscurria , but differs by distribution of keels. Tibia I with two branches, not originating from common base, retrolateral and prolateral branch with strong spines; palpal bulb with oval tegulum ( Figs 7 View Fig A–C, 8A–D), in general with four keels (PS, PI, SA, A), but two species have a prolateral accessory keel (PAc). Umbyquyra palmarum gen. et comb. nov. have four keels. Female genitalia: spermatheca with heavy sclerotized basal area ( Fig. 7D View Fig ), in U. cuiaba gen. et sp. nov. basal area reduced, SR with short ( Fig. 11D View Fig ) or elongated ( Figs 7D View Fig , 15D View Fig ) ducts emerging or not from the basal area. Urticating hairs of type I and III present in both sexes.

Species included

Umbyquyra paranaiba gen. et sp. nov., U. cuiaba gen. et sp. nov., U. araguaia gen. et sp. nov., U. sapezal gen. et sp. nov., U. belterra gen. et sp. nov., U. caxiuana gen. et sp. nov., U. tucurui gen. et sp. nov., U. tapajos gen. et sp. nov., U. palmarum gen. et comb. nov., U. acuminata gen. et comb. nov. and U. schmidti gen. et comb. nov.

Distribution

Species of Umbyquyra gen. nov. are registered in the Brazilian states of Acre, Pará, Mato Grosso, Tocantins, Goiás, Mato Grosso do Sul, São Paulo and Bolivia, Province Sara ( Figs 29–31 View Fig View Fig View Fig ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Theraphosidae

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