Talavera Peckham & Peckham, 1909
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.37828/em.2018.18.4 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AF50CFA8-DF48-455F-A2E6-DE36742E8CC1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13360329 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C387E2-FFF7-FF94-FD92-19FAAEE2A0CB |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Talavera Peckham & Peckham, 1909 |
status |
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Gen. Talavera Peckham & Peckham, 1909 View in CoL
Figures 26-29 View Figure 26 View Figure 27 View Figure 28 View Figure 29
Type species. Icius minutus Banks, 1895 [= Talavera minuta (Banks, 1895) View in CoL ].
Documentation studied. Literature data, especially diagnostic drawings, and macrophotographs, preliminarily collected in Prószyński (2016a) - http://www.peckhamia.com/salticidae/q10-Tala.html), complemented by the newest data.
Diagnosis. Resembling Euophrys (see above), from which differs by not coiled embolus ( Figs 22C View Figure 22 , 27-29 View Figure 27 View Figure 28 View Figure 29 ). Spermathecae ball shaped, with extremely thin, thread like copulatory ducts running anterior-ward (Figs 77- 29). Body squat ( Fig. 26 View Figure 26 ) and very small (about 2-3 mm), color pattern uniform with spaced and thin light scales sitting on uniform dark tegument.
Remarks. Technically Talavera disagrees with the most important, cornerstone character of the group of genera EUOPHRYINES - that is have no coiled embolus, instead it has almost straight embolus (often strongly reduced in size - see series of SEM photographs by Logunov and Kronestedt, 2003, shown here at Figs 27 View Figure 27 , 28 View Figure 28 , 29 View Figure 29 ). Because other diagnostic characters agree (ball shaped spermathecae with delicate ducts, membranous "windows" in epigyne) and embolus is sitting atop inflatable haematodocha ( Figs 29 View Figure 29 N-P) Talavera is considered atypical EUOPHRYINES with modified embolus.
Description. Very small spiders (about 2-3 mm) of average body shape, shown on Fig. 26 View Figure 26 , palps and internal structure of epigyne shown on Figs 27-29 View Figure 27 View Figure 28 View Figure 29 . Color pattern is unique and consist of uniform, spaced small scales distributed uniformly over dark body ( Fig. 26 View Figure 26 ).
Remarks. Whereabouts of specimens of Talavera specimens kept in major collection of the world is given by Prószyński (1971: 404-408) (labeled as Euophrys ) 10.
Distribution. Palaearctic Region, with single species in North America.
Composition. Type species: Talavera minuta (Banks, 1895) ( Figs 22B, E View Figure 22 , 26 View Figure 26 D-E, 27A-E). Other following species included: T. aequipes (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1871) ( Figs 3-K View Figure 3 , 22B View Figure 22 , 27 View Figure 27 F-H), T. aperta (Miller, 1971) ( Figs 22B, E View Figure 22 , 28 View Figure 28 C-E), T. esyunini Logunov, 1992 ( Figs 29 View Figure 29 E-F), T. ikedai Logunov & Kronestedt, 2003 ( Figs 29 View Figure 29 H-I), T. inopinata Wunderlich, 1993 ( Fig. 27 View Figure 27 M-P), T. krocha Logunov & Kronestedt, 2003 ( Fig. 28 View Figure 28 I-J), T. logunovi Kovblyuk & Kastrygina, 2015 ( Figs 28 View Figure 28 F-H), T. milleri (Brignoli, 1983) . (Figs 229K-L), T. monticola (Kulczyński, 1884) ( Figs 29 View Figure 29 A-D), T. parvistyla Logunov & Kronestedt, 2003 ( Figs 22B View Figure 22 , 28 View Figure 28 J-M), T. thorelli (Kulczyński, 1891) ( Figs 22B, E View Figure 22 , 28 View Figure 28 A-B), T. trivittata (Schenkel, 1963) , ( Figs 27 View Figure 27 I-L), T. tuvensis Logunov & Kronestedt, 2003 ( Figs 29J View Figure 29 ). 14 species. 10 " Talavera" petrensis (C. L. Koch, 1837) is already transferred to the genus Euophrys (see above Figs 3 View Figure 3 A-E, 4H, 6A, 7E).
SOURCES: A-B - Prószyński (1990p). Private preprint. C - Paquin P., Duperre N. 2003. Fabreries, Suppl. 11: 203, f 2270-2272., D - drawings by W. P. Maddison., E - Logunov Kronestedt 2003. J. Natural History, 2003, F-P - Logunov & Kronestedt 2003. J. Natural History (2003). All ©copyrights are retained by the original authors and copyright holders, used by their courtesy.
SOURCES: A-E, I, J - Logunov & Kronestedt (2003). J. Natural History, 2003, F-H - Kovblyuk & Kastrygina (2015) Arthropoda Selecta 24(2): 201-205, I, J - Logunov & Kronestedt (2003), Żabka (1997), K -M - Logunov & Kronestedt (2003). J. Natural History, 2003. All ©copyrights are retained by the original authors and copyright holders, used by their courtesy.
SOURCES: A-B - Chvátalová & Buchar (2002). Acta Societatis Zoologicae Bohemicae 66: 3-11, C-P - Logunov & Kronestedt (2003). J. Natural History, 2003. All ©copyrights are retained by the original authors and copyright holders, used by their courtesy.
Appendix - overdue nomenclatorical correction
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.