Nops agnarssoni, Sánchez, Alexander, Brescovit, Antonio D. & Alayón, Giraldo, 2015

Sánchez, Alexander, Brescovit, Antonio D. & Alayón, Giraldo, 2015, Four new caponiids species (Araneae, Caponiidae) from the West Indies and redescription of Nops blandus (Bryant), Zootaxa 3972 (1), pp. 43-64 : 45-52

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3972.1.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FA022B0E-9F20-4A4C-A0EA-112B60BD42B8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6100520

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E5C57F-5C7D-4C7A-FF77-E8EB3018FBE9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nops agnarssoni
status

sp. nov.

Nops agnarssoni View in CoL , new species

Figures 37–43 View FIGURES 37 – 43 , 78 View FIGURES 77 – 80

Nops blandus: Armas, 2010: 60 View in CoL (misidentification, only male paratype).

Types. Male holotype from Isla Caja de Muertos, Puerto Rico (17° 53' 15.7" N, 66° 31' 37.2" W); 24.vii.2010. L.F. Armas & A. Perez–Asso, deposited in IBSP 166240. Male paratype, same data as holotype, deposited in IBSP 166241.

Etymology. The specific name is a patronymic in honor of Ingi Agnarsson, for his help and support during fieldwork in Puerto Rico looking for caponiids.

Diagnosis. Males of Nops agnarssoni n. sp. resemble those of Nops blandus ( Figs. 25–27 View FIGURES 25 – 31 , 77 View FIGURES 77 – 80 ) and Nops finisfurvus n. sp. ( Figs. 44–46 View FIGURES 44 – 50 , 79 View FIGURES 77 – 80 ) by having a curved embolus; but it can be distinguished by its middle part strongly curved and a weakly sinuous tip ( Figs. 37–39 View FIGURES 37 – 43 , 78 View FIGURES 77 – 80 ).

Description. Male (holotype): Carapace dark orange, elongated oval with a black and slightly elevated ocular tubercle ( Figs. 40, 41 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ); pars cephalica not elevated, pars thoracica slightly sloping posteriorly ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ), thoracic groove absent. Two black, oval eyes of equal size, separated by about two–thirds their diameter. Chelicerae orange. Endites orange except for anterior tips due a white membranous projection, wide, convergent but not touching, with middle part wider than the distal and proximal and forming an obtuse angle of about 120 degrees ( Fig. 43 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ), covered with scattered long setae. Labium orange, broad, fused to sternum along obsolete posterior groove, rounded and reborded in apical part ( Fig. 43 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ). Sternum orange, darker at the edge, oval, surface with fine reticular lines with few weak pits and numerous stiff setae around the edge ( Fig. 43 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ). Coxae light orange. Legs orange, formula 4123; metatarsi entire, anteriors with a median translucent ventral longitudinal keel and with a distal, translucent ventral extension of membrane between anterior tarsi and metatarsi; all tarsi subsegmented, with three claws, paired claws with 5 teeth, unpaired claw elongated and dorsally reflexed in all legs, without teeth. Trichobothria present on metatarsi and tarsi in a single row. Palp with tibia excavated ventrally; cymbium elongated rounded, ventral surface densely covered with strong setae, with globose oval bulb ( Figs. 37–39 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ), embolus strongly curved at middle part, distinctly shorter than tibial length, on a base of the same size as the width of the tibia, and a weakly sinuous tip ( Figs. 37–39 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ). Abdomen grayish green dorsally with fine light gray lines forming a pattern ( Fig. 41 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ), lighter ventrally, but darker in distal part around spinnerets, with only slightly sclerotized epigastric and postepigastric scuta ( Fig. 42 View FIGURES 37 – 43 ). Spinnerets light gray, six, in typical caponiid arrangement. Total length 6.50. Carapace 3.40 long, 2.80 wide. Eyes 0.10 major diameter, 0.06 minor diameter. Leg measurements: I: femur 8.60/ patella 1.90/ tibia 9.90/ metatarsus 9.90/ tarsus 1.80; II: 8.70/ 1.30/ 10.40/ 10.10/ 1.30; III: 7.80/ 1.50/ 7.60/ 10.80/ 1.20; IV: 8.50/ 1.70/ 9.70/ 9.90/ 1.80. Sternum 1.90 long, 1.60 wide. Palpal tibia 1.40 long, 0.70 wide.

Female: Unknown.

Distribution: Known only from the type locality in Puerto Rico ( Fig. 84 View FIGURES 84 – 85 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Caponiidae

Genus

Nops

Loc

Nops agnarssoni

Sánchez, Alexander, Brescovit, Antonio D. & Alayón, Giraldo 2015
2015
Loc

Nops blandus:

Armas 2010: 60
2010
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