Leucauge subblanda Bösenberg et Strand, 1906
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.807941 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6084535 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/420AC67D-760B-DB1A-FFAF-0776CA4FC7F6 |
treatment provided by |
Jeremy |
scientific name |
Leucauge subblanda Bösenberg et Strand, 1906 |
status |
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Leucauge subblanda Bösenberg et Strand, 1906 View in CoL
Figs 32–35, 39–42
Leucauge subblanda: Tanikawa, 2007: 102 , figs 350-353, 804-805 (♂♀); Tanikawa, 2009: 412, figs 41-42 (mf); Yoshida, 2009b: 12, figs 5-8 (♂♀).
Leucauge bimaculata Zhu, Song & Zhang, 2003: 219 , figs 116A-F (♂♀).
MATERIAL EXAMINED. Russia: Primorskii krai, Ussuriyskii District, Gornotaezhnaya Station , 43°41'68'' N, 132°9'25'' E, 1.VII 2002, 1♂, coll. M. Omelko ( ZMMU) GoogleMaps ; Gornotaezhnaya Station, Kabaniy Spring , 43°50'58'' N, 1 32°7'48'' E, 5.VI 2002, 3♀, coll. M. Omelko ( ZMMU) GoogleMaps ; Kamenushka vill., ca. 43°37' N, 132°14' E, summer 1981, 7♀, coll. G. Belova ( ZMMU) GoogleMaps .
Figs 32-38. Leucauge subblanda (32–35) and L. subgemmea (36–38). 32, 36 – female habitus, lateral; 33, 37 – female habitus, dorsal; 34, 38 – epigyne, ventral; 35 – femur IV of male showing 2 rows of trichobothria. Scale = 0.2 mm if not otherwise indicated.
NOTES. This species has a Palaearchaearctic range and is known from Japan, Korea, Taiwan, China ( WSC, 2016) and Primorskii krai ( Marusik, 1989). Recently, this species was confused with L. magnifica Yaginuma , 1 9 5 4 = L. celebesiana (Walckenaer, 1841) by Chinese and Korean authors ( Kim et al., 1999; Namkung, 2002; Song et al., 1999; Zhu et al., 2003: see WSC, 2016), and it was even considered a junior synonym of L. celebesiana . Yoshida (2009b) revalidated L. subblanda . In the latest catalog of Russian spiders ( Mikhailov, 2013) it is listed as L. celebesiana . Males of L. subblanda ( Figs 39–42 View Figs 39 – 42 ) are rather similar to several other congeners occurring in Southeast Asia, although females are easily differentiated from all other species (Fig. 34). Leucauge subblanda is easily differentiated from another Leucauge , L. subgemmea , occurring in the Russian Far East, by having a more elongate abdomen and longitudinal lines on the dorsum of the abdomen (Figs 32, 33 and 36, 37).
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ZMMU |
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