Pamirosa kudratbekovi, Fomichev & Omelko & Marusik, 2024

Fomichev, Alexander A., Omelko, Mikhail M. & Marusik, Yuri M., 2024, Pamirosa gen. nov., unexpected record of Artoriinae (Araneae, Lycosidae) from the rooftop of Pamir, Central Asia, Zoosystematics and Evolution 100 (3), pp. 1005-1015 : 1005-1015

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zse.100.123331

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FDF2CBE1-60D9-42B3-B33C-481C54B22712

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12734718

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C8B361F-07FA-4719-994F-680251B7DF42

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:4C8B361F-07FA-4719-994F-680251B7DF42

treatment provided by

Zoosystematics and Evolution by Pensoft

scientific name

Pamirosa kudratbekovi
status

sp. nov.

Pamirosa kudratbekovi sp. nov.

Figs 1–9 View Figures 1–9 , 10–15 View Figures 10–15 , 16–20 View Figures 16–20 , 21–30 View Figures 21–30 , 31–38 View Figures 31–38 , 49–50 View Figures 39–50 , 51–53 View Figures 51–53 , 54 View Figure 54

Types.

Holotype ♂ ( ISEA, 001.9080 ) and paratype 1 ♀ ( ISEA, 001.9081 ) Tajikistan, Gorno-Badakhshan Region, Muzkol Mt Range, near Ak-Baital Mt Pass (38 ° 32.871 ' N, 73 ° 33.736 ' E), scree, 4700 m, 19 Jul. 2023, leg. A. A. Fomichev & Y. V. Dyachkov. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis.

See generic diagnosis.

Description.

Male. Total length 8.2. Carapace: 4.35 long, 3.25 wide. Abdomen: 3.95 long, 2.6 wide. General appearance as in Figs 1 View Figures 1–9 , 2 View Figures 1–9 . Coloration. Carapace dark brown with brown, barely visible median band; lateral bands indistinct. Eye field almost black. Clypeus, chelicerae and labium dark brown. Endites and coxae yellow-brown. Sternum brown, darker at margins. Palps dark brown, distal part of cymbium yellow. Legs dark brown, without annulations. Abdomen gray, with dark brick red-colored cardiac mark. Spinnerets gray. Eye sizes and interdistances: AME 0.1, ALE 0.11, PME 0.41, PLE 0.3, AME – AME 0.16, AME – ALE 0.16, PME – PME 0.43, PLE – PLE 1.26. Width of anterior eye row 0.86, 2 nd row 1.13, 3 rd row 1.57. Clypeus height at AME 0.16. Chelicerae with 3 promarginal and 3 retromarginal teeth. For legs measurements see Table 1 View Table 1 . For legs spination see Table 2 View Table 2 .

Male palp as shown in Figs 5 View Figures 1–9 – 30 View Figures 21–30 . Femur 2.5 times longer than tibia, with 3 dorsal and 2 prolateral spines. Patella 1.4 times longer than tibia, with one prolateral spine. Tibia 2.9 times shorter than cymbium. Cymbium broad and rounded; length / width ratio 1.6. Tip of cymbium bent dorsally and equipped with stick-like (NS) and plumose setae (PS). Subtegulum (St) very small, oval located on retrolateral side of bulb. Tegulum (Te) circular, length / width ratio 0.74; anterior part with long and narrow retrolateral ridge (RR) on ventral margin of conductor (Cn) and triangular prolateral outgrowth (PO); conductor not tapering. Median sector of anterior edge of tegulum covered with number of short, thread-like denticles (TD). Sperm duct (SD) S-shaped in retrolateral view; tegular apophysis complex. Thin stalk of tegular apophysis (TS) starts from dorsal surface of tegulum. Tegular apophysis massive, hammer-shaped; prolateral process of tegular apophysis (PP) triangular; retrolateral process of tegular apophysis (RP) semicircular, with tip bent ventrally. Palea absent. Embolus large, coiled in 2 planes; proximal part (PE) with accompanying membrane (AM) forming loop ca 270 °. Basoembolic apophysis (BA) circular in ventral view, strongly sclerotized, in intact bulb tightly fixed between prolateral outgrowth of tegulum (PO) and prolateral process of tegular apophysis (PP). Terminal apophysis (Tr) elongated, with sharply pointed tip. Embolic division with small, sharply pointed dorsal process (DP), partly hidden by embolus in ventral view. Distal part of embolus (DE) tightly twisted, making two complete loops (720 °).

Female. Total length 8.0. Carapace: 4.1 long, 3.0 wide. Abdomen: 4.0 long, 2.45 wide. General appearance as in Figs 28 View Figures 21–30 , 29 View Figures 21–30 . Coloration as in male, but palps, legs, venter of the abdomen and spinnerets lighter. Dorsal surface of abdomen with blurred herringbone pattern. Eye sizes and interdistances: AME 0.1, ALE 0.13, PME 0.39, PLE 0.27, AME – AME 0.19, AME – ALE 0.16, PME – PME 0.36, PLE – PLE 1.07. Width of anterior eye row 0.87, second row 1.06, third row 1.46. Clypeus height at AME 0.19. Chelicerae as in male. For legs’ measurements see Table 3 View Table 3 . For legs’ spination see Table 4 View Table 4 .

Epigyne as shown in Figs 33–38 View Figures 31–38 . Epigynal plate trapezoidal, convex, with large trapezoidal fovea located posteriorly, septum absent. Fovea (Fo) ca. 3 times wider than long. Copulatory openings (CO) located at antero-lateral parts of fovea. Copulatory ducts (CD) membranous, corkscrew-shaped, form approximately 3 turns around fertilization ducts (FD). Receptacles (Re) screw-shaped, strongly sclerotized; heads (RH) touching each other. Fertilization ducts (FD) sinusoidal, strongly sclerotized. Rod-shaped glands (RG) located posterior to the copulatory openings.

Etymology.

The specific name is a patronym in honour of Uvaido Kudratbekov (Porshinev, Tajikistan) who helped to organize an expedition to Pamir Mountains in which the types of this new species were collected.

Distribution.

Known only from the type locality (Figs 51 View Figures 51–53 – 54 View Figure 54 ).

Note.

Having only one female, we cannot cut the single epigyne to check the origin of membranous ducts in endogyne, which would allow us to perceive if they are copulatory or fertilization ducts. Membranous parts of the endogyne are unknown in other lycosids occurring in the Holarctic.

Habitat.

The specimens were collected among stone screes (Fig. 51 View Figures 51–53 ) on elevations about 4700 m.

Comments.

Among the genera of alpine Lycosidae inhabiting stone screes in the Palearctic are the following: Acantholycosa Dahl, 1908 ; Dzhungarocosa ; Evippa Simon, 1882 ; Gulocosa Marusik et al. 2015 ; Mongolicosa Marusik et al. 2004 and Sibirocosa Marusik et al. 2004 (see Table 5 View Table 5 ). Species from all of these genera share one common character: they have more than three pairs of ventral spines on tibia I. This is true for the widespread Acantholycosa complex (group of genera) and in genera not related to Acantholycosa Dahl, 1908 ( Marusik et al. 2015; Fomichev and Marusik 2017; Fomichev 2022). Unlike all other scree-dwelling wolf-spiders, P. kudratbekovi sp. nov. has only three pairs of ventral tibial spines on leg I, as in many non- scree dwelling Pardosinae spiders (cf. Figs 49 View Figures 39–50 , 50 View Figures 39–50 , 39–48 View Figures 39–50 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Lycosidae

Genus

Pamirosa