Tegenaria egrisiana, Zamani & Kaya & Marusik, 2024
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1218.135249 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7F6A7B71-74A9-42BA-A258-C28544EAC887 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14199448 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/45CD9A9F-8B0B-47DD-B0A7-145458C6B6BE |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:45CD9A9F-8B0B-47DD-B0A7-145458C6B6BE |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Tegenaria egrisiana |
status |
sp. nov. |
Tegenaria egrisiana sp. nov.
Figs 16 D – F View Figure 16 , 17 A – D View Figure 17 , 18 A, B View Figure 18 , 20 C View Figure 20
Type material.
Holotype • ♂ ( ZMMU), Georgia: Imereti Prov.: cave between Gumbrini and Khamali , 42°18'56.4"N, 42°38'09.4"E, 161 m, 19.07.2012 (Y. M. Marusik) GoogleMaps . Paratypes: • 1 ♂ 1 ♀ ( ZMUT), 2 ♀ ( ZMMU), same data as for the holotype GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis.
Tegenaria egrisiana sp. nov. is very similar to T. pallens Zamani & Marusik, 2023 from Iran in the overall shape of the copulatory organs. However, the male differs from T. pallens in the shorter tip of the cymbium, ~ 0.7 the length of the palpal tibia (Fig. 17 A – D View Figure 17 , 20 C View Figure 20 ; vs as long as the palpal tibia), the blunt tip of the conductor (vs pointed and curved; Zamani et al. 2023: fig. 2 A), the embolus base positioned at the 9: 00 o’clock position (vs 8: 30 o’clock), the tip of the embolus terminating at ~ 2: 00 o’clock position (Fig. 17 A View Figure 17 ; vs 1: 00 o’clock), and the median apophysis (Ma) with a different shape. The female of the new species differs from that of T. pallens in the epigynal plate nearly twice as wide as it is long (vs> 3 × wider than long; cf. Fig. 16 D View Figure 16 and Zamani et al. 2023: fig. 3 C), in having a distinct median plate (vs absent), and a small rectangular fovea (vs oval; cf. Fig. 16 D, E View Figure 16 and Zamani et al. 2023: fig. 3 A, B).
Description.
Male. Habitus as in Fig. 18 A View Figure 18 . Total length 7.10. Carapace 3.23 long, 2.37 wide. Eye sizes: AME: 0.12, ALE: 0.17, PME: 0.14, PLE: 0.18. Carapace, labium, and maxillae pale brown; carapace with darker submedian bands; chelicerae reddish brown; sternum greyish brown, with yellow median band and six spots. Legs pale brown, with very faint annulations; Fe with long ventral setae at basal 1 / 2. Abdomen pale beige, with greyish dots, patches, and stripes. Spinnerets uniformly pale beige. Measurements of legs: I: 22.92 (6.12, 1.44, 6.26, 6.50, 2.60), II: 19.02 (5.05, 1.28, 4.96, 5.50, 2.23), III: 16.90 (4.63, 1.15, 4.15, 5.15, 1.82), IV: 20.79 (5.50, 1.28, 5.24, 6.65, 2.12).
Palp as in Fig. 17 A – D View Figure 17 ; femur longer than patella + tibia; femur ~ 2.2 × longer than tibia (Fig. 20 C View Figure 20 ); patella 2 × longer than wide; cymbium ~ 1.8 × longer than tibia; tibia ~ 2 × longer than wide, with two apophyses: large and membranous retroventral apophysis (Rv) and conical retrolateral apophysis (Rl) with a notched blunt tip (Figs 17 D View Figure 17 , 20 C View Figure 20 ); retrolateral apophysis shorter than ventrolateral one; cymbium 2 × longer than wide; bulb longer than wide; median apophysis (Ma) large and wide, originating at ~ 4 o’clock position; conductor as long as wide, with a spatula-like tip; embolus filiform, roundly bent, originating at ~ 9: 00 o’clock position (Fig. 17 A View Figure 17 ).
Female. Habitus as in Fig. 18 B View Figure 18 . Total length 8.68. Carapace 4.25 long, 2.95 wide. Eye sizes: AME: 0.12, ALE: 0.20, PME: 0.18, PLE: 0.20. Coloration as in male. Measurements of legs: I: 22.80 (6.13, 1.65, 6.00, 6.30, 2.72), II: 19.81 (5.53, 1.57, 4.96, 5.47, 2.28), III: 18.03 (5.07, 1.44, 4.32, 5.22, 1.98), IV: 22.57 (6.18, 1.47, 5.63, 7.00, 2.29).
Epigyne as in Fig. 16 D – F View Figure 16 ; epigynal plate ~ 2 × wider than long with two sclerotized and barely visible teeth; fovea small and almost rectangular; copulatory openings (Co) located on anterior edges of holes (Fig. 16 D, E View Figure 16 ); copulatory ducts (Cd) with a membranous anterior part and a widened slightly sclerotized posterior part; receptacles tubular and twisted along their axis (Fig. 16 F View Figure 16 ).
Distribution.
Known only from the type locality in Imereti Province, central-western Georgia.
Etymology.
The specific epithet refers to the historical Georgian polity of Egrisi, which was centered in present-day western Georgia.
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.
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