Acumontia majori Pocock, 1902
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.210296 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:28EA6439-289E-4CBB-B427-397F6A4B54C0 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5662788 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AC3E87F8-690A-4E15-FF47-F96A169BBD6D |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Acumontia majori Pocock, 1902 |
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Acumontia majori Pocock, 1902 View in CoL
( Figs. 3 View FIGURE 3 A–B, 13)
Acumontia majori Pocock 1902: 407 View in CoL , figs. 83A–A2 (part, 3 only); Roewer 1915: 117, fig. 29; Roewer 1923: 610, fig. 765; Lawrence 1959: 60; Staręga 1992: 280.
Acumontia Majori View in CoL [sic.]: Pocock 1903: 443.
Type data. 3 lectotype, ( BMNH, examined), from MADAGASCAR, [FIANARANTSOA], Ambohimitombo.
Notes. Pocock (1902) described this species based on 2 specimens, which he deemed with doubt to be a male (smaller specimen, “probably not quite adult”) and a female (larger one, with metatarsal notch). He provided illustrations of the lateral habitus and metatarsal notch of this larger specimen. Later, Pocock (1903) noticed that his initial sex determination was inverted and that those were representative of two species: “but the example described as the male is the female, and vice versa. Moreover, the evidence supplied by other species does not justify the opinion that the very considerable structural differences between these two are merely attributable to sex. External sexual characters in the genus Acumontia and other genera of Triaenonychidae are usually slight as compared with what obtains in some of the Mecostethous Opiliones . Hence I feel compelled to regard the two specimens in question as representatives of distinct species.” He chose the (true) male as lectotype of A. majori , while the female became the holotype of A. roberti . Roewer (1915; 1923) limited himself to repeat the main illustration of Pocock, without seeing the types. Lawrence (1959) and Staręga (1992) have not seen the types either and only repeated the original information. No further specimen has been reported.
Diagnosis. Differs from A. pococki and A. rostrata by the tubercles of anterior margin of carapace much smaller than cheliceral sockets. Differs from A. hispida , A. horrida , A. nigra , A. roeweri , A. soerenseni , A. spinifrons and A. venator by having the apophysis of ocularium unbranched. Differs from A. armata , A. echinata and A. pococki by the spines of area III contiguous at base. Differs from A. alluaudi , A. capitata , A. cowani , A.
flavispina , A. hispida , A. horrida , A. hystrix , A. longipes , A. milloti , A. remyi and A. succinea sp. nov. by the shape of the two ventro-basal apophyses of the femur of pedipalps blunt instead of spiniform. Differs from A. alluaudi , A. flavispina , A. hispida , A. horrida and A. succinea sp. nov. by having five tarsomeres in tarsus I of male. Very similar to A. roberti , differing by the trochanter of pedipalp dorsally unarmed, and by the small tubercles on the anterior margin of carapace.
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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Acumontia majori Pocock, 1902
Mendes, Amanda C. & Kury, Adriano B. 2012 |
Acumontia
Pocock 1903: 443 |
Acumontia majori
Starega 1992: 280 |
Lawrence 1959: 60 |
Roewer 1923: 610 |
Roewer 1915: 117 |
Pocock 1902: 407 |