Marinarozelotes jaxartensis (Kroneberg, 1875)

Sherwood, Danniella, Marusik, Yuri M., Sharp, Adam & Ashmole, Philip, 2023, A survey of Gnaphosidae (Arachnida, Araneae) from Ascension Island with description of a new species of Australoechemus Schmidt & Piepho, 1994, African Invertebrates 64 (3), pp. 291-302 : 291

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/afrinvertebr.64.113946

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DDA2967E-348B-41F9-8B23-4E237A584916

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10170256

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C1BAD780-A126-5CD8-8CB9-90518808965D

treatment provided by

African Invertebrates by Pensoft

scientific name

Marinarozelotes jaxartensis (Kroneberg, 1875)
status

 

Marinarozelotes jaxartensis (Kroneberg, 1875) View in CoL

Trachyzelotes jaxartensis : Levy 1998: 107, figs 25-28 (♂♀).

Marinarozelotes jaxartensis : Ponomarev and Shmatko 2020: 135, figs 7-8, 11, 30, 37-38, 50, 59 (♂♀).

Other citations.

For complete list of taxonomic references, see WSC (2023).

Material examined.

Ascension Island • 1♀ ; Packers Hole Cueva [Cave]; -7.923, -14.368; 13-17.III.1990; P. Ashmole and M. Ashmole leg.; ASC 0173 • 1♀ GoogleMaps ; South Gannet Pools ; -7.9865, -14.4015; 24.III.1990; P. Ashmole and M. Ashmole leg.; ASC 0259 • 1 immature GoogleMaps ; Letterbox [Peninsula]; -7.947, -14.297; 18-22 March 1990; P. Ashmole and M. Ashmole leg.; ASC 0745 • 1♀ GoogleMaps ; Scouts Path [Green Mountain National Park]; -7.944, -14.346; 28.I.2020; [no collector stated]; ASC • 1♂ GoogleMaps ; South Gannet Upper ; -7.983, -14.399; 23-27 March 1990; P. Ashmole and M. Ashmole leg.; ASC 0592 • 1♀ GoogleMaps Ascension Island; -7.94, -14.37; August-November 1957; E. A. Duffey leg.; No. 25; NHMUK .

Remarks.

Invasive. Originally described from Central Asia, but now known to also occur across the Holarctic, and in Hawaii, India, Mexico, and South Africa ( WSC 2023). First recorded from Ascension Island as Camillina acanthognathus (Purcell, 1907) by Duffey (1964). Specimens collected in the 1990s by Philip and Myrtle Ashmole (University of Edinburgh) indicate it is still found on the island.