Phintelloides Kanesharatnam & Benjamin, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/BDJ.12.e129438 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:12A053C5-E9BE-405B-BA11-D6A2FA868963 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13803916 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C4D9ADA9-8DE8-508C-AA23-8AB34BFE5346 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Phintelloides Kanesharatnam & Benjamin, 2019 |
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Phintelloides Kanesharatnam & Benjamin, 2019 View in CoL
World Spider Catalog: urn:lsid:nmbe.ch:spidergen:04527
Phintelloides Kanesharatnam & Benjamin, 2019 - Kanesharatnam and Benjamin 2019: 20. View in CoL
Chrysilla jesudasi ( Caleb & Mathai, 2014) Kanesharatnam and Benjamin 2019: 20. View in CoL
Diagnosis
Kanesharatnam and Benjamin 2019 (p. 22) diagnose the genus as follows: male with white tuft of flattened setae on the clypeus; white diamond-shaped mark behind the eye field; prosoma with pale yellow / white transverse band behind AME; abdomen with blackish or brownish grey, longitudinal median band bordered by pale yellow bands (or devoid of markings). In addition, they noted the presence of a comparatively long embolus in males; the apical portion of the bulbus with a lamellar process (although this is absent in some including P. jesudasi , P. brunne , and P. scandens, CLD ); and the bird’s-neck-shaped diverging curves at anterior margin of epigynum. Furthermore, Phintelloides have white belt markings on the lateral prosoma, the leg I slightly robust in males, and male pedipalps featuring a small posterior lobe and a long RTA with a bent tip. Females have black patches on the eye field and surrounding PME, behind PLE, and on the posterior slope of the prosoma. In the female genitalia, CO oriented laterally outwards; CD medium-to-very long and bent or twisted; spermatheca pyriform or spherical.
We consider the above diagnosis difficult to interpret from a defining point of view. Several of the listed character states are not compared to that in related genera and some are not valid for all species. Diagnostic somatic characters for the genera involved can be found above in the diagnosis section for the genus Chrysilla , where different states of 10 main cognitive characters between Chrysilla and related genera are summarized. Here we restrict ourselves to adding a few aspects we consider useful. In female Phintelloides species, carapace pattern allegedly is distinctive viz. black and white pattern with 3 pairs of black eye spots (Fig. 10 a View Figure 10 a , c View Figure 10 c ). Indeed this character is found in females of P. jesudasi , P. arborea and P. flavumi but not in P. brunne , P. flavoviri or P. orbisa , or the species described below, P. scandens sp. nov. A similar pattern is also found in females of Phintella piatensis Barrion and Litsinger 1995 , and it possible that this species fits in the genus Phintelloides . In males, the basal part of etb seems to be attached dorsally and is hidden underneath the tegulum; this can only be ascertained by probing the palp manually. Epigyna with a bird’s neck curve (bnc) are, unlike any other salticid genus except Chrysilla , suggestive of a specialised copulatory system.
A “ white moustache ” turns up seemingly at random in various chrysilline genera and is inconvenient as a tool when identifying genera. In Phintelloides scandens sp. nov. males it is lacking (Fig. 15 a View Figure 15 a ), although females have a tuft of white setae in front of the AME (Fig. 15 b View Figure 15 b ).
Phintelloides versicolor and P. munita are morphologically at the edge of the genus because the copulatory organs deviate from all other species by the following characters: the tegulum is undivided and distally bulgy and rigid, the prolateral margin is concave in ventral view; the tegular proximal lobe (pl) is broad and round, the filiform embolus is shorter than that in all known species of Phintelloides and at the base curved over 90 °. Females of> versicolor and munita are distinct from other related species by the pair of characteristic black curled marks on white background on the rear part of the carapace (Fig. 17 b View Figure 17 b , e View Figure 17 e ). Furthermore, these females are quite distinct from those of Phintelloides and Phintella by the straight copulatory ducts directed anteriorly and, the absence of the bird’s-neck-shaped curves the absence of the atrium; the opening is connected to a single pair of transverse, horizontal hood-like folds running parallel to the anterior edge of the epigyne.
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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Phintelloides Kanesharatnam & Benjamin, 2019
Deeleman-Reinhold, Christa L., Addink, Wouter & Miller, Jeremy A. 2024 |
Phintelloides
Kanesharatnam N. & Benjamin S. P. 2019: 20 |
Phintelloides Kanesharatnam & Benjamin, 2019 - Kanesharatnam and Benjamin 2019: 20 . |
Chrysilla jesudasi ( Caleb & Mathai, 2014 )
Caleb J. T. D. & Mathai M. T. 2019: 20 |