Piranthus maddisoni, Wang & Mi & Li & Xu, 2024

Wang, Cheng, Mi, Xiaoqi, Li, Shuqiang & Xu, Xiang, 2024, Taxonomic notes of jumping spiders (Araneae, Salticidae) from Guangxi, Hainan, Sichuan, Xizang and Yunnan, China, ZooKeys 1221, pp. 205-277 : 205-277

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1221.135640

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B61D8EFC-2753-4B88-8A36-DAB1F37D96BB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14509130

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DD899E13-30C3-5708-9B17-21C4CBCAD732

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Piranthus maddisoni
status

sp. nov.

Piranthus maddisoni sp. nov.

Figs 23 View Figure 23 , 24 View Figure 24 , 47 View Figure 47

Type material.

Holotype ♂ ( TRU - JS 0769 ), China: • Hainan Province, Changjiang Li Autonomous County, Bawangling National Nature Reserve (19°7.12'N, 109°9.34'E, ca 640 m), 24. IV. 2021, F. E. Li leg. GoogleMaps Paratype • 1 ♀ ( IZCAS - Ar 45283 ), Lingshui County, Diaoluoshan (18°40.22'N, 109°53.67'E, ca 260 m), 14. IV. 2009, G. Tang leg. GoogleMaps

Etymology.

The specific name is a patronym in honor of Prof. Wayne P. Maddison (Vancouver, Canada), the leading specialist in jumping spiders, who has made significant contributions to the taxonomy of salticids worldwide; noun (name) in the genitive case.

Diagnosis.

Piranthus maddisoni sp. nov. resembles that of P. bakau Maddison, 2020 in having similar habitus, pattern, and palpal structure, but differs in: 1) retrolateral tibial apophysis ( RTA) not broadened at base, and forming an incision at distal end in retrolateral view (Fig. 23 C View Figure 23 ) vs broadened into a dorsal prominent portion and lacking similar incision ( Maddison et al. 2020: fig. 239); 2) presence of a well-developed anterior tegular lobe (AL) (Fig. 23 B View Figure 23 ) vs indistinct ( Maddison et al. 2020: fig. 238); 3) base of septum (Se) <1 / 4 of epigynal width (Fig. 24 A View Figure 24 ) vs ~ 1 / 3 of epigynal width ( Maddison et al. 2020: fig. 240).

Description.

Male (Figs 23 View Figure 23 , 24 D, E, G – I View Figure 24 ). Total length 6.10. Carapace 2.78 long, 2.15 wide. Abdomen 3.27 long, 1.61 wide. Eye sizes and interdistances: AME 0.55, ALE 0.26, PLE 0.26, AERW 1.51, PERW 1.59, EFL 1.12. Legs: I 5.25 (1.75, 1.00, 1.25, 0.75, 0.50), II 4.51 (1.38, 0.90, 1.10, 0.68, 0.45), III 3.76 (1.13, 0.70, 0.70, 0.80, 0.43), IV 5.04 (1.58, 0.75, 1.18, 1.08, 0.45). Carapace almost oval, dark, and covered with dense white setae. Chelicerae red-brown, with three promarginal and five retromarginal teeth. Legs I and II yellow except thickness femora, patellae, and tibiae dark brown, bearing pale setae on patellae and tibiae I. Dorsum of abdomen with two pairs of muscle depressions, pair of transverse, pale setal stripes followed by big transverse pale grey band medially, covered by anterior scutum ~ 1 / 3 abdominal length; venter colored as dorsum, with pair of oval postero-lateral pale spots and median dotted lines.

Palp (Fig. 23 A – C View Figure 23 ): femur length / width ratio ca 2.5; patella ~ 1.4 × longer than wide in retrolateral view; tibia slightly longer than wide, with sub-triangular disto-prolateral apophysis ( PTA) and blade-shaped retrolateral apophysis ( RTA) longer than tibia, slightly curved at proximal 1 / 3, and forming shallow incision at distal end; cymbium pale,> 1.5 × longer than wide; tegulum elongate-oval, swollen medio-posteriorly, with lamellar, anteriorly extended antero-marginal sub-triangular lobe (AL); embolus (E) arising at baso-prolateral corner of tegulum, with broad base extended anticlockwise, and then acutely narrowed into flagelliform portion.

Female (Fig. 24 A – C, F View Figure 24 ). Total length 8.34. Carapace 3.47 long, 2.53 wide. Abdomen 4.53 long, 2.20 wide. Eye sizes and interdistances: AME 0.43, ALE 0.26, PLE 0.26, AERW 1.48, PERW 1.60, EFL 1.05. Legs: I 4.89 (1.65, 1.03, 1.08, 0.63, 0.50), II 4.83 (1.50, 1.05, 1.15, 0.68, 0.45), III 4.24 (1.30, 0.80, 0.78, 0.93, 0.43), IV 6.00 (1.80, 1.00, 1.40, 1.30, 0.50). Habitus (Fig. 24 F View Figure 24 ) similar to that of male except paler and without dorsal abdominal scutum.

Epigyne (Fig. 24 A – C View Figure 24 ) ~ 1.2 × wider than long; atrium (At) almost oval, separated by basally broadened septum (Se); copulatory openings (CO) anteriorly located, partly visible; copulatory ducts ( CD) long, broadened and flat proximally, and then forming complicated coils; spermathecae (S) spherical, separated from each other ~ 2 × their diameter.

Distribution.

Known only from the type locality in Hainan, China (Fig. 47 View Figure 47 ).

Comments.

Although the male and female were collected in different places, they share consistent habitus, and pattern and thus they are considered to be conspecific, but this may need further confirmation.

TRU

Royal Cornwall Museum

IZCAS

Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Salticidae

Genus

Piranthus