Sicarius hahni ( Karsch, 1878 )

Lotz, L. N., 2012, Present status of Sicariidae (Arachnida: Araneae) in the Afrotropical region, Zootaxa 3522, pp. 1-41 : 8-10

publication ID

5FDF2E4A-1F35-4EC8-A1FE-DCE443E4E702

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5FDF2E4A-1F35-4EC8-A1FE-DCE443E4E702

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5257822

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/817E87C3-FFD6-890E-FF1E-6078FD75BEE6

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sicarius hahni ( Karsch, 1878 )
status

 

Sicarius hahni ( Karsch, 1878) View in CoL

( Figs. 2C, 3C, 4D, 6B)

Hexomma hahnii Karsch, 1878: 325 , pl. 9, f. 2.

Hexophthalma hahni, Karsch, 1879: 109 View in CoL .

Sicarius hahni, Simon, 1893: 269 View in CoL , f. 225–231; Purcell, 1908: 225; Newlands 1986: 51, f. 21–23.

Sicarius oweni Newlands 1986: 53 , f. 12, 24–26, unpublished synonym.

Types: ♂ holotype from Namibia: Hereroland , Hahn Mission [in 1878 Hahn had his mission at Otjimbingwe], [2221'S, 1608'E] [not seen] .

Note: Newlands (1986) mentions a new species from the “Semiarid regions of Transvaal and Zimbabwe lowvelds. All the material he based this species on seem to be lost as they were mostly from his personal collection. The two records of material from AMSA seem to be lost as well, as they are not among the material received from AMSA on loan. Specimens studied from the “Transvaal / Zimbabwe area correspond to the description of S. hahni and the distinction of abdomen size mentioned by Newlands (1986) do not merit a new species.

Diagnosis: Leg femora in both sexes with long, medially slightly widened setae dorsal ( Fig. 2C), differing from S. albospinosus , where there is no widening medially, and from all other species where the widening is more pronounced. Male embolus ending in a thin pointed apex ( Fig. 3C), this is similar to most of the other species except for S. spatulatus where the embolus apex is broad and blunt. Female spermathecae ( Fig. 4D) consist of four medium length finger-like knobbed sacs that branch of away from the copulatory tube end, in a similar way to S. damarensis and S. testaceus , but not like S. albospinosus , in S. dolichocephalus the spermathecae is unbranched and in S. spatulatus there is a multitude of spherical spermathecae; the copulatory tube has a short extension tube at the base and widens distally in lateral humps that in some specimens form short lateral extentions, in S. albospinosus the widening is triangular, in S. damarensis it is a smooth arc and in S. testaceus it is only sometimes present as a single hump.

Female: (NMZ/A 9940): TL = 10.5; CL = 5.3; CW = 5.4; CLL = 0.8. AME-LE 0.5; Eye diameter 0.2.

Leg measurements:

Distribution: Sicarius hahni is distributed in the eastern part of Namibia, in Botswana, in the northeastern part of South Africa and in Zimbabwe ( Fig. 6B).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Sicariidae

Genus

Sicarius

Loc

Sicarius hahni ( Karsch, 1878 )

Lotz, L. N. 2012
2012
Loc

Sicarius oweni

Newlands, G. 1986: 53
1986
Loc

Sicarius hahni, Simon, 1893: 269

Newlands, G. 1986: 51
Purcell, W. F. 1908: 225
Simon, E. 1893: 269
1893
Loc

Hexophthalma hahni

Karsch, F. 1879: 109
1879
Loc

Hexomma hahnii

Karsch, F. 1878: 325
1878
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