Eukoenenia lanai Christian, 2014

Christian, Erhard, Isaia, Marco, Paschetta, Mauro & Bruckner, Alexander, 2014, Differentiation among cave populations of the Eukoenenia spelaea species-complex (Arachnida: Palpigradi) in the southwestern Alps, Zootaxa 3794 (1), pp. 52-86 : 79-82

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AE0A99F2-1D71-46CB-89E2-08ED4C010E17

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4914655

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2D3887EF-360D-DA2A-FF4C-FA90FF25FC68

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eukoenenia lanai Christian
status

sp. nov.

Eukoenenia lanai Christian View in CoL , species nova

( Figures 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 , 5 M View FIGURE 5 , 6 View FIGURE 6 , 10 M View FIGURE 10 , 12 M View FIGURE 12 , 13 M View FIGURE 13 , 14 M View FIGURE 14 , 20 View FIGURE 20 , 21 View FIGURE 21 , 23–25 View FIGURE 23 View FIGURE 24 View FIGURE 25 )

Material examined. Holotype male: Italy, Piemonte, Province of Cueno, Demonte, Miniera superiore di Monfieis (44°21′44″N, 07°16′00″E, 1750 m a.s.l.); 12 September 2010, leg. E. Lana. Two paratypes: 1 female, 1 male; same locality, date, and collector. GoogleMaps

Deposition. Museum of Natural History , Vienna, Austria, Arachnological Collection. Acquisition numbers 21.878 (holotype), 21.879 (paratype female), 21.880 (paratype male) .

Etymology. The specific epithet is a patronym in honour of Enrico Lana, eminent speleobiologist, photographer and collector of rare subterranean animals.

Diagnosis. A species with all characters of the E. spelaea complex as described above. Body length 2100 µm or more; each finger of chelicera with 8 teeth; lateral organ with 3 blades; 5 deuto-tritosternal setae; forked seta absent on I bta4; proximal forked seta on I ta3 only half length of rod seta; some or all of sternites IV–VI with more than 3+3 setae a; segment XI of opisthosoma with (9–)10 setae; fusules on first genital lobe of male inserted on dome-shaped bases.

Description. Morphometric data are given in Table 1 View TABLE 1 under ♀ 05, ♂ 06 and ♂ 07 (holotype).

General appearance. Large Eukoenenia , with a body length of 2100–2170 µm. Shape and pubescence of trunk as in other members of the E. spelaea complex. Trunk of live individuals yellowish, particularly the opisthosoma.

Prosoma. Frontal organ 40 µm long (holotype), with two lanceolate, pointed branches. Lateral organ with 3 reticulated, 45–49 µm-long blades that are parallel-sided with a pointed tip ( Fig. 5 M View FIGURE 5 ). Propeltidium with 10+10 setae, the shortest (29–31 µm) in central position, the longest (53–57 µm) laterally in posterior half. Setae t 1, t 2 and t 3 of metapeltidium 74–85, 132–145 and 82–98 µm long, respectively. Labrum with usual cuticular pattern and 5+5 short setae. Deuto-tritosternum with 5 setae of 47–54 µm, arranged in a wide V. Chaetotaxy of chelicera and dentition of fingers as in E. roscia . Coxal chaetotaxy as described above for spelaea group. Curved seta near tip of pedipalp weakly and asymmetrically forked, the typical fs is inserted somewhat behind. Leg I with 7 trichobothria in usual arrangement and a total of 7 forked setae. The ta3 of leg I has 4 fs in distal half, 1–1–2: fs 1 is only half length of the nearby rs; in all specimens fs 2 is inserted much closer to m than to cs ( Fig. 10 M View FIGURE 10 ). I bta3 not as slender as in E. strinatii and E. roscia , length/width 3.06–3.19 ( Fig. 12 M View FIGURE 12 ); seta r inserted at 48–53% of article length. I bta4 without fs. IV bta slender, all ratios very similar to those of E. roscia ; r <grt <esd; tip of r does not project beyond distal end of article ( Fig. 13 M View FIGURE 13 ).

Opisthosoma. Anterior tergites with t 1, t 3, s on segment II and t 1, t 2, t 3, s on III–VI. Sternites IV–VI each with a pair of submedian circular structures and lateral setae s 1 and s 2; more than 3+3 submedian setae a on at least one of the sternites IV–VI, the maximum observed (N = 3) was 4 per side ( Figs 6 View FIGURE 6 & 14 M View FIGURE 14 ). E. lanai has by far the relatively longest setae a among all populations investigated (see above). The setation of the terminal segments ( Table 3 View TABLE 3 ) is partly variable; segment VII carries 13–17 setae, segment XI has 9 (female) or 10 setae (the two males). The 2 pairs of setae on the intermediate ring of the flagellum are of equal length. In the holotype, the flagellum (detached, under separate coverslip) is preserved from the third article to the tip ( Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 ). Length (in µm) and number of setae (in brackets; “+” indicates the presence of an apical crown) are for article 3: 217 (10+), 4: 214 (9), 5: 176 (8+), 6: 212 (8), 7: 171 (8+), 8: 227 (8), 9: 184 (8+), 10: 249 (7), 11: 207 (7), 12: 239 (7), 13: 179 (7), 14: 123 (6 and 1 terminal seta). On article 3, the longest seta measures 277 µm, the longest spine of the apical crown 68 µm. Photographs of two live individuals show 14 flagellar articles and the relatively longest flagellum observed in this study (1.9–2.0× trunk length, Table 4 View TABLE 4 ).

Female genital area. First lobe has 7+3 setae on each side; the innermost of the 3 apical setae measures 24 µm, it is somewhat shorter than the others. Each half of second lobe possesses 3 setae. The total formula is 7+3/3.

Male genital area. Chaetotaxy (2+9+2f/3/4) and general shape of genital lobes as in E. strinatii (cf. Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 ). The fusules, however, are inserted on dome-shaped bases ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 ), a character that separates E. lanai from the other species of the present study. In the holotype, the longest seta on the first lobe measures 98 µm, the fusules 60 µm.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF