Smeringopinae Simon, 1893

Huber, Bernhard A., Eberle, Jonas & Dimitrov, Dimitar, 2018, The phylogeny of pholcid spiders: a critical evaluation of relationships suggested by molecular data (Araneae, Pholcidae), ZooKeys 789, pp. 51-101 : 60-63

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.789.22781

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:496949FC-A96A-4489-A094-0182520DAB6C

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2C6A08DB-4D12-751A-58C8-44D35E7C10F5

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scientific name

Smeringopinae Simon, 1893
status

 

Subfamily Smeringopinae Simon, 1893 Figure 6

Smeringopodeae Simon, 1893: 474. Type genus Smeringopus Simon, 1890, by subsequent designation ( Huber 2011b).

Smeringopinae Simon; Huber 2011b: 217.

Remarks.

Smeringopinae is a relatively homogeneous subfamily (with respect to body shapes, colour, webs, and microhabitats), and in this sense similar to Ninetinae and Arteminae but very unlike Modisiminae and Pholcinae . Most of the 125 known species of Smeringopinae are medium-size to large, have long legs, elongated to cylindrical abdomens, and all have eight eyes. Another similarity to Ninetinae and Arteminae is that Smeringopinae are often found in rather arid regions. The most obvious exception is the largely humid tropical genus Smeringopina Kraus, 1957, which is also the genus with the smallest and largest representatives in the subfamily (with body lengths ranging from 2.5-10 mm) and with the widest range of microhabitats used (leaf litter to large sheltered spaces) ( Huber 2013). The original distribution of the subfamily is Africa, the Mediterranean, and the Middle East. Three species have attained much wider distributions, resulting from human-mediated dispersal ( Huber 2011b).

As in previous molecular analyses ( Bruvo-Mađarić et al. 2005, Astrin et al. 2007, Dimitrov et al. 2013), Smeringopinae is sister to Pholcinae (Figure 1) with reasonable to high support. This relationship is also supported by morphology: the two taxa share tarsus IV comb-hairs spread over the entire length of the tarsus ( Huber and Fleckenstein 2008).

The monophyly of Smeringopinae receives reasonable to high support in all our analyses. Previous molecular analyses have partly supported Smeringopinae , but also suggested rather obscure relationships [e.g., the position of Holocnemus pluchei (Scopoli, 1763) among Ninetinae in Astrin et al. 2007]. Holocnemus pluchei was included in preliminary analyses of the present data but its position was drastically unstable, so we decided to exclude it from the final analyses. Smeringopinae monophyly is rather weakly supported by morphology, i.e., by the presence of a large thoracic pit on the carapace (rather than a narrow furrow or an evenly domed carapace; cf. Huber 2011b).

Within Smeringopinae , our data strongly support a basal split between a northern clade (Mediterranean, northern Africa, Middle East, Central Asia) and a southern clade (Sub-Sahara) (Figure 6). This basal split was also recovered in a morphological cladistic analysis ( Huber 2012). Within the northern clade, Hoplopholcus Kulczynski, 1908 is sister to all other genera and not close to Stygopholcus Kratochvil, 1932 as repeatedly claimed by Brignoli (1971, 1976, 1979) but contested by Senglet (1971, 2001). The genera Hoplopholcus , Stygopholcus , and Crossopriza Simon, 1893 all receive full support, but the small Mediterranean genus Holocnemus Simon, 1873 (only three described species) continues to be problematic even after the exclusion of H. pluchei . The two species of Holocnemus included in our analyses never group together, and no morphological synapomorphy is known to suggest their sister-group relationship (in fact, Holocnemus has never been revised).

The southern (Sub-Saharan) clade includes Smeringopus Simon, 1890 and Smeringopina , and is also supported by a unique number of epiandrous spigots (two) ( Huber 2012). The paraphyly of Smeringopus has been suggested before ( Dimitrov et al. 2013), and our larger data set supports this view, but with low support values. Two of the species groups of Smeringopus proposed in Huber (2012) appear closer to Smeringopina than to other Smeringopus : the chogoria group and the rubrotinctus group. Morphological data do not support this view but they neither strongly contradict it: the two species groups lack the distinctive arrangement of pores on the pore plates (in groups or ‘islands’) and the retrolateral furrow on the male palpal femur present in all other species of Smeringopus ( Huber 2012). Remarkably, Smeringopus and Smeringopina are largely separated geographically, with Smeringopus being most diverse in southern and eastern Africa, and Smeringopina in western and central Africa ( Huber 2012, 2013). The chogoria and rubrotinctus groups are geographically restricted to an area where Central Africa (the Guineo-Congolian center of endemism) meets East Africa ( Huber 2012). Other than that, our sampling in Smeringopus is not dense enough to test the species groups proposed in Huber (2012). Remarkably, though, the isolated ‘basal’ position of S. ngangao Huber, 2012 is supported by the present analyses.

Our analyses include 30 of the 44 described species of Smeringopina (68%), and all species groups proposed in Huber (2013) except two monotypic ‘groups’ ( S. fon Huber, 2013; S. ngungu Huber, 2013). Even though for some species only one gene (CO1) was sequenced, our analyses support several species groups and deeper relationships proposed previously ( Huber 2013), based on cladistic analysis of morphological characters. Morphology placed the West African guineensis group as sister to all other Smeringopina ; all our analyses support both the monophyly of the guineensis group and its sister-group relationship with all other congeners. The next two branches are composed of representatives of the lekoni group, which is thus here considered paraphyletic rather than monophyletic. The ankasa and cornigera groups are both supported, as is their sister group relationship to each other. The attuleh group is supported, but not as sister to the ankasa + cornigera groups but as sister to the following group. The last clade is composed of representatives of the simplex and beninensis groups, but the clear dichotomy in the molecular trees is not equivalent to these groups. Instead, the simplex group includes all ‘basal’ representatives originally assigned to the beninensis group; the beninensis group includes only those species that have a light transversal element ventrally on the abdomen (character 9 in Huber 2013, which is thus less homoplastic than previously thought).

Kingdom

Animalia

Order

Araneae

Family

Pholcidae