Monoblemma muchmorei Shear, 1978
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4619.1.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:19193371-2164-4AD1-ACED-183525F3A49D |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5921953 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D56260-7E68-FFD2-FF78-7A92FA8F367E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Monoblemma muchmorei Shear, 1978 |
status |
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Monoblemma muchmorei Shear, 1978 View in CoL
Figure 5 View FIGURE 5
M. m. Shear, 1978: 23, f. 51–56 (Dmf); Lehtinen, 1981: 72, f. 316–319; Burger, 2008b: 1083, f. 1b, 3a–c, 11b, g, 12e, 13d.
Material examined: Paratype: female from U.S., Virgin Islands, St. John , 6.VI.1974, W. Muchmore leg. ( AMNH). Examined by photograph .
Discussion. According to the published spider records available in the World Spider Catalog, Neotropical Tetrablemmids occurs from México to Brazil, mainly in soil and leaf litter of dry and humid forests, from 80 to 1000 m a.s.l ( World Spider Catalog, 2019). However, this family seems to have low abundance in inventories of spider communities, sometimes with just one or two individuals collected, as noticed by Bonaldo & Días (2010) from Brazilian Amazon and Edwards & Edwards (2007) in bamboo leaf litter from Puerto Rico. In Colombia, the only official record of a tetrablemmid was given by Shear (1978) who examined 3 males and 10 females of Monoblemma muchmorei collected in Villavicencio (Meta department), in the confluence of the humid forests from the Eastern slopes of Cordillera Oriental mountains and the Eastern plains of the country (Villavicencio-Apure dry forests according to WWF ecoregions system). However, this species was described based on material from Virgin Islands ( U.S.) ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ).
In this paper, 3 male and 4 female specimens of C. brescoviti sp. nov. were collected in the Colombian Caribbean region from localities close to Montes de María, where some fragments of dry forest (Guajira-Barranquilla xeric scrub WWF ecoregion) and some humid forests (Magdalena-Urabá moist forests WWF ecoregion) still exist ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ).
Unhappily, the Tropical Dry Forest (TDF) is an endangered ecosystem in Colombia being affected by anthropic activities such as agriculture, logging and livestock ( García et al., 2014). The TDF has been reduced to 3% of its original extension, only 5% of which is included in protected areas of the National System of Protected Areas (Sistema Nacional de Áreas Protegidas-SINAP). The departments in the Caribbean region, Cesar (21.8%), Bolívar (18.4%), Magdalena (12.1%) and Sucre (3.9%) contributes the most to the Colombian TDF coverage ( García et al., 2014, table 8.3), and are potential localities of interest for the discovery of further tetrablemmids.
Finally, although there are several studies about spiders in Colombian TDF ( Cabra-García et al., 2010; Flórez, 1997, 1998, 1999), very few focuse on spider inventories in TDF remnants of the Colombian Caribbean (e.g. Escorcia et al., 2012; Quijano & Martínez, 2015, both for Atlántico department). Because of their similarity to other spider families (e.g. Oonopidae ), many tetrablemmid specimens may have gone unnoticed in biological collections, and we suspect that many new records and species remain to be discovered both in the field and in the local repositories.
AMNH |
American Museum of Natural History |
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