Phintella chunfen spec. nov. (#分DZÞƦ)

Figs 102–110

Type material. CHINA: Hunan Province: Holotype: ♂ (MHBU-ARA-00021942), Chenzhou City, Yizhang County, Mangshan National Forest Park, 24.9792°N, 112.8829°E, 776 m a.s.l., 31 May 2021, Y. Mu & W. Wang leg.

Etymology. The specific epithet is a noun in apposition taken from the Chinese pinyin "chunfen " for "Vernal Equinox". It is one of the 24 solar terms. The wise ancient Chinese devised the 24 solar terms from celestial observations, which served as a guiding system for agricultural productivity.

Diagnosis. This new species is similar to Phintella fodingensis Wang, Mi & Peng, 2023 and P. mii Wang & Li, 2020 in the general shape of palpal bulb (see Wang et al. 2023: 26, figs 15A–C, 16A–G; Wang & Li 2020: 58, figs 9A–D, 10A–G). It differs from P. fodingensis by its thicker embolus and wider lamellar tegular process (Figs 106, 109; vs. embolus slimmer and process narrower in P. fodingensis); the dorsally bent RTA in retrolateral view (Figs 106–107, 109–110; vs. RTA not bent dorsally in P. fodingensis). It can be differentiated from P. mii by the PL reaching half length of tibia (Figs 105–106, 108–109; vs. PL reaching full length of tibia in P. mii).

Description. Male. Habitus as in Figs 102, 104. Measurements of holotype: carapace 1.82 long, 1.44 wide; opisthosoma 1.93 long, 1.23 wide; eyes: AME 0.41, ALE 0.20, PME 0.04, PLE 0.15; legs: Ⅰ 4.44 (1.30, 0.66, 1.12, 0.83, 0.53), II 3.42 (0.95, 0.40, 0.86, 0.64, 0.57), III 4.13 (1.18, 0.45, 0.96, 0.95, 0.59), IV 4.48 (1.36, 0.42, 1.02, 1.10, 0.58); leg formula 4132. Carapace black, with some white scales on eye field (Fig. 102). Chelicerae pale yellowish brown, with two promarginal teeth and one retromarginal tooth (Fig. 103). Opisthosoma black, with white lateral margins and thin white chevrons in posterior half (Fig. 102).

Palp (105–110): embolus straight in ventral view; RTA with sturdy base, bent to dorsal side in retrolateral view; lamellar tegular process wide; proximal lobe of tegulum narrow.

Female. Unknown.

Natural history. Foliage dwellers.

Distribution. China (Hunan) (Fig. 1).