Martensopsalis Giribet & Baker, 2021

Giribet, Gonzalo, Baker, Caitlin M. & Brouste, Damien, 2021, Martensopsalis, a new genus of Neopilionidae from New Caledonia (Opiliones Eupnoi), Zootaxa 4984 (1), pp. 98-107 : 100-101

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4984.1.9

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5CC422A8-3CFC-4808-8C85-5FBA03E688CA

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5196946

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/04C4AC0D-DE0C-46F0-AB6A-F5D2B3D24514

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:04C4AC0D-DE0C-46F0-AB6A-F5D2B3D24514

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Martensopsalis Giribet & Baker
status

gen. nov.

Martensopsalis Giribet & Baker View in CoL gen. nov. ( Figs 1 View FIGURES , 3–6 View FIGURES 3 View FIGURES 4 View FIGURES 5 View FIGURES 6 )

ZooBank registration: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:04C4AC0D-DE0C-46F0-AB6A-F5D2B3D24514

Type species. Martensopsalis dogny View in CoL spec. nov.

Diagnosis. Martensopsalis can be distinguished from all other genera of Neopilionidae by the presence of a pointed basal apophysis on the ventral side of the palpal femur ( Figs 3 View FIGURES 3 , 4C View FIGURES 4 ), although being more conspicuous in some individuals than others; palpal patella with a distal-prolateral apophysis ( Figs 3 View FIGURES 3 , 4C View FIGURES 4 ), also with different degrees of development; palpal patella and tibia of similar size; palpal tarsus longer than other articles; a dense set of thick setae on all palpal articles; palpal claw well developed and smooth. Penis with long sclerotized straight shaft with a short glans, and the stylus being a coiled tube; without bristles, spines or setae.

Description. Prosoma weakly sclerotized, smooth; carapace with the metapeltidium 2 well demarcated; opisthosoma unornamented; dorsum color of earth tones or green, with a transverse reflective pale/orange band on first opisthosomal tergite ( Figs 3 View FIGURES 3 , 4A–B View FIGURES 4 , 6A View FIGURES 6 ); ozophores large, raised and visible from above, located immediately behind fixed spine of coxa I. Ocularium large, smooth, positioned behind anterior margin of carapace at a distance equal to length of ocularium ( Figs 4A–B View FIGURES 4 , 6A, C View FIGURES 6 ). Chelicerae ( Figs 4B, D View FIGURES 4 ) of normal size, without evident sexual dimorphism; second article setose, except for fixed finger; movable finger without setae. Palp ( Fig. 4C View FIGURES 4 ) covered with stiff thick setae, giving it a spiny appearance; without plumose setae; femur with a distinct basal-proventral apophysis ( Figs 3 View FIGURES 3 , 4C View FIGURES 4 ); patella with a distinct prodistal apophysis ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 3 ); patella and tibia of similar size; tarsus longer than femur, slightly bent; tarsal claw without ventral teeth.

Coxae of legs I–III with dorsal spines; other leg articles without denticles or spines. Legs long and slender, femur I longer than carapace; pseudoarticulations of tarsi with paired ventral spines; leg II with two pseudoarticulations on femur and eight on tibia; leg IV with two or four pseudosegments on tibia only, not always the same in the corresponding right and left legs.

Penis ( Figs 4E View FIGURES 4 , 5 View FIGURES 5 ) simple, with a straight shaft, without spines, groups of bristles or sensory setae; shaft folding towards the tip from which the short glans and the coiled stylus tube protrude.

Etymology. Named for our dear colleague Jochen Martens for his contributions and enormous influence on Opiliones systematics. The second part of the generic name is the classical Greek noun “psalis” (= scissors) which has been previously used in the names of other genera of Neopilionidae such as Megalopsalis , Forsteropsalis and Pantopsalis . The gender is feminine.

Distribution. Widespread in the southern half of New Caledonia’s Grande Terre.

Comments. Martensopsalis is so far the only genus of Neopilionidae in New Caledonia, known only from four specimens collected during our 2018 expedition and from additional records posted on iNaturalist. The simple straight penis without setae or spines and with a short glans with a long stylus distinguishes Martensopsalis from most other neopilionids, including all other Australasian species. The penis of Neopilio Lawrence, 1931 is similar in lacking supination and setae and in having the stylus developed as a tightly coiled tube, but the shaft widens basally ( Hunt & Cokendolpher 1991; Lotz 2011).

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