Dendrolycosa Doleschall 1859

Jäger, Peter, 2011, Revision of the spider genera Nilus O. Pickard-Cambridge 1876, Sphedanus Thorell 1877 and Dendrolycosa Doleschall 1859 (Araneae: Pisauridae), Zootaxa 3046, pp. 1-38 : 10-11

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.278844

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3507073

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03895E31-152F-9958-FF72-8D7E9228F97D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dendrolycosa Doleschall 1859
status

 

Dendrolycosa Doleschall 1859 View in CoL View at ENA

Dendrolycosa Doleschall 1859: 51 View in CoL (description of the genus).

Therimachus Thorell 1895: 224 (description of the genus). Simon 1898a: 294 (synonymy with Dendrolycosa View in CoL ). Campostichommides Strand 1911: 164 (description of the genus). syn. nov.

Dianpisaura Zhang, Zhu & Song 2004: 366 (description of the genus). syn. nov.

The genus Dendrolycosa Doleschall 1859 View in CoL was described from two subadult females from Ambon. The history of descriptions and transfers shows that the concept of this genus and other genera involved were never clear and misunderstood in several cases. Blandin (1979) revised African representatives and included Dendrolycosa View in CoL as well. Unfortunately, he did not illustrate the subadult female syntypes of D. fusca View in CoL from Ambon, but instead a female identified by Eugene Simon from MNHN from Java, wrongly assigned to the type species (see D. duckitti View in CoL spec. nov. below). After the description of the type species, four species have been subsequently described from Southeast Asia, one from East Africa and one from Australia. Four of them have been described in other genera and later transferred to Dendrolycosa View in CoL ( Blandin 1979, Davies 1982). Five species originally described in Dendrolycosa View in CoL were transferred to the genus Hygropoda Thorell 1894 View in CoL : H. albolimbata (Thorell 1878) View in CoL , H. dolomedes (Thorell 1878) View in CoL , H. exilis (Thorell 1881) View in CoL , and H. longitarsis ( Thorell 1877) View in CoL by Roewer (1955b: 1458) as well as H. lineata (Thorell 1881) View in CoL by Davies (1985), one species was transferred to the genus Voraptus Simon 1898 (Zoridae) : V. tenellus (Simon 1893) by Roewer (1955b: 1458). Another species was considered a nomen nudum ( Platnick 2011): “ D. kochi Simon 1898 View in CoL ”: 289 (female from E Australia, which was illustrated by Blandin 1979: 365, fig. 34; Rainbow [1911: 262] stated that Simon informed him in a “letter dated Paris, 6th July, 1910, ... he has not yet described this species, but that he included it in his work under manuscript name in order to define the range of the genus“).

Strand (1911) descriped the monotypic genus Campostichommides in the Agelenidae View in CoL . Lehtinen (1967) transferred the genus to the Pisauridae View in CoL . It is recognised as junior synonym of Dendrolycosa View in CoL (see note in D. inquirenda ).

Zhang et al. (2004) later erected the genus Dianpisaura Zhang, Zhu & Song 2004 for two Chinese species previously described in the genus Pisaura Simon 1885 View in CoL : D. lizhii ( Zhang 2000) (type species) and D. songi ( Zhang 2000) View in CoL . Both species were described by Zhang (2000) from southern Yunnan View in CoL Province less than 100 km from the border to Laos. Both species were recognised to be congeneric with Dendrolycosa fusca View in CoL . While comparing more nominal Pisaura View in CoL species, some of them that had been described from the Philippines and from India were identified as belonging to this genus. Moreover, Nilus ornatus Berland 1924 is transferred to the genus Dendrolycosa View in CoL .

Extended diagnosis. Small to large (6–21 mm) sized Pisaurinae. Diagnostic characters of females are the wide intromittent ducts, in contrast to Pisaura View in CoL spp., and the presence of one or two depressions in the anterior epigyne ( Zhang et al. 2004, for Dianpisaura ). The only diagnostic character for male copulatory organs spiders is the absence of an embolar membrane that, in contrast, is present in Pisaura View in CoL species ( Zhang et al. 2004: sub Dianpisaura ). According to observations in Laos, the web-building behaviour of Dendrolycosa View in CoL species may also serve as a diagnostic character: a sheet web with a funnel retreat that is built in vegetation, which is similar to the webs of Agelena View in CoL spp., although not as large.

Note. The length of the palpal tibia is not here considered diagnostic on a generic level, as proposed in the description of Dianpisaura ( Zhang et al. 2004) . It seems to be an exceptional character state in D. robusta View in CoL . In all other males of the genus, the male palpal tibia is as long as or shorter than the cymbium. Zhang et al. (2004) proposed the anterior patch of the dorsal opisthosoma embedded in a dark folium with undulating margins, especially in posterior half, as a diagnostic character (here called pattern A, combined with two white submarginal bands on the dorsal prosoma). This pattern is known to be present in D. bairdi View in CoL spec. nov., D. bobbiliensis View in CoL comb. nov., D. fusca View in CoL , D. icadia View in CoL , D. inquirenda comb. nov., D. lepida View in CoL , D. ornata View in CoL comb. nov., D. parangbusta View in CoL comb. nov., D. robusta View in CoL , D. sierwaldae View in CoL spec. nov., and D. songi View in CoL comb. nov. The colour pattern of the opisthosomata in D. duckitti View in CoL spec. nov., D. gitae View in CoL comb. nov., D. yuka View in CoL spec. nov. and D. putiana View in CoL comb. nov. is different: it consists of three prosomal and four opisthosomal thin longitudinal bright lines with a distinct incision of the lateral lines in the posterior half (pattern B). Moreover, D. duckitti View in CoL spec. nov. is an olive green colour in live specimens whereas species with pattern A are brown or reddish brown. In D. cruciata View in CoL , a third pattern could exist: dark chevrons on dorsal opisthosoma ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 30 – 33 ), but from the type material it is not clear whether this pattern was real or whether artefacts have been illustrated by Roewer (ridges caused by shrivelling?). No closer relationships could be recognised between species within one pattern. It is interpreted as colour variation as is known intraspecifically from Megadolomedes australianus (L. Koch 1865) View in CoL , which was described and illustrated by Davies and Raven (1980: figs 8–12). Another spider genus with similarly two distinct colour patterns is Alopecosa Simon 1885 (Lycosidae) View in CoL ( Nentwig et al. 2010).

In the present species distal tibiae and metatarsi are darkened.

Composition. D. bairdi View in CoL spec. nov. from Laos, D. bobbiliensis ( Reddy & Patel 1993) View in CoL comb. nov. from India, D. cruciata (Roewer 1955) View in CoL from East Africa, D. duckitti View in CoL spec. nov. from Laos, D. fusca Doleschall 1859 View in CoL (type species) from Amboina, D. gitae ( Tikader 1970) View in CoL comb. nov. from India, D. icadia ( L. Koch 1876) View in CoL from Queensland, Australia, D. lepida ( Thorell 1890) View in CoL from Sumatra, D. ornata ( Berland 1924) View in CoL comb. nov. from New Caledonia, D. parangbusta ( Barrion & Litsinger 1995) View in CoL comb. nov. from Philippines, D. putiana ( Barrion & Litsinger 1995) View in CoL comb. nov. from Philippines, D. robusta ( Thorell 1895) View in CoL from Burma, D. sierwaldae View in CoL spec. nov. from New Guinea, D. songi ( Zhang 2000) View in CoL comb. nov. from Yunnan View in CoL , China, D. yuka View in CoL spec. nov. from Australia. Additionally, five undescribed species are known from Australia (Raven, in litt.). According to the diversity known it is likely that more species exist.

Nomina dubia: D. inquirenda ( Strand 1911) comb. nov. from Indonesia ( Moluccas), D. spadicaria ( Simon 1897) from India, D. stauntoni Pocock 1900 from India.

Nomina nuda: “ Dendrolycosa kochi Simon 1898 ” (see D. yuka View in CoL spec. nov.)

Distribution. Tanzania, India, Burma, China ( Yunnan Province), Laos (Oudomxai Province, Vientiane Province, Bolikhamsay Province, Champasak Province), Indonesia (Sumatra, Java, Ambon, Moluccas), New Guinea, Australia (Queensland), New Caledonia

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Pisauridae

Loc

Dendrolycosa Doleschall 1859

Jäger, Peter 2011
2011
Loc

Dianpisaura

Zhang 2004: 366
2004
Loc

Dendrolycosa

Doleschall 1859: 51
1859
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