Trachyzelotes stubbsi Platnick & Murphy, 1984

Chatzaki, Maria, 2010, New data on the least known zelotines (Araneae, Gnaphosidae) of Greece and adjacent regions, Zootaxa 2564, pp. 43-61 : 48-50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.197217

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3510606

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F801C-FFF3-3B1D-FF44-8EAFFC8ACA2C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Trachyzelotes stubbsi Platnick & Murphy, 1984
status

 

Trachyzelotes stubbsi Platnick & Murphy, 1984 View in CoL

Figs 6–12 View FIGURES 6 – 9 View FIGURES 10 – 13

T. stubbsi Platnick & Murphy, 1984: 9 View in CoL , Figs 15–16 View FIGURES 14 – 19 , (Dm) holotype from Cyprus, Cape Kiti, near Larnaka airport (contra Chatzaki et al., 2003) (not examined).

T. stubbsi: Levy, 1998: 106 View in CoL , Figs 23–24 View FIGURES 20 – 23 View FIGURE 24 (m), from Israel (contra Chatzaki et al., 2003).

T. adriaticus (Caporiacco, 1953) View in CoL : Chatzaki et al., 2003: 57, Figs 36–37 (mf), from Greece, Antikythira isl. (misidentification).

T. stubbsi: Levy 2009: 26 View in CoL View Cited Treatment , Figs 57–58 (Df) from Israel.

Diagnosis: Males of T. stubbsi are distinguished by other congeners by the bifid and turned tibial apophysis of the palpal organ as well as the characteristic hammer-like shape of the prolateral extension of the terminal apophysis. Females are distinguished by the small spermathecae and the long M-shaped median ridge of the epigyne. Females of T. adriaticus and T. stubbsi are inseparable (see details in taxonomic comments).

Identification: Platnick & Murphy, 1984: 9, Figs 15–16 View FIGURES 14 – 19 , Levy, 1998: 106, Figs 23–24 View FIGURES 20 – 23 View FIGURE 24 , Levy, 2009: 26, Figs 57–58.

Material: GREECE: Antikythira: Potamos village, 700 m west: sparse phrygana on sandy soil close to the village: 10 ɗɗ 3 ΨΨ (27.III.01 to 05.VIII.01) (leg. M. Chatzaki); CYPRUS: Lemesos, Kourio: 6 ɗɗ 4 ΨΨ (27.V.07 to 01.VIII.07); 9 ɗɗ 4 ΨΨ (15.III.08 to 17.V.08); 1 ɗ 1 Ψ (15.III.07 to 27.V.07); 1 ɗ 1 Ψ (13.V.06 to 09.VII.06) [all leg. D. Kaltsas].

Taxonomic comments. This species was first described by Platnick and Murphy (1984) from a male collected in Cyprus. Levy (1998) confirmed its presence in Israel and later found and described the female ( Levy 2009).

Males and females from the Greek island Antikythira fit the descriptions recorded above. Distinctive characters of the species are also present in the newly collected material from Cyprus: the prolateral extension of the terminal apophysis of the palpal organ has a characteristic hammer-like shape (see Figs 6–7 View FIGURES 6 – 9 ) and an extra retrolateral process (rp) of the tegular sclerite exists in all populations examined (see also Platnick & Murphy, 1984, p.10, Fig.15 View FIGURES 14 – 19 ). Intraspecific variation also occurs in males of this species: in specimens from Antikythira ( Fig. 7 View FIGURES 6 – 9 ) the hammer-like extension is less stout compared to those from Cyprus ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 6 – 9 ) and has a more slender base; also specimens from Antikythira are smaller in size than those from Cyprus (see Table 1 View TABLE 1 ).

Its epigyne however cannot be distinguished from that of the closely related T. adriaticus ( Figs 10–13 View FIGURES 10 – 13 ). Levy (2009) argued that the M-shaped median ridge (keels according to Levy) of the epigyne takes up two thirds of the epigynal space (sunken space) as delimited by the anterior margin and that “… the spatial position of the median keels and their lateral expansions ” is the distinctive character of the species as far as females are concerned. Unfortunately he did not give any comparative detail of T. adriaticus which seems to follow the same configuration (compare Figs 10, 12 and 13 View FIGURES 10 – 13 ); no consistent differences can be seen between the epigynes of both species in specimens from Cyprus, Antikythira, Crete and Gavdos-Gavdopoula or from the illustrations given by Levy (p.26, Figs 57–58).

Levy also commented on the distribution of the two species on the Greek territory arguing that no females of T. stubbsi could be identified on the Greek islands as deduced by the illustrations of Chatzaki et al. (2003) but instead only females of T. adriaticus were present. However, since Antikythira is a very small island it seems improbable that both species do occur on it sympatrically (males and females were collected at the same traps), especially taking into consideration that the two species are not known to occur on Crete, which is a much larger island. Male and female specimens from Cyprus were also collected sympatrically and the females appear no different from the females of the Greek islands.

Therefore the females of the two species are inseparable in terms of genitalic comparison. Somatic characters are also variable within species so only the presence of males or the evidence from distributional patterns may help to their identification.

In conclusion, T. adriaticus and T. stubbsi are quite similar and intraspecific variation occurs in both for the same characters of males (details of the prolateral extension of the terminal apophysis). However, because the two species also differ in the habitus (size, color) and in the general pattern of the prolateral extension of the terminal apophysis of males (hammer-like in T. stubbsi and pointed in T. adriaticus ) they may be considered as two distinct species.

Distribution. Israel; Cyprus; Greece: Antikythira isl.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Gnaphosidae

Genus

Trachyzelotes

Loc

Trachyzelotes stubbsi Platnick & Murphy, 1984

Chatzaki, Maria 2010
2010
Loc

T. stubbsi:

Levy 2009: 26
2009
Loc

T. adriaticus

Chatzaki 2003: 57
2003
Loc

T. stubbsi:

Levy 1998: 106
1998
Loc

T. stubbsi

Platnick 1984: 9
1984
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