Alopecosa kovblyuki Nadolny & Ponomarev

Nadolny, Anton A., Ponomarev, Alexandr V. & Dvadnenko, Konstantin V., 2012, A new wolf spider species in the genus Alopecosa Simon, 1885 (Araneae: Lycosidae) from Eastern Europe, Zootaxa 3484, pp. 83-88 : 83-86

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.214889

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166791

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A27840-8C7B-FF95-6BD7-F9E2FD62F871

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Alopecosa kovblyuki Nadolny & Ponomarev
status

sp. nov.

Alopecosa kovblyuki Nadolny & Ponomarev View in CoL , sp. nov.

Figures 1–14 View FIGURES 1 – 12 View FIGURES 13 – 15 .

Type material: Holotype 1 3 ( ZMMU) RUSSIA, Rostov area, Ust-Donetsk Distr., Razdorskaya Village, Pukhlyakovskie Sklony, 47°31'18''N 40°36'37''E, 7– 14.04.2004 (A.V. Ponomarev).

Paratypes: RUSSIA. Rostov area: 1 3 (CP- 25.11.29 /2), Rostov-on-Don, Shchepkinskiy Forestry, 47°20'N 39°45'E, May 2010 (V.V. Alexandrov). Ust-Donetsk Distr., Razdorskaya Village, 47°32'30''N 40°38'50''E: 1 3 ( ZMMU), valley edge, Caragana frutex , 17– 26.04.2010 (A.V. Ponomarev); 1 3 (CP- 25.11.29 /1), valley edge, Caragana frutex , 17– 26.04 .2010 (A.V. Ponomarev). UKRAINE. Crimea, Dzhankoy Distr.: 14 3 7 ƤƤ (TNU-SO1/1, SO5, SO6/1, SO11, SO14/1, SO26/3, SO27/3, SO28/2, SO45/2, SO46/2, SO49/2, SO56/5, SO58/3, SO66/3, SO70), environs of Solenoe Ozero Village, 45°53'N 34°27'E, hand collected and pitfall traps, 21.10.2008, 12.03– 22.10.2009 (A.A. Nadolny); 8 3 3 ƤƤ ( ZMMU), 6.5 km N Solenoe Ozero Village, 45°56'35''N 34°27'06.7''E, Phragmites australis & Carex sp. on the mollusks' shells bar, pitfall traps, 26.03-9.04.2009 (A.A. Nadolny). Razdol'noe Distr.: 1 3 (TNU), 9 km

N Razdol'noe, environs of Portovoe Village, Lebyazh'i Islands branch of Crimean State Nature Reserve, 45°51'17''N 33°29'40''E, 19.04.2012 (A.A. Nadolny). Kherson area, Genichesk Distr.: 5 3 5 ƤƤ (TNU-2804/3, 2812/2, 2814/1, 2819/1, 2887/9, 2894/2, 2903/4), environs of Genichesk, 46°10'N 34°48'E, Arabatskaya Strelka, hand collected and pitfall traps, 31.05– 26.11.2010 (N.A. Stasyuk). Mykolaiv area, Pervomaysk Distr.: 3 ƤƤ (TNU), Myhiya Village, 48°02'N 30°57'E, dry meadow, 7.05–8.06.2007 (N.Yu. Polchaninova). Poltava area, Novosanzharskiy Distr.: 2 3 3 ƤƤ (TNU), Sokolova Balka Village, 49°12'N 34°37'E, southern slope with ruderal vegetation, 27.04– 14.06.2011 (I.P. Lezhenina).

Comparative material. Alopecosa beckeri (Thorell, 1875) : UKRAINE. Crimea: see material in Nadolny & Kovblyuk (2010). Alopecosa taeniopus (Kulczynski, 1895) : RUSSIA. Astrachan' area: 7 ƤƤ (CP), 230 km NW Astrachan', Bogdinsko-Baskunchakskiy Reserve, 13– 17.07.2002, 7– 10.06.2005 (E.A. Belosludtsev & A.S. Tilli). Belgorod area: 2 3 (CP), Kustovoe Village, 17.10.1998 (A.V. Ponomarev). Rostov area: 1 3 (CP-25.11.5/34), Razdorskaya Village, Pukhlyakovskie Sklony, 23.03.2004 (A.V. Ponomarev); 4 3 1 Ƥ (CP), Don River delta, 12 km N Azov, 9– 16.04.2008 (P.P. Ivliev). UKRAINE. Crimea: see material in Nadolny & Kovblyuk (2010).

Etymology. The species name is a patronym in honour of our friend and colleague, Mykola M. Kovblyuk (Simferopol, Ukraine).

Diagnosis. The new species is similar to A. beckeri , A. mariae (Dahl, 1908) and A. taeniopus . Males can be distinguished from these species by a rounded projection on the tegulum ( Figs 2–3 View FIGURES 1 – 12 , 13 View FIGURES 13 – 15 ). In addition, the shape of tegular (=median) apophysis ( Figs 2–6 View FIGURES 1 – 12 , 13–14 View FIGURES 13 – 15 ) and synembolus ( Figs 7–8 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ) is also distinct. Females of the new species and A. mariae clearly differ from A. beckeri ( Nadolny & Kovblyuk 2010: figs 23, 27) and A. taeniopus ( Nadolny & Kovblyuk 2010: figs 25, 29) by the presence of two anterior epigynal pockets ( Figs 9–11 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ; Buchar & Thaler, 2004: figs 5–6). Females of A. kovblyuki sp. nov. and A. mariae differ in the shape of the epigynal septum and the spermathecal reservoirs. The epigynal septum of A. kovblyuki sp. nov. is highly variable ( Figs 9–11 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ), therefore females of the new species and A. mariae are difficult to distinguish.

Description. Holotype: total length 9.0; carapace 4.4 long, 3.2 wide. Median light brown band on carapace widening in anterior part, and reaches the border of the carapace at the level of posterior lateral eyes. Dark brown areas on each side of median band. Carapace with broad white marginal bands. Eye area black. Chelicerae dark brown. Cheliceral claw with hillock on proximal part. Sternum light brown, covered with black setae. Legs and pedipalps light brown. Pedipalpal tibia more than twice as long as wide. Median band with grey lanceolate spot; series of spots on the dorsal abdomen; median band bordered with brown band. Sides of abdomen yellow. Ventral abdomen with grey spot. Tibiae spination: I, II – pl 1-1, rl 1-1, v 2-2 -2(a); III, IV – d 1-1, pl 1-1, rl 1-1, v 2-2 -2(a). Paratypes (TNU-2814/1), measurements (male/female): total length 8.0 / 9.4; carapace 3.8 / 4.2 long, 2.7 / 2.9 wide. Length of pedipalp segments (male/female): femur 1.4 / 1.4, patella 0.8 / 0.8, tibia 0.7 / 0.7, tarsus 1.3 / 1.2.

Length of leg segments (male/female):

Male pedipalp: tegulum with rounded projection on ventral side, retrolateral side of tegular apophysis curved ventrally, embolus flat and wide, synembolus claw-like, distal part of embolus and synembolus hiden behind tegular apophysis ( Figs 2–8 View FIGURES 1 – 12 , 13–14 View FIGURES 13 – 15 ); epigyne with two anterior pockets, septum flat, width of septum more than 1.5 times length, spermatheca spherical ( Figs 9–12 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ).

Variation. Males (n = 11): carapace 3.6–4.4 long and 2.6–3.2 wide. Tegular apophysis shape variable ( Figs 5–6 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ). Females (n = 10): carapace 4.1–4.6 long, 2.9–3.2 wide. Epigyne shape variable ( Figs 9–11 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ). The grey spot on the ventral side of abdomen can be absent.

Phenology. Males and females have been found from March to November, with peak activity in April. Females with egg sacs were found in May. Alopecosa kovblyuki sp. nov. and A. taeniopus occur sympatrically and have a similar phenology ( Fig. 16 View FIGURE 16 ).

Habitats. Most of specimens were collected in grasslands (steppe; meadows with Artemisia & Limonium ; meadows with Phragmites & Carex ; Salicornia & Halocnemum on the silt). A few specimens were collected in plantations of various deciduous trees.

Distribution. Ukraine (Mykolaiv area, Crimea, Kherson area, Poltava area), Russia (Rostov area). Collection records of A. kovblyuki sp. nov. are shown on Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 .

Remarks. Alopecosa kovblyuki sp. nov. has similarities with other Alopecosa species. However, the structure of the pedipalp and epigyne differs from the type species of the genus, A. fabrilis . The correct placement of A. kovblyuki sp. nov. can only be resolved when Alopecosa is revised.

ZMMU

Zoological Museum, Moscow Lomonosov State University

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Lycosidae

Genus

Alopecosa

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