Bolostromus italoi, Dupérré, 2023

Dupérré, Nadine, 2023, Review of the American genus Bolostromus Ausserer, 1875 with the description of fourteen new species (Araneae, Cyrtaucheniidae), Zootaxa 5317 (1), pp. 1-88 : 46-49

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5317.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A88A6184-36E3-4FDD-9BE0-862EC7361ED7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8153853

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BC87C1-FFEE-146E-96D5-38AD05CE02E2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bolostromus italoi
status

sp. nov.

Bolostromus italoi new species

Figs 35–36 View FIGURE 35 View FIGURE 36 , 70, map 2 View MAP 2

Type material. Female holotype from Ecuador, Loja Province, Oña (-03. 471850 -79.168543) 2252m, 16.XI.2021, hand collecting in burrow in dry area, I. Tapia ( QCAZ) . Paratypes: 6♀ from Ecuador, same data as holotype ( QCAZ, ZMH-A0019759 , A0019760 MCZ) .

Additional material. ECUADOR: Loja Province: Oña (-03. 471850 -79.168543) 2252m, 16.XI.2021, 1♀ 5juv., hand collecting in burrow in dry area, I. Tapia ( DTC) .

Etymology. The specific name is in honor of Italo Germanico Tapia Caisaguano in recognition of his help and enthusiasm in collecting Ecuadorian spiders including this new species.

Diagnosis. Females most resemble B. valdivia n. sp. in coloration but are differentiated from all species by the combination of the following characters: carapace fovea strongly procurved and, with ending recurved ( Fig. 36A View FIGURE 36 , arrow), metatarsi I with thick, almost complete scopulae, and internal genitalia with elongated and narrow spermathecae with elongated external lobe ( Fig. 36E View FIGURE 36 ).

Description. Female (holotype): Total length: 15.31; carapace length: 6.82; carapace width: 5.52; carapace height: 3.43; abdomen length: 8.49. CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace almost rectangular sightly medially, margin sinuous; pars cephalica dark brown; pars thoracica light brown, smooth; cephalic groove well defined, with pit medially; fovea broad, strongly procurved with end recurved ( Fig. 36A View FIGURE 36 ); caput strongly elevate ( Fig. 36C View FIGURE 36 ). Clypeus: 0.21. Sternum elongated 3.94/2.79, light beige medially, dark brown laterally; posterior sigillae oval, median and anterior sigillae rounded ( Fig. 36B View FIGURE 36 ). Labium dark reddish-brown without cuspule; elongated. Endites quadrangle; dark reddish-brown with 12 cuspules; serrula not observed. Chelicerae dark brown; promargin seven teeth and 26 denticles; rastrellum with 15 spines. EYES: AME: 0.19; ALE: 0.34; PLE: 0.22; PME: 0.21; interdistances: AME: 0.15; AME-ALE: 0.16; PME: 0.65; PME-PLE: 0.08; LE: 0.13; ocular quadrangle: 1.38/1.47/0.52. ABDOMEN: Oval, dark gray with a median light gray pattern of triangular marks, ventrally light gray ( Fig. 35A, B View FIGURE 35 ). Spinnerets: median spinnerets: 0.67; lateral spinnerets: 1.03/0.74/1.06. LEGS: Uniformly brown; metatarsi I with strong 2/3 scopulae ( Fig. 36D View FIGURE 36 ); metatarsi II with half scopulae; tarsi I–II with complete scopulae ( Fig. 36D View FIGURE 36 ); leg III–IV without scopulae. Coxae I–II with inner short stiff setae ( Fig. 36B View FIGURE 36 , arrow). Tarsal claw teeth (7/6) (6/7) (5/6) (5/4-5). LEG MEASUREMENTS: I 17.17 (5.39/2.88/3.87/2.87/2.16); II 15.23 (4.69/2.36/3.28/2.74/1.81); III 11.28 (3.78/1.97/1.61/2.40/1.52); IV 18.17 (5.12/2.92/4.51/3.79/1.83); leg formula: 4123. LEGS SPINATION: femur I–III (0); IV with 11 grouped pro-apical spines; patellae I, II, IV (0); III with 14p, 2r; tibia I (0); II 1vap; III 2-2v, 2vap, 3p, 1d, 2r; IV 2-2v, 2vap, 3r; metatarsus I 1-1v 3vap; II 1-1-1-1v, 3vap; III 3p, 1-1-2-2d, 2r, 2-2v, 2vap; IV 2r, 2-1-2-2-1-1v, 4vap; tarsus I, II (0); III 3v, 3p; IV 3v, 2r, 3p. GENITALIA: Spermathecae elongated and narrow with elongated external lobes ( Fig. 36E View FIGURE 36 ).

Male: Unknown.

Distribution. Only known from the type locality in Loja Province, Ecuador.

Natural History. Specimens were collected at an altitude of 2252m in a dry forest of the Andes, females build a silk-lined burrow covered by debris ( Fig. 69A, B View FIGURE 69 ).

QCAZ

Museo de Zoologia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

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