Lepthyphantes rossitsae, Dimitrov, 2018

Dimitrov, Dragomir, 2018, Description of Lepthyphantes rossitsae sp. n. from Turkey (Arachnida: Araneae: Linyphiidae), Revue suisse de Zoologie 125 (2), pp. 277-281 : 277-280

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.1414223

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5592571

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F1732C-D141-3E28-52C4-5928FD1E83E0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lepthyphantes rossitsae
status

sp. nov.

Lepthyphantes rossitsae View in CoL sp. n.

Figs 1-6 View Figs 1-9 , 10-12 View Figs 10-15 , 16-22 View Figs 16-22

Types: Male holotype, 1 male paratype, 7 females paratypes; Turkey, Çamlik village , Beyşehir district, Maǧarasi cave; 10.07.1993; P. Beron leg.

Etymology: I dedicate the species to my wife Rossitsa Dimitrova.

Diagnosis: The new species is very similar to Lepthyphantes leprosus in somatic and genital characters. The male of L. rossitsae sp. n. can be distinguished by the shape of the narrow branch of the lamella characteristica, which is shorter and wider apically ( Figs 1, 4 View Figs 1-9 , 16, 18 View Figs 16-22 ), while in L. leprosus it is longer, narrower and forked at the end ( Fig. 7 View Figs 1-9 ). The embolus in both species is very similar, but in L. rossitsae sp. n. the teeth at its base are less numerous and tiny ( Figs 2, 5 View Figs 1-9 , 17 View Figs 16-22 ), while in L. leprosus they are more numerous and slightly bigger ( Fig. 8 View Figs 1-9 ). Also the big tubercle of the cymbium ( Figs 3, 6 View Figs 1-9 , 19 View Figs 16-22 ) is shorter and wider than in L. leprosus ( Fig. 9 View Figs 1-9 ). The female epigyne ( Figs 10-12 View Figs 10-15 , 20-22 View Figs 16-22 ) has almost the same lateral wall and lateral lobe as in L. leprosus , but the scape in L. rossitsae sp. n. is thinner and longer and there are no lateral teeth ( Figs 13-15 View Figs 10-15 ).

Description of male (holotype): Measurements: Total length 3.85; cephalothorax length 1.48, width 1.25; sternum length 0.68, width 0.45; chelicera length 0.72, width 0.30; abdomen length 2.35, width 1.45; leg I length 11.75 (0.80 + 3.00 + 0.45 + 3.00 + 3.00 + 1.50); leg II length 10.75 (0.60 + 2.80 + 0.45 + 2.70 + 2.85 + 1.35); leg III length 8.45 (0.55 + 2.35 + 0.40 + 1.90 + 2.25 + 1.00); leg IV length 10.70 (0.62 + 2.70 + 0.40 + 2.63 + 3.00 + 1.35). Eyes: Both eye rows straight; AME smaller than other eyes, touching each other. Other eyes approximately equal in size. AME diameter 0.05; ALE, PLE, PME diameter 0.09; ALE separated from AME by 0.03. PME separated from PLE and each other by 0.08, ALE touching PLE. Chelicerae with 2 large distal and 2 small apical teeth on promargin and with 1 large distal tooth on retromargin. Coloration: carapace, sternum, chelicerae and legs yellow-brown. Abdomen grey, with white pattern (not very well preserved). Leg chaetotaxy: leg I (1p, 1d, 2d2p1v1r, 1d1r); leg II (-, 1d, 2d1r1v, 1d1p); leg III (-, 1d, 2d1r, 1d); leg IV (-, 1d, 2d1r, 1d).

Palps ( Figs 1-6 View Figs 1-9 , 16-19 View Figs 16-22 ): Cymbium with one big and one small tubercle in its basal part, visible in dorsal view ( Figs 3, 6 View Figs 1-9 , 19 View Figs 16-22 ). Paracymbium connected to cymbium with its flat internal part. Lamella characteristica broad and incised, bifid. It’s narrow distal branch gradually widening to a fan shaped apical part ( Figs 1, 4 View Figs 1-9 , 16 View Figs 16-22 ). Embolus bent, sickle-shaped, bearing small teeth near its base ( Figs 4-5 View Figs 1-9 , 17 View Figs 16-22 ).

Description of female (paratype): Measurements: Total length 4.05; cephalothorax length 1.60, width 1.25; sternum length 0.85, width 0.75; chelicera length 0.72, width 0.30; abdomen length 2.66, width 1.70; leg I length 10.47 (0.65 + 2.95 + 0.47 + 2.50 + 2.50 + 1.40); leg II length 9.45 (0.63 + 2.40 + 0.47 + 2.30 + 2.40 + 1.25); leg III length 7.00 (0.54 + 2.00 + 0.40 + 1.35 + 1.85 + 0.86); leg IV length 9.35 (0.56 + 2.40 + 0.40 + 2.25 + 2.52 + 1.22). Eye arrangement and coloration as in male. Chelicerae with 4 large teeth on promargin and 4 small apical teeth on retromargin. Leg chaetotaxy: leg I (1p, 1d, 2d1p2v1r, 1d1p1r); leg II (-, 1d, 2d1v2r, 1d1p1r); leg III (-, 1d, 2d1v1r, 1d); leg IV (-, 1d, 2d1r, 1d).

Epigyne ( Figs 10-12 View Figs 10-15 , 20-22 View Figs 16-22 ): Lateral wall without teeth ( Figs 10-11 View Figs 10-15 , 20-21 View Figs 16-22 ). Scape long and narrow, widening at the end ( Figs 10 View Figs 10-15 , 20 View Figs 16-22 ). Two lateral lobes on each side of scape ( Figs 10-11 View Figs 10-15 , 20-21 View Figs 16-22 ).

Distribution: Known only from the type locality.

Remarks: As already stated by Helsdingen (2009), the splitting of Lepthyphantes s. l. into several distinct genera by Saaristo & Tanasevitch (1996, 1999, 2000, 2001) not only makes species identification difficult and user-unfriendly, but also leaves Lepthyphantes s. str. as a heterogeneous group containing all species that could not be placed with certainty in any of the present genera close to Lepthyphantes . This is also the case with Lepthyphantes leprosus . Previously it was listed as part of the Lepthyphantes nebulosus group. Meanwhile most of the species from this group have been transferred to Megalepthyphantes Wunderlich, 1994 , but Lepthyphantes leprosus remained in Lepthyphantes along with some other species, most of which are clearly not related to each other. Since the new species described here is very close to Lepthyphantes leprosus , it is provisionally also placed in Lepthyphantes .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Linyphiidae

Genus

Lepthyphantes

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