Kochosa tasmaniensis, Framenau & Castanheira & Yoo, 2023

Framenau, Volker W., Castanheira, Pedro De S. & Yoo, Jung-Sun, 2023, The artoriine wolf spiders of Australia: the new genus Kochosa and a key to genera (Araneae: Lycosidae), Zootaxa 5239 (3), pp. 301-357 : 343-347

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5239.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BF1FF837-56D5-4829-8D46-E821D9D31AB3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7634865

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/193AC81C-0028-FFD4-FF3C-FC7E194263E0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Kochosa tasmaniensis
status

sp. nov.

Kochosa tasmaniensis sp. nov.

( Figs 25A–F View FIGURE 25 , 26A–D View FIGURE 26 , 27 View FIGURE 27 )

Holotype. Male, Eddystone Point (40º59'S 147º21'E, Tasmania, AUSTRALIA), T. B. Churchill, November 1986 ( QVMAG 13 :819). GoogleMaps

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the Australian state Tasmania, where this species is found.

Other material examined (18 males, 1 female). Australia: Tasmania : 1 male Eddystone Point , 40º59′S 147º21′E ( QVMAG 13 :474) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3447) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3512) GoogleMaps ; 1 female North Scottsdale , 41º06'S 147º33'E ( QVMAG 13 :43258) GoogleMaps ; 2 males Waterhouse Point , 40º49'S 147º40'E ( QVMAG 13 :423) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :433) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :539) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :627) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :973) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :1969) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3189) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3379) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3403) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3485) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3501) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :3770) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :4279) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, same data ( QVMAG 13 :4061) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Males of K. tasmaniensis sp. nov. can be separated from all other species in the genus by the long and thin embolus, which is distinctly waved apically ( Fig. 25C View FIGURE 25 ). Similar to K. obelix sp. nov., the embolic division has a thorn-like protrusion retrolaterally, but it is much stronger in the latter species ( Fig. 18E View FIGURE 18 ). The epigyne of female K. tasmaniensis sp. nov. differ from those of all other species by the distinct posterior raised edge ( Fig. 26C View FIGURE 26 ).

In addition, K. tasmaniensis sp. nov. is the only species, which has a tubercle on the outer edge of the fangs in both males ( Fig. 25F View FIGURE 25 ) and females.

Description.

Male ( based on holotype, QVMAG 13 :819) .

Cephalothorax. Dorsally dark brown, distinct light median band narrowing abruptly behind cephalic area ( Fig. 25A View FIGURE 25 ); light lateral bands distinct; dense cover of white, short setae in median and lateral bands ( Fig. 25A View FIGURE 25 ); Sternum dark brown (Fig, 25B); chelicerae fang with tubercle ( Fig. 25F View FIGURE 25 ).

Abdomen. Dorsally light orange-brown; cardiac mark continuous, narrowest posteriorly and there bordered by dark brown area ( Fig. 25A View FIGURE 25 ). Venter orange-brown ( Fig. 25B View FIGURE 25 ).

Pedipalps ( Fig. 25C–E View FIGURE 25 ): patella conspicuously light brown ( Fig. 25A View FIGURE 25 ); tegular apophysis broad, almost translucent; basoembolic apophysis reduced to a small sclerotised edge; embolus long, slender, and distinctly waved apically.

Legs. Brown with indistinct dark annulations; spination of leg I: femur: 3 dorsal, 1 apicoprolateral; tibia: 3 ventral pairs, 1 apicoventral pair, 1 prolateral, 1 retrolateral; metatarsus: 3 ventral pairs, 1 apicoventral, 2 prolateral, 1 apicoprolateral, 2 retrolateral, 1 apicoretrolateral.

Measurements (based on holotype QVMAG 13:819: TL 4.72, CL 2.42, CW 1.78. Eyes: AME 0.10, ALE 0.10, PME 0.23, PLE 0.20. Row of eyes: AE 0.57, PME 0.72, PLE 0.86. Sternum (length/width) 1.14/0.92 (1.03/0.96). Labium (length/width) 0.30/0.36. AL 2.39, AW 1.49. Legs: Length of segments: Pedipalp 0.88+0.85+-+0.81=2.54, I 1.82+2.16+1.51+0.88=6.37; II 1.76+2.02+1.51+0.88=6.17, III 1.51+1.65+1.45+0.85=5.46; IV 1.96+2.19+2.10+ 1.16=7.41.

Variation. Size (range, mean ± s.d.): TL 3.92–5.40, 4.52 ± 0.50; CL 2.30–2.93, 2.54 ± 0.21; CW 1.60–2.00, 1.82 ± 0.12, n = 10. The most evident variation in K. tasmaniensis sp. nov. concerns the abdominal pattern, as the anterior shoulders are sometimes very pale increasing the contrast-rich colouration of this species.

Female ( based on paratype, QVMAG 13 :43258) .

Cephalothorax and abdomen. Similar to male ( Fig. 26A, B View FIGURE 26 ); the single female is in poor condition and all legs are fallen off. The specimen is overall darker than the male illustrated. The outer tubercle on the fang is present as in male.

Epigyne ( Fig. 26C, D View FIGURE 26 ): ventral view: median septum indistinct with but with raised posterior rim ( Fig. 26C View FIGURE 26 ); dorsal view: spermathecal heads spherical, comparatively small; spermathecal stalks short, attaching posterolaterally ( Fig. 26D View FIGURE 26 ).

Legs. Spination unknown as all legs fallen off.

Measurements: TL 5.91, CL 3.00, CW 2.00 (but cephalothorax laterally compressed). Eyes: AME 0.09, ALE 0.14, PME 0.23, PLE 0.23. Row of eyes: AE 0.72, PME 0.88, PLE 1.28. Sternum (length/width) 1.40/1.12. Labium (length/width) 0.45/0.54. AL 3.00, AW 2.24. Legs: measurements not possible.

Life history and habitat preferences. The habitat preferences of K. tasmaniensis sp. nov. are unknown; males were found between September and December, but mostly in October and November. A single male was recorded in April suggesting that they mature before winter. The female paratype was collected in October.

Distribution. Kochosa tasmaniensis sp. nov. has so far only been found at three locations in north-eastern Tasmania ( Fig. 27 View FIGURE 27 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Lycosidae

Genus

Kochosa

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF