Karaops jarrit Crews & Harvey, 2011

Crews, Sarah C., 2023, But wait, there's more! Descriptions of new species and undescribed sexes of flattie spiders (Araneae, Selenopidae, Karaops) from Australia, ZooKeys 1150, pp. 1-189 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1150.93760

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A38C5FB6-9F66-4F85-8788-AAA53D21704D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/49A14BD6-6987-5893-8A34-96704B1E2DD9

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Karaops jarrit Crews & Harvey, 2011
status

 

Karaops jarrit Crews & Harvey, 2011 View in CoL

Fig. 8A, F View Figure 8 , Map 4 View Map 4

Karaops jarrit Crews & Harvey, 2011: 36, figs 23-26 (♂, ♀, examined).

New records.

Western Australia • 1♂; Rivervale, 177 Knutsford Avenue; 31°57'50"S, 115°55'43"E; 10 Nov. 2010; V.W. Framenau leg.; sifted litter; in house; (WAM T108825) • 1♀; ~ 48 km NNE Koolyanobbing; 30°21'51.48"S, 119°37'59.36"E; 9-17 Oct. 2013; C. Knuckey leg.; dry pitfall trap; minor creekline; (WAM T128844) • 1♂; same as previous; (WAM T128845) • 1 imm.; Bungalbin Hill, 48.2 km NNE of Koolyanobbing; 30°21'38.10"S, 119°41'53.67"E; 3 Apr. 2013; S. White, A. Heidrich, A. Nowicki, J. Vos, F. Bokhari leg.; hand; leaf litter; (WAM T130654) • 1♂; ~ 38 km WSW of Quindanning, Worsley Alumina conveyor #2, night shift; 33°05'10"S, 116°08'56"E; 22 Dec. 2007; J. Hynes leg.; (WAM T111761) • 1 imm.; ~ 26 km NE of Harvey, N of Worsley Alumina Overland Conveyor #1; 33°00'24"S, 116°10'17"E; 25 Oct. 2009; J. Hynes leg.; night shift; (WAM T143564).

Diagnosis.

The female of Karaops jarrit can be distinguished from K. raveni by the lateral lobes of the epigyne almost touching or touching posteriorly, and the accessory bulbs are separated by more than one accessory bulb width in the latter species ( Crews and Harvey 2011; figs 27, 28, 31, 32). The epigynes of K. jarrit and K. marrayagong are very similar ( Crews and Harvey 2011: figs 25-28), and with only a few specimens of each, it is difficult to determine if differences between the two will remain useful for their separation. The median field is wider and shorter in K. marrayagong than in K. jarrit , and the accessory bulbs of the former are closer together. Additionally, K. marrayagong has 4 promarginal teeth and K. jarrit has 3. Although many people find the idea of using geography to separate species problematic, currently the easiest way to distinguish these two species is that K. jarrit is found in the southwest of Western Australia, and K. marrayagong is known from a single locality near Sydney, close to the east coast of the continent in New South Wales (Map 4 View Map 4 ).

The male of Karaops jarrit (Fig. 8F View Figure 8 ) is similar to the males of K. raveni and K. marrayagong by the body shape (flatter and wider than species in other Karaops species groups (Fig. 9B, D View Figure 9 )), the horizontally oval sternum, and the long dRTA, curved ventrally and tapered to a point (Figs 8D, E View Figure 8 , 9A, D View Figure 9 , 10B View Figure 10 ). It can be differentiated from K. marrayagong by lacking spinules on the median apophysis and from K. raveni by the tegular lobe which is located more toward the center of the bulb, whereas it is located more retrolaterally in this species. Additionally, it can be geographically differentiated from K. jarrit because they are located on opposite sides of the continent (Map 4 View Map 4 ).

Description.

The description of the male and female can be found in Crews and Harvey (2011).

Distribution.

This species is found in southwestern Western Australia (Map 4 View Map 4 ).

Natural history.

The greatest number of specimens is known from the Northern Jarrah Forest subregion of the Jarrah Forest bioregion, with two localities near Perth, from the Perth subregion of the Swan Coastal Plain bioregion, a single locality in the Fitzgerald subregion of the Esperance Plains bioregion, and most recently from the Southern Cross subregion of the Coolgardie bioregion. The first three subregions have a warm to hot Mediterranean climate. Data indicate that adults are primarily found in the warmer to hotter times of the year with little rainfall. This species has been collected in a pitfall trap, in leaf litter, and on an overland conveyer at night.

Discussion.

Karaops jarrit (Fig. 8A, F View Figure 8 ) is known from four disjunct localities in southwestern Australia, likely reflecting collecting efforts rather than actual distribution. Karaops jarrit overlaps in distribution with K. ellenae and K. francesae , none of which are in the same species group. The sister taxa of K. jarrit are K. raveni and K. marrayagong on the east coast from New South Wales to Queensland (Suppl. material 2: table S1).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Selenopidae

Genus

Karaops

Loc

Karaops jarrit Crews & Harvey, 2011

Crews, Sarah C. 2023
2023
Loc

Karaops jarrit

Crews & Harvey 2011
2011