Nesticus nasicus Coyle & McGarity, 1992

Hedin, Marshal & Milne, Marc A., 2023, New species in old mountains: integrative taxonomy reveals ten new species and extensive short-range endemism in Nesticus spiders (Araneae, Nesticidae) from the southern Appalachian Mountains, ZooKeys 1145, pp. 1-130 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1145.96724

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:830628C2-76CD-4641-BFC6-144CD775ED6B

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5E146B38-C2B8-5BBB-A51E-B91AB2934E26

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Nesticus nasicus Coyle & McGarity, 1992
status

 

Nesticus nasicus Coyle & McGarity, 1992 View in CoL View at ENA

Figs 31A-D View Figure 31 , 32A-H View Figure 32

Nesticus nasicus Coyle & McGarity, 1992: 162, figs 1-4, 7-14.

Material examined.

Type material: Holotype: USA - North Carolina, Jackson Co. • ♂ holotype; 1 mile W of Dillsboro at Cowee Mountain Train Tunnel , rock bank; 28 Oct. 1990; T McGarity leg. AMNH; New collections from type locality: - Jackson Co. • ♂, 17♀; Cowee Mountain Train Tunnel , NW of Dillsboro; 35.3768°N, - 83.268°W; 14 Aug. 1992; M. Hedin leg. Non type material: - Buncombe Co. • ♀; NE Mt. Pisgah , Hwy 151, head of McKinney Creek ; 35.4448°N, - 82.7225°W; 5 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, M. Lowder, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 02_194; • ♀; NE Mt. Pisgah , Hwy 151, head of McKinney Creek ; 35.4448°N, - 82.7225°W; 22 Aug. 2004; M. Hedin, R. Keith, J. Starrett, S. Thomas leg.; MCH 04_074; - Haywood Co. • ♀; Blue Ridge Parkway, vicinity Richland Balsam ; 35.3666°N, - 82.9915°W; 4 Aug. 1992; F. Coyle leg.; • 4♂, 2♀, 7 imm; Hwy 215, along West Fork Pigeon River ; 35.339°N, - 82.9016°W; 4 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, F. Coyle, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 02_190; • 2♂, 8♀, 5 imm; Hwy 276, N Pigeon Gap; 35.3677°N, - 82.7958°W; 4 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, M. Lowder, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 02_193; - Jackson Co. • 3♀, 1 imm; Coward Mountain near Jackie Spring Gap; 35.3352°N, - 83.0897°W; 1 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 02_178; • 4♀, 1 imm; Coward Mountain , E Wolfpen Gap; 35.3606°N, - 83.1037°W; 1 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, M. Lowder leg.; MCH 02_177; • 9♀; Mull Creek on Caney Fork Road , 11 mi. E Hwy 107; 35.3417°N, - 83.0292°W; 11 Aug. 1992; M. Hedin leg.; • 2♀; Rich Mountain, SE Sugar Creek Gap ; 35.2907°N, - 83.004°W; 1 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 02_179; • ♂; SW of Rich Mountain Bald, 0.5 mi E Sugar Creek Gap; 35.2915°N, - 83.006°W; 26 Jun. 1992; B. Dellinger leg.; • ♀; SW of Rich Mountain Bald, 0.5 mi E Sugar Creek Gap; 35.2915°N, - 83.006°W; 17 Apr. 1994; M. Hedin, B. Dellinger leg.; • 7♀; Wolf Creek at Cullowhee Creek , off Cullowhee Mountain Road ; 35.2468°N, - 83.1843°W; 11 Aug. 1992; M. Hedin leg.; - Transylvania Co. • ♀; along West Fork French Broad River , Silverstein Road, 2 mi. N Hwy 64; 35.1573°N, - 82.8758°W; 19 Aug. 2007; M. Hedin, M. McCormack, S. Derkarabetian leg.; MCH 07_128; • ♀; below Connestee Falls , off Hwy 276 S Brevard; 35.1647°N, - 82.7319°W; 2 Oct. 1992; B. Dellinger leg.; • ♂, 2♀; Hwy 215, 4.7 mi. NW Balsam Grove along Bald Knob branch; 35.2568°N, - 82.9098°W; 13 Aug. 1992; M. Hedin leg.; • 5♀; Hwy 215, S Pinhook Gap; 35.2575°N, - 82.9204°W; 22 Aug. 2004; M. Hedin, R. Keith, J. Starrett, S. Thomas leg.; MCH 04_073; • 2♀, 1 imm; Hwy 276 at Davidson River , opposite Stillwater Branch; 35.284°N, - 82.7591°W; 28 Aug. 2001; M. Hedin, M. Lowder, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 01_180; • 4♀; Hwy 276 at Davidson River , opposite Stillwater Branch; 35.284°N, - 82.7591°W; 4 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, M. Lowder, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 02_192; • ♀; Hwy 276, Looking Glass Creek just N Looking Glass Falls ; 35.2978°N, - 82.7676°W; 19 Aug. 2007; M. McCormack, S. Derkarabetian leg.; MCH 07_129; • ♀; Hwy 281, E Owens Gap; 35.1957°N, - 82.9608°W; 20 Aug. 2004; M. Hedin, R. Keith, J. Starrett, S. Thomas leg.; MCH 04_071; • ♀, 1 imm; N Fork French Broad, FR 140 off Hwy 215; 35.2503°N, - 82.889°W; 4 Sep. 2002; M. Hedin, M. Lowder, P. Paquin leg.; MCH 02_189. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis.

Males may be distinguished from other members of the species group by the palp with a uniquely shaped tegular apophysis (except in comparison to Nesticus brimleyi ), combined with a narrow-based paracymbial dorsal process (Fig. 31A, C View Figure 31 ) which differs greatly from N. brimleyi . The N. nasicus epigynum is very similar to N. brimleyi and N. templetoni . When viewed dorsally all possess “crinkled” sac-shaped structures above (anterior to) the main epigynal plate, which we hypothesize are homologous to vulval pockets (Vp) as seen in Japanese Nesticus ( Suzuki and Ballarin 2020). Further diagnostic features for N. nasicus are discussed in Coyle and McGarity (1992).

Variation.

Notable variation exists in the shape of the dorsal process of the paracymbium, which is sometimes narrow and finger-like ( Coyle and McGarity 1992: figs 1, 2), or fishtailed (Fig. 31A-D View Figure 31 ), with variation in the shape of the end of the process. Both the distomedial and dorsomedial paracymbial processes vary in presence across populations, with a distomedial process found in West Fork Pigeon River and Cowee Mountain males ( Coyle and McGarity 1992: fig. 2), and a dorsomedial process found only in Cowee Mountain males; these processes are lacking in males from other populations. As discussed below similar population-level variation in these processes is observed in Nesticus templetoni . The shape of both the lateral and apical processes of the median apophysis also varies across populations (Fig. 31A-D View Figure 31 ).

Epigyna vary across sample locations in the length of the projection of the median septum, the shape of the epigynal pockets (though generally spherical), the width of epigynal pocket lateral hoods, and the length of the spermathecae (Fig. 32A-H View Figure 32 ).

Distribution and natural history.

Previously known only from two locations but now known to be reasonably widespread in the Great Balsam and Pisgah Mountains southwest of Asheville North Carolina, west of the Asheville Basin (Fig. 30 View Figure 30 ). The southeastern Connestee Falls population, found east of the French Broad River, is a geographic outlier.

Remarks.

No obvious phylogeographic trends are apparent in the mitochondrial data, with geographically separate locations seemingly less genetically divergent than in other similarly widespread taxa (Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ). This is particularly striking considering the notable male morphological variation observed across populations.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Nesticidae

Genus

Nesticus

Loc

Nesticus nasicus Coyle & McGarity, 1992

Hedin, Marshal & Milne, Marc A. 2023
2023
Loc

Nesticus nasicus

Coyle & McGarity 1992
1992