Reductoonops berun, Duperre, Nadine & Tapia, Elicio, 2017

Duperre, Nadine & Tapia, Elicio, 2017, The goblin spiders (Araneae, Oonopidae) of the OTONGA Nature Reserve in Ecuador, with the description of seven new species, Evolutionary Systematics 1 (1), pp. 87-109 : 94-95

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.1.14969

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0530C3AA-584D-429A-B80E-9457F507B94F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/83622B7B-5874-4A25-9018-E7818CE82D67

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:83622B7B-5874-4A25-9018-E7818CE82D67

treatment provided by

Evolutionary Systematics by Pensoft

scientific name

Reductoonops berun
status

sp. n.

Reductoonops berun View in CoL sp. n. Figs 18-21, 34

Type material.

Male holotype and male paratype from Ecuador, Cotopaxi Province, OTONGA Biological Reserve, 04-07.ix.2014, sifting litter, Berlese, E. Tapia, C. Tapia, N. Dupérré (QCAZ). Female allotype, same data.

Additional material.

Cotopaxi Province: OTONGA Biological Reserve, 24-30.v.2014, 1♂, sifting litter, Berlese, E. Tapia, C. Tapia, N. Dupérré (ZMH); 08-21.vi.2014, 9♂2♀, sifting moss, Berlese, E. Tapia, C. Tapia, N. Dupérré (ZMH); 04-07.ix.2014, 4♂4♀, sifting litter, Berlese, E. Tapia, C. Tapia, N. Dupérré (ZMH).

Etymology.

The specific epithet is a noun in apposition taken from the Tsafi´ki languange, meaning "fish hook" for the shape of the dorsal apophysis of the male palp.

Diagnosis.

Males and females are similar to R. hedlite and R. tandapi by the presence of two large, reflective eyes. Males are distinguished from R. tina Platnick & Berniker, 2011 by their double hook-shaped dorsal apophysis (dap2), simple in the latter species (Platnick and Berniker 2011; fig 392); from R. tandapi Platnick & Berniker, 2011 by the spine-like dorsal apophysis (dap1), bidentate in the later (Platnick and Berniker 2011; fig 367). Females are distinguished by their elongated oval, truncated apically anterior genitalic process (Fig. 21); sinuous and subdistally narrowed in R. tina Platnick & Berniker, 2011.

Description.

Male (holotype). Total length: 0.9; carapace length: 0.5; carapace width: 0.3.

COLORATION: Carapace, sternum, mouthparts beige, without pattern; abdomen beige, without pattern; legs pale beige (Fig. 34). CARAPACE: Piriform in dorsal view (Fig. 34); elevated portion of pars cephalica finely reticulate, sides finely reticulate. Fovea absent, lateral margin undulate. Clypeus margin strongly rebordered, sinuous in front view, sloping forward in lateral view. Sternum longer than wide, surface smooth, radial furrows between coxae I–II, II–III, III–IV smooth, with an additional radial between endites and coxae I. Chelicerae straight, cheliceral teeth not observed. Labium triangular, not fused to sternum, anterior margin slightly incised at middle. Endites elongated, triangular tip. EYES: Two large, reflective eyes, separated by half their radius (Fig. 34). ABDOMEN: Cylindrical (Fig. 34). Booklung covers large, ovoid. Dorsal scutum absent. Epigastric scutum weakly sclerotized, not surrounding pedicel. Postepigastric scutum weakly sclerotized, yellow, short, only around epigastric furrow, not fused to epigastric scutum. Spinneret scutum, supraanal scutum both absent. LEGS: Leg formula 4123; spineless. GENITALIA: Male palp not strongly sclerotized (Fig. 18); cymbium ovoid in dorsal view, cup-shaped; bulb longer than the sclerotized cymbium (Fig. 18); embolus flagellum-like, basally sinuous, accompanied dorsally by conductor (c), ventrally by a wide, apically pointed ventral apophysis (vap), dorsally with two apophysis, one spine-like (dap1) and one double hook-shaped (dap2) (Figs 18, 19).

Female. Total length: 1.1; carapace length: 0.6; carapace width: 0.3.

COLORATION: As in male. CARAPACE, EYES and ABDOMEN: As in male.

LEGS: As in male; female palp without claw. GENITALIA: Anterior genitalic process somewhat visible through the epigastric scutum, epigastric scutum margin with a wide trapezoid sclerotized area medially (Fig. 20); anterior genitalic process elongated oval, truncated apically, process set in wide wing-like structure (Fig. 21).

Natural history.

Specimens were collected by sifting litter or mosses.

Distribution.

Only known from the type locality.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Oonopidae

Genus

Reductoonops