Metellina, CHAMBERLIN & IVIE, 1941

Álvarez-Padilla, Fernando & Hormiga, Gustavo, 2011, Morphological and phylogenetic atlas of the orb-weaving spider family Tetragnathidae (Araneae: Araneoidea), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 162 (4), pp. 713-879 : 779-782

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00692.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10545810

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7D5E87AD-C02B-5542-FC84-4CF8D128F9F7

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Metellina
status

 

METELLINA CHAMBERLIN & IVIE, 1941 View in CoL View at ENA ( FIGS 66–70 View Figure 66 View Figure 67 View Figure 68 View Figure 69 View Figure 70 )

Type species: Metellina curtisi ( McCook, 1894) . The syntypes of Pachygnatha curtisi are fragments of three male specimens from California ( USA), deposited at the Academy of Natural Sciences , Philadelphia ( Levi, 1980) .

Diagnosis: Metellina species can be distinguished from all other tetragnathid genera by the following combination of characters: abdomen oval, longer than wide; secondary eyes with canoe-shaped tapetum ( Levi, 1980: figs 95, 96); PLE on a single tubercle ( Fig. 67C, E View Figure 67 ); epigynal plate flat ( Fig. 68A, B View Figure 68 ); copulatory openings posteriorly orientated ( Fig. 68D View Figure 68 ); fertilization ducts originating on the anterior surface of the spermathecae ( Figs 68C View Figure 68 , 70D View Figure 70 ); accessory glands concentrated near the copulatory ducts ( Fig. 68F View Figure 68 ); cymbial ectobasal process formed by a massive cuticular fold ( Fig. 69C, D View Figure 69 ); cymbial ectomedian process absent ( Fig. 69D View Figure 69 ); paracymbium slightly longer than half the cymbium length; and sperm duct without switch backs ( Fig. 70C View Figure 70 ).

Description: Female: body length c. 8.0 mm. Cephalic fovea formed by a transverse, deep, M-shaped groove ( Fig. 67A View Figure 67 ). Ocular area higher than carapace lateral margins ( Fig. 67C, E View Figure 67 ). Labium trapezoidal, wider than long and rebordered. Sternum slightly longer than wide ( Fig. 67D View Figure 67 ). Anterior surface of chelicerae smooth; boss present ( Fig. 67C, E View Figure 67 ). Eyes subequal in size, lateral eyes slightly smaller, juxtaposed, and on a tubercle. Clypeus c. 1.5 times the AME diameter. Booklung cuticle smooth ( Fig. 66A View Figure 66 ). Tracheal spiracle near the spinnerets. Median tracheae not ramified, longer than half the lateral tracheae length ( Fig. 66D View Figure 66 ). Tracheal spiracle without accessory glands, median tracheae tips leaf-shaped ( Fig. 66C, F View Figure 66 ). ALS with c. 60 piriform spigots ( Fig. 66B View Figure 66 ). PMS with two aciniform spigots between the cylindrical and minor ampullate silk gland spigots but without any aciniform spigots over the anterior surface. PLS with more than 20 aciniform spigots, distal end of the aggregate spigots embracing the tip of flagelliform spigot. Epigynal plate flat, copulatory openings posteriorly orientated and in the shape of longitudinal grooves ( Fig. 68A, B, D View Figure 68 ). Spermathecae walls well sclerotized ( Fig. 68C–F View Figure 68 ). Copulatory and fertilization ducts cuticle well sclerotized. Copulatory ducts shorter than half the spermathecae length, fertilization ducts longer than the spermatheca width ( Figs 68F View Figure 68 , 70D View Figure 70 ). Accessory glands distributed on one side of the spermathecae, accessory gland openings arranged in groups ( Fig. 68E, F View Figure 68 ).

Male: size and somatic morphology similar to that of the female, except the chelicerae are slightly larger and divergent ( Fig. 67B, C, F View Figure 67 ). PLS triplet reduced to nubbins. Epiandrous plate flat, fusules arranged in two groups and immersed in pits ( Fig. 66E View Figure 66 ). Palpal patella with one macroseta, palpal tibia slightly longer than wide. Tegulum wider than long and larger than the subtegulum. Conductor well sclerotized and fused to the tegulum ( Fig. 70B, C View Figure 70 ). Embolic apophysis massive and square in ectal view; embolus short and well sclerotized ( Figs 69B View Figure 69 , 70B View Figure 70 ). Sperm duct spiralled ( Fig. 70C View Figure 70 ).

Natural history: The Holarctic genus Metellina includes seven species and one subspecies ( Levi, 1980; Marusik, 1986). Metellina builds vertical webs with c. 25 radii, more than 30 spirals, and an open hub ( Levi, 1980: pl. 6). These spiders are found either in dark and humid places or amongst the forest low vegetation. A few aspects of the biology of M. segmentata have been studied, such as the reproductive biology ( Rubenstein, 1987; Prenter, Montgomery & Elwood, 1995; Hack, Thompson & Fernandez, 1997; Malakov, Bilde & Lubin, 2004), the phenology and life cycle, including that of Metellina mengei ( Blackwall, 1869; Toft, 1983), and the sperm ultrastructure and development ( Michalik, Sacher & Alberti, 2005).

Taxonomy: Metellina has never been revised, except for the North American species ( Levi, 1980). Our diagnosis and description includes the species revised by Levi (1980). We coded M. segmentata for the phylogenetic analysis. The monophyly of Metellina has never been tested. Two hypotheses exist regarding the sister group of Metellina , either sister to Chrysometa (supported by the chelicerae of

782 F. ÁLVAREZ-PADILLA and G. HORMIGA the male larger than those of the female and by having the sperm duct without switch backs; Hormiga et al., 1995); or sister to Dolichognatha ( Álvarez-Padilla, 2007) . The morphology plus behaviour data set recovered Metellina as sister to Dolichognatha ( Fig. 143A, B View Figure 143 ); when these data are combined with DNA sequences, Metellina comes out as sister to a clade that includes Dolichognatha , Chrysometa , and Diphya ( Fig. 144 View Figure 144 ).

PMS

Peabody Essex Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Tetragnathidae

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