NANOMETINAE FORSTER & FORSTER, 1999

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 : 802-803

publication ID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10545820

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7D5E87AD-C030-555D-FCDA-4C08D093F9E9

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

NANOMETINAE FORSTER & FORSTER, 1999
status

 

NANOMETINAE FORSTER & FORSTER, 1999

NEW RANK ( FIGS 4F View Figure 4 , 71–76 View Figure 71 View Figure 72 View Figure 73 View Figure 74 View Figure 75 View Figure 76 , 87–91 View Figure 87 View Figure 88 View Figure 89 View Figure 90 View Figure 91 , 96–99 View Figure 96 View Figure 97 View Figure 98 View Figure 99 )

Type genus: Nanometa Simon, 1908 . This family name was first proposed by Forster & Forster (1999: 166) at the family rank, but it has never been formally diagnosed.

Diagnosis: Nanometines can be differentiated from other tetragnathids by the following combination of characters: female cheliceral denticles present (84-1: Figs 73C View Figure 73 , 88D View Figure 88 ), absence of trichobothria on femur IV ( Fig. 73F View Figure 73 ) and the remaining femora, female genital openings often plugged with amorphous material (132-3: Figs 74A View Figure 74 , 98B View Figure 98 ), male palpal patella without macrosetae (180-0: Figs 73D View Figure 73 , 97H View Figure 97 ), conductor originating on the centre of the tegulum (55-0), solid, uniform degree of sclerotization between tegulum and conductor (59-0); and tubular embolus shape (67-0) ( Figs 75E View Figure 75 , 76A–C View Figure 76 , 90C View Figure 90 , 91A View Figure 91 ). These six characters also represent the morphological synapomorphies supporting this lineage obtained by the total evidence analysis of Dimitrov & Hormiga (2011), in which they are labelled as ‘ Nanometa clade’ (see also Álvarez- Padilla et al., 2009). Additional diagnostic characters of nanometines are the female copulatory ducts longer than the spermathecae length (146-2; Figs 74B View Figure 74 , 89D View Figure 89 , 98D View Figure 98 ), shorter in Pinkfloydia Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011 : figs 8G, H, 15F); the presence of a cymbium ectobasal process (26-1); and having the cymbium ectomedian process more than half the cymbial width (30-1: Figs 75A View Figure 75 , 90A, C View Figure 90 , 99D View Figure 99 ). The characteristic branched tracheal system of many nanometines (such as Nanometa and ‘ Orsinome sarasini ; see Forster & Forster, 1999: 166) is not found in Pinkfloydia , which has its median tracheal trunks confined to the abdomen and not branched ( Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011).

Taxonomic and natural history: Forster & Forster (1999) were the first to recognize this group endemic to Australasia as ‘Nanometidae’ and discussed some interesting aspects of nanometine anatomy such as the presence of an stridulatory organ on the booklung covers of males opposite to a row of denticles on the IV coxa ( Figs 71A, B View Figure 71 , 73E View Figure 73 ). They also included in their ‘Nanometidae’ the monotypic genus Eryciniolia Strand, 1912 and Orsinome lagenifera ( Urquhart, 1888) . There are many species to be described in Nanometinae , some which are new (e.g. Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011) but others are misplaced, such as the case of ‘ Orsinome sarasini ( Figs 143A, B View Figure 143 , 144 View Figure 144 ), which is not congeneric with the type species of Orsinome and belongs in the Nanometinae . At the present time Nanometinae includes the genera Nanometa and Pinkfloydia . The monophyly of Nanometinae has been tested in recent phylogenetic analyses that also included molecular data and the group is relatively well supported ( Álvarez-Padilla et al., 2009; Dimitrov & Hormiga, 2011).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Tetragnathidae

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