Priscula pastaza Huber, 2023

Huber, Bernhard A., Meng, Guanliang, Dupérré, Nadine, Astrin, Jonas & Herrera, Mauricio, 2023, Andean giants: Priscula spiders from Ecuador, with notes on species groups and egg-sac troglomorphism (Araneae: Pholcidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 909, pp. 1-63 : 38-42

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.909.2351

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A48BD2B3-DC40-45BD-9968-F04890A1C5C5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10462922

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DADCE77E-4843-45FC-B14E-B20C35764BE3

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:DADCE77E-4843-45FC-B14E-B20C35764BE3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Priscula pastaza Huber
status

sp. nov.

Priscula pastaza Huber sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:DADCE77E-4843-45FC-B14E-B20C35764BE3

Figs 6A–B View Fig , 29–32 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig , 41A, C, H View Fig , 42D–E, H View Fig , 43C, G–H View Fig , 44B–D, F View Fig

Diagnosis

Distinguished from known congeners by details of procursus ( Fig. 30A–C View Fig ; tip with two large membranous elements: wide dorsal flap and long ventral flap with pointed tip), genital bulb ( Fig. 30D– F View Fig ; main bulbal process weakly curved with obtuse tip), epigynum ( Fig. 32A–B View Fig ; semicircular, longer than in putatively closest known relatives, P. esmeraldas sp. nov. and P. chapintza sp. nov.), and female internal genitalia ( Fig. 31C View Fig ; round pore plates similar to P. chapintza but not connected to sclerites posteriorly).

Type material

Holotype ECUADOR – Pastaza • ♂; Cavernas del Anzu Forest Reserve, Caverna de los Continentes ; 1.4067° S, 78.0449° W; 1160 m a.s.l.; 25 Sep. 2021; B.A. Huber and M. Herrera leg.; in cave; MECN–ARAC– 37–T . GoogleMaps

Paratypes ECUADOR – Pastaza • 1 ♂, 2 ♀♀ (one female used for SEM); same collection data as for holotype; MECN–ARAC–38–T , in ZFMK Ar 24101 GoogleMaps .

Other material examined

ECUADOR – Pastaza • 3 ♀♀, 2 juvs (in pure ethanol); same collection data as for holotype; ZFMK Ecu174 GoogleMaps 2 ♂♂ (one palp used for SEM), 1 ♀, 2 juvs; Cavernas del Anzu Forest Reserve, Cueva Copa del Mundo ; 1.4054° S, 78.0433° W; 1140 m a.s.l.; 26 Sep. 2021; B.A. Huber and M. Herrera leg.; in cave; MECN–ARAC–39–T , in ZFMK Ar 24102 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ with egg-sac; same collection data as for preceding; MECN–ARAC–40–T , in ZFMK Ar 24103 GoogleMaps 1 juv. (in pure ethanol); same collection data as for preceding; ZFMK Ecu183 GoogleMaps 1 ♀, 2 juvs; same locality as for preceding; 17 Jul. 2013; M. Archambault leg.; QCAZ GoogleMaps .

Etymology

The species name is derived from the type locality, noun in apposition.

Description

Male (holotype)

MEASUREMENTS. Total body length 4.2, carapace width 1.7. Distance PME–PME 200 µm; diameter PME 130 ×150 µm; distance PME–ALE 50 µm; AME absent (cf. female: Fig. 41A View Fig ). ALE and PLE larger than PME (diameter ALE 180 µm, PLE 160 µm). Leg 1: 41.4 (10.3+0.8+ 10.4 +17.5 +2.4), tibia 2: 7.7, tibia 3: 5.7, tibia 4: 7.3; tibia 1 L/d: 69.

COLOR (in ethanol). Carapace light-brown, with whitish marks beside ocular area, clypeus with large light brown band narrowing towards chelicerae; sternum light brown with thin darker brown margins; legs monochromous light brown, without darker rings; abdomen monochromous pale gray, only ventrally with darker ochre mark in gonopore area.

BODY. Habitus as in Fig. 6A View Fig . Ocular area raised, without hump on posterior side, with comb of stronger hairs at median side of each ocular triad. Deep thoracic groove. Clypeus unmodified except sclerotized rim. Sternum wider than long (1.15/0.80), unmodified. Abdomen globular to slightly higher than long, dorso-posteriorly rounded.

CHELICERAE. As in Fig. 31A–B View Fig , with short entapophyses, pair of short frontal apophyses close to fang joints; without stridulatory ridges.

PALPS. As in Fig. 29A–C View Fig ; coxa unmodified, trochanter slightly protruding ventrally, femur large, with unsclerotized retrolateral process proximally followed distally by sclerotized indentation, distal ventral rim not protruding; patella ventrally reduced to strongly sclerotized narrow rim; tibia small relative to femur; palpal tarsal organ exposed, weakly raised ( Fig. 43C View Fig ); procursus ( Fig. 30A–C View Fig ) with distinct whitish protruding area dorsally, distinctive prolateral and dorsal membranous elements composed of hair-like processes (dorsal part shown in Fig. 42D–E View Fig ), distal ventral sclerite flat and weakly sclerotized; genital bulb ( Fig. 30D–F View Fig ) with small proximal sclerite connecting to tarsus, with large whitish area on retrolateral-ventral side, strong and slightly spiraling main bulbal process with subdistal sperm duct opening (arrow in Fig. 42H View Fig ) and obtuse tip.

LEGS. Without spines; with curved hairs on tibiae and metatarsi (mainly legs 1 and 2); with few short vertical hairs; retrolateral trichobothrium of tibia 1 at 6%; prolateral trichobothrium present on all leg tibiae; tarsi without regular pseudosegmentation but rather with many indistinct platelets.

Male (variation)

Tibia 1 in three other males: 9.3, 11.0, 11.3. AME pigment always present but lenses tiny (~20 µm diameter) or absent.

Female

In general similar to male ( Fig. 6B View Fig ) but clypeus rim not sclerotized and hairs on ocular area unmodified. AME variable as in males. Tibia 1 in five females: 7.7–8.8 (mean 8.2). Tarsal organs exposed ( Fig. 43G–H View Fig ); main tarsal claws with ~14–17 tines, tarsus 4 claws more evenly curved and with shorter tines than tarsi 1–3 claws ( Fig. 44C–D, F View Fig ). ALS with one strongly widened spigot, one pointed spigot, and one large and four small cylindrical spigots ( Fig. 41C View Fig ); with distinctively sculptured area medially in front of ALS ( Fig. 41H View Fig ). Epigynum ( Fig. 32A–B View Fig ) main anterior plate semicircular, slightly protruding, posteriorly with lighter semicircular area; posterior epigynal plate medially divided by whitish area. Internal genitalia ( Fig. 31C View Fig ) with simple sclerotized arc, membranous ‘valve’, and pair or roundish pore plates.

Distribution

Known from two neighboring caves in the Cavernas del Anzu Forest Reserve, Pastaza Province, Ecuador ( Fig. 4B View Fig ).

Natural history

All spiders were collected in the interior of two caves; adults were only found in the aphotic zones, but juveniles were also found in the twilight area (the first meters of the entrance areas of both caves were occupied by a different species that also occurs in the neighboring forest; see P. bonita sp. nov.). No specimens of P. pastaza sp. nov. were found in the well-preserved neighboring forest, suggesting that the species might be a troglobite, i.e. strictly bound to underground habitats. The spiders were hanging in very fine and barely visible webs, freely exposed among rocks or in wall niches. Two egg-sacs contained six and seven eggs, respectively, with an egg diameter of 0.95 mm.

ZFMK

Germany, Bonn, Zoologische Forschungsinstitut und Museum "Alexander Koenig"

QCAZ

Ecuador, Quito, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador, Catholic Zoology Museum

ZFMK

Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig

QCAZ

Museo de Zoologia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Pholcidae

Genus

Priscula

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