Baeus jabaquara Margaria and Loiacono, 2006
publication ID |
21207 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:51607BDA-BC10-491E-B057-702FF339EAC4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6258599 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/93FE7C9A-C6A5-B516-AB3D-DF48D6E37450 |
treatment provided by |
Thomas |
scientific name |
Baeus jabaquara Margaria and Loiacono |
status |
n. sp. |
Baeus jabaquara Margaria and Loiacono View in CoL HNS , n. sp.
(Figs. 7-11).
Diagnosis
Female body yellow, with conspicuous pilosity, antennal club longer than A2-A6 with traces of segmentation. Male body color walnut brown; metasoma lighter than remaining parts of body, and appendages yellowish; digitus with three teeth, aedeagal-volsellar shaft weakly sclerotized, relative length between aedeagal lobe and aedeagal-volsellar shaft combined, and basal segment (34:53). Baeus jabaquara HNS n. sp. is related to B. anelosimus HNS n. sp. but differs by body pilosity, the relative proportions of antennal segments in female and male, the color and venation of wings, and the relative porportions between mesosoma and metasoma.
Description
Holotype female (Figs. 7-8)
Color. Body and appendages yellow, with very conspicuous pilosity.
Body. Length 0.70 mm (Fig. 7). Head in dorsal view transverse (35: 15), wider than mesosoma (34:19); vertex and frons with short pilosity, and polygonal sculpture; head in lateral view higher than long (25:15), slightly higher than mesosoma; eye height:malar space (11:10); LOL:POL:OOL (7:12:1); head in frontal view subcircular, wider than high (25:20); eye with scatter very short pilosity; eye height:interorbital space (11:14).
Antenna. (Fig. 8). Antennal segments in the following relative proportions (41:8), (16:12), (5:8), (4:8), (3:9), (3:9), antennal club segmentation poorly differenciated (45:25), antennal club longer than A2-A6 (45:31).
Mesosoma. In dorsal view with setigerous puncture sculpture, as wide as long (15:12); mesoescutum transverse (15:7); scutellum and metanotum narrow stripe like; mesonotum with conspicuous semidecumbent pilosity.
Metasoma. T2 (first visible tergite) wider than long (26:15) and conspicuous pilosity; T3 - T6 wider than long (15:10); T7 triangular. S1 with short longitudinal crenulae.
Allotype male (Figs. 9-11).
Color. Body walnut brown, metasoma lighter, and appendages yellowish.
Body. Length close to 0.8 mm, eye heightmalar space (9:8), LOL:POL:OOL (7:14:1); head in frontal view wider than high (26:18); eyes with scattered very short pilosity; eye height:interorbital space (9:21).
Antenna. (Fig. 9). Antennal segments in the following relative proportions: (40:15), (22:10), (10:10), (7:11), (8:13), (8:10), (8:11), (10:12), (7:13), (11:11), (11:13), (16:10).
Mesosoma. In lateral view longer than high (33:20).
Wings. Fore wings hyaline narrow, length:width (55:18), apically rounded, overlapping the apex of metasoma, stigmal vein (Fig. 10); venation and wing darker than in B. anelosimus HNS ; hind wings hyaline, with setae longer than wing width.
Metasoma. Metasoma with first tergite trapezoidal wider than long (14:4), with longitudinal costae in all segment surface; T2 wider than long (23:14), with costae in the anterior portion of the segment surface.
Genitalia. (Fig. 11). Digitus with three very small teeth, penis valves and ventral portion of aedeago-volsellar weakly sclerotized; volsellar laminae developed as a weakly ventral plate; relative length between aedeagal lobe, and aedeagal-volsellar shaft and basal segment (34:53).
Variability
Body completely yellow, or yellow with castaneus dorsal surface.
Type material designation
Holotype female (on card), Brazil, Jundiaí, State of São Paulo, Serra do Japi , 20-III-2005, Gonzaga coll., reared from Anelosimus jabaquara (Araneae: Theridiidae ) eggs. Allotype male (on microscopic slide), same data as holotype. Paratypes females (5), (4 on cards, 1 on microscopic slide), same data as holotype. GoogleMaps
Distribution
Baeus jabaquara HNS sp. nov. is distributed in the Brazilian state of São Paulo. This area corresponds to Paraná subregion of the Neotropical region, according to the new biogeographical scheme of Morrone (2001).
Etymology
This species is named after the epithet of the spider host Anelosimus jabaquara used as noun in apposition.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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