Hexapopha fannesi, Feitosa & Ott & Bonaldo, 2023

Feitosa, Níthomas M., Ott, Ricardo & Bonaldo, Alexandre B., 2023, Meeting the southern brothers: a revision of the Neotropical spider genus Hexapopha Platnick, Berniker & Víquez, 2014 (Araneae, Oonopidae), Zootaxa 5329 (1), pp. 1-150 : 31-33

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5329.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BDC2B521-8DC4-4680-A210-5CAEF611F02B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8244073

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D344879B-FFEE-5E16-FF13-3BDFFB3FF801

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hexapopha fannesi
status

sp. nov.

Hexapopha fannesi sp. nov.

Figs 2D View FIGURES 2 , 17–18 View FIGURES 17 View FIGURES 18 ; Map 2 View MAP 2

Type material: Holotype: male from Maçaranduba , Nova Ipixuna, Pará, Brazil (04º55’12”S, 49º10’02”W), MPEG team leg., 1♁, deposited in MPEG 37770, PBI_OON 45692 GoogleMaps . Paratype: Fazenda Arataú , Novo Repartimento, Pará, Brazil (04º02’40”S, 50º23’05.55”W), Jun. 19, 2003 ‑ Aug. 11–12, 2003, Equipe IPAN leg., 1♁ (MPEG 10860, PBI _ OON 45336 ) GoogleMaps .

Etymology. The specific name is a patronym honoring the arachnologist Wouter Fannes (Royal Museum for Central Africa) recognizing his great contribution to the Goblin Spiders PBI.

Diagnosis. Males differ from those of other species with long endite’s P1 (reaching at least the anterior margin of the sternum) ( H. harveyi sp. nov., H. erebai sp. nov., H. periclitata sp. nov., H. delta sp. nov., H. tallitae sp. nov. and H. platnicki sp. nov.) as follows: from H. harveyi sp. nov. by the relatively shorter endite’s P1 (not surpassing the anterior margin of sternum, Fig. 18C View FIGURES 18 ; reaching the middle of sternum in H. harveyi sp. nov., Fig. 16A View FIGURES 16 ); from H. delta sp. nov., H. tallitae sp. nov. and H. platnicki sp. nov. by the longitudinal oriented endite’s P1 ( Fig. 18C View FIGURES 18 ) (divergent in H. delta sp. nov., Fig. 25C View FIGURES 25 ; convergent in H. tallitae sp. nov. and H. platnicki sp. nov., Figs. 28C View FIGURES 28 , 31B View FIGURES 31 ); from H. periclitata sp. nov. and H. erebai sp. nov., by the tip of endite’s P1 folded ventrally ( Fig. 18C View FIGURES 18 ) (not folded in H. periclitata sp. nov., Fig. 23B View FIGURES 23 ; twisted lateraly in H. erebai sp. nov., Fig. 20C View FIGURES 20 ).

Description. Male (PBI_OON 45692). Total length 1.54. CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace pale orange, with Coxapopha -like pattern, pars cephalica with two posterior humps in lateral view, surface of elevated portion of pars cephalica smooth, sides finely reticulate, fovea present ( Figs 17B–C View FIGURES 17 ). Eyes ALE oval, PME squared, PLE oval; posterior eye row recurved from above, straight from front; ALE separated by their radius to diameter, ALE-PLE separated by less than ALE radius, PME touching throughout most of their length, PLE-PME separated by less than PME radius ( Fig. 17E View FIGURES 17 ). Sternum wider than long, pale orange, median concavity absent, with radial furrows between coxae I–II, II–III, III–IV, furrow wrinkled, surface finely reticulate, without pits, microsculpture everywhere but front ( Figs 17D View FIGURES 17 , 18B View FIGURES 18 ). Mouthparts: Chelicerae distal region abruptly narrowed ( Fig. 17E View FIGURES 17 ). Labium anterior margin anteriorly projecting at middle, wider than long ( Figs 18C–D View FIGURES 18 ). Endites with a median projection (mp), a P1 and a P2; mp very short, with wide base and narrow tip, directed anteriorly; P1 long, directed posteriorly, with tip bent upwards, anterior margin serrated. P2 lamellar, situated anteriorly to P1, face retrolateral serrated ( Figs 18C–E View FIGURES 18 ). ABDOMEN: dorsum soft portions yellow. Book lung covers small, very narrow. Dorsal scutum pale orange, covering full length of abdomen, no soft tissue visible from above. Epigastric scutum not protruding. Postepigastric scutum pale orange, almost semicircular, covering nearly full length of abdominal length. LEGS: white. GENITALIA: Epigastric region with sperm pore situated at level of posterior spiracles. Palp proximal segments white; embolus tip flattened, bent upwards; conductor present, without projections, longer than embolus ( Figs 17G–I View FIGURES 17 , 18F–I View FIGURES 18 ).

Female. Unknown.

Other material examined. None.

Distribution. Known from Novo Repartimento and Nova Ipixuna, state of Pará, Brazil ( Map 2 View MAP 2 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Oonopidae

Genus

Hexapopha

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