Calommata Lucas, 1837

Levy, Gershom, 2007, Calommata (Atypidae) and new spider species (Araneae) from Israel, Zootaxa 1551, pp. 1-30 : 3-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.178107

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6247649

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E00DA31A-1C07-FFDF-08AB-27D84DB9FDDD

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Calommata Lucas, 1837
status

 

Calommata Lucas, 1837 View in CoL View at ENA

Type-species by original designation: Calommata fulvipes Lucas, 1837 .

Diagnosis. Carapace with anteriorly strongly elevated ocular tubercle ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1 ), and flattened posterior part traversed by thoracic furrow with small deep pit at middle (Figs. 2, 3). Large forward-directed chelicerae dorsally expanded and with flattened sides bearing sharp teeth in a row and a long arched fang ( Figs. 1 View FIGURES 1 , 6). Sternum with distinctive labial sclerite in front (Fig. 8). Tibiae of male palpi enormously expanded (Fig. 2). Legs of normal size in male, rather stout in female. Tarsi armed with three claws: two serrated; tarsi pseudosegmented in male. Six spinnerets: anterior laterals and posterior medians one-segmented, posterior laterals three-segmented (Fig. 7).

Comments. According to the revision by Gertsch & Platnick (1980), Calommata differs from all other atypids by the transversal thoracic furrow, the relatively posteriorly situated ocular tubercle and the distinctive labium. Calommata is known by one species distributed from tropical Africa to South Africa ( Blandin 1971), and six species distributed in South-East Asia and the Far East ( Platnick 2004). As far as known they live in burrows.

Calommata sundaica ( Doleschall, 1859) View in CoL Figs. 1 View FIGURES 1 –9

Pelecodon sundaicus Doleschall, 1859: 6, pl. 13, fig.2; Ψ from Java.

Calommata sumatrana Ausserer, 1871: 130 , pl. 1, figs.1–3; Ψ from Sumatra. Calommata sundaica Thorell, 1890: 416 View in CoL ; Abraham, 1924: 1120, figs. 1b, 2; Ψ from Singapore Island; Kritscher, 1957: 259, figs. 8–9; ♂ from Sumatra.

Description. Based on male from Israel. Colouration of carapace dull yellow with violescent margins. Carapace occurs in two forms: a trapezoidal form truncated in front (Fig. 3), and an ovoid form with forward outstretched membranous portion exposing protrusions rising on posterior parts of chelicerae (Fig. 4); both forms occur in one and the same locality and no type can be ascribed to any distinct population. Large AME separated from each other by less than diameter of one AME. Labium dark coloured and slightly concave in front (Fig. 8). Sternum glabrous, yellow with fine brown margins; longer than wide; sigilla indistinct (Fig. 8). Chelicerae with row of about 8–10 long sharp teeth and a few small external denticles placed at basal part (Fig. 6). Basal portion of palpal endite slightly longer than distal elongated portion; inner side of distal elongation with straight furrow densely lined with fine bristles (Fig. 5).Yellow slender palpal femora slightly longer than light-brown expanded tibiae (Fig. 2). Legs weakly covered with bristles; dorsal-ectal side of patella, tibia and metatarsus of posterior two pairs of legs armed with groups of short spines; tarsi of posterior pairs of legs are longest segments of all legs; leg formula: IV, I, II, III. Body sparsely covered with inconspicuous bristles. Brown opisthosoma, mottled with fine light dots and with one large light patch on sides; small coriaceous scutum situated dorsally at anterior third.

FIGURES –. Calommata sundaica ( Doleschall, 1859) ♂. 5. Left coxa (shadowed) and trochanter of palpus, ventral view. 6. Right chela, inner view. 7. Spinnerets, ventral view. 8. Labium and sternum. 9. Left palpus: a. prolateral view, b. retrolateral view.

Male. Measurements (10 ɗɗ): total length 4.4–6.6; carapace length 1.6–2.3, width 1.5–2.0, index 1.05– 1.43; leg lengths: I 6.7–8.3, II 5.8–8.1, III 5.7–7.6, IV 7.1–9.7, patella-tibia index 0.82–1.18.

Palpus. Strong, black long styliform embolus crosses straight to broad, flattened conductor (Figs. 9a, b).

Female. Adult females have not yet been collected in Israel, only a young one in an early molting stadium was found so far. A description is not given as it cannot be based on specimens from this region.

Diagnosis. Based on male. Calommata species are very closely allied and can be distinguished from each other by very few subtle differences. Males were rarely described. Considering Benoit's (1967) description of the African C. simoni Pocock the Calommata male found in Israel differs by the more slender and longer palpal embolus, the narrower space between the AME, the indistinct sigilla on the sternum, and by the absence of a pair of very long macrosetae on the distal part of metatarsus IV.

Distribution. Java, Sumatra, Singapore, Israel (new record). Records: Israel: Foothills of Judea: surroundings of Sedot Mikha, Zekharya , Sansan Reserve (696459/508994), Ramat Avishur (681583/502691), and Nehusha.

Comments. Over 60 adult males were collected by pitfall traps in November 2001 at five different sites in the Judean foothills of Israel. Despite intensive searches, no burrows of the females have yet been detected. The occurrence of Calommata in Israel sheds intriguing light on the distributional pattern of an old mygalomorph element. Apart from C. simoni , only two other Calommata males, both from East Asia, were described: C. sundaica (Doleschall) and C. signata Karsch. Whether the males of the East-Asian species can be separated with certainty from each other or from the Israeli species, is rather questionable on the basis of the available descriptions. Considering the paucity of information on the faunae of the vast Asian areas, the older name, sundaica , is selected for the Israeli species for the time being, albeit the large distance between the populations.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Atypidae

Loc

Calommata Lucas, 1837

Levy, Gershom 2007
2007
Loc

Calommata sumatrana

Kritscher 1957: 259
Abraham 1924: 1120
Thorell 1890: 416
Ausserer 1871: 130
1871
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF