Nyikoa limbe, Huber, Bernhard A., 2007

Huber, Bernhard A., 2007, Two new genera of small, six-eyed pholcid spiders from West Africa, and first record of Spermophorides for mainland Africa (Araneae: Pholcidae), Zootaxa 1635, pp. 23-43 : 26-30

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.179534

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6243188

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CE87A4-FFEB-FFC8-FF67-DDCFFC5B7F67

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nyikoa limbe
status

sp. nov.

Nyikoa limbe View in CoL , n. sp.

( Figs. 2–3 View FIGURES 2 – 12 , 13–31 View FIGURES 13 – 17 View FIGURES 18 – 25 View FIGURES 26 – 31 )

Type material. Male holotype from Cameroon, Southwest Province, Fako Division, Limbe Subdivision, 1.4 km NE of Etome (04°03.0’N, 09°07.6’E), ~ 400 m a.s.l., January 13–19, 1992 (S. Larcher, G. Hormiga, J. Coddington, C. Griswold, C. Wanzie), in USNM.

Etymology. The species name is derived from the type locality, and is used as a noun in apposition.

Diagnosis. Small but long-legged six-eyed pholcine (proximo-lateral cheliceral apophyses!), easily distinguished from other known pholcines by unique and extremely complex procursus ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ). Further distinguished from other African six-eyed pholcines by combination of following characters: male cheliceral apophyses without modified hairs ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ); epigynum without scape ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ); prolateral attachment of bulb ( Fig. 13 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ); absence of retrolateral notch proximally on cymbium ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ); widely spaced eye triads ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 2 – 12 ); presence of several ALS spigots (versus two) ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 26 – 31 ); shift of tibia-cymbium joints to prolateral (rather than to retrolateral) side ( Fig. 13 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ).

Male (holotype). Total length 1.7, carapace width 0.60. Leg 1: 14.0 (3.4 + 0.3 + 3.6 + 5.4 + 1.3), tibia 2: 2.2, tibia 3: 1.3, tibia 4: 2.4. Tibia 1 length/diameter (L/d): 50. Habitus as in Figs. 2, 3 View FIGURES 2 – 12 ; coloration mostly pale ochre-yellow, abdomen pale ochre-gray; distance PME–PME 175 µm; diameter PME 70 µm; distance PME– ALE 15 µm; AME missing. Sternum wider than long (0.44/0.38), unmodified. Clypeus unmodified; chelicerae with pair of simple frontal apophyses ( Figs. 15 View FIGURES 13 – 17 , 24 View FIGURES 18 – 25 ), without stridulatory ridges. Palps as in Figs. 13, 14 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ; coxa unmodified, trochanter simple, without apophysis, femur, patella and tibia widened but otherwise unmodified; procursus distinctive, highly complex ( Figs. 18–21 View FIGURES 18 – 25 ), bulb with bifid projection, one part membranous (embolus?), other part thin blade-like; palpal tarsal organ capsulate ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 18 – 25 ). Legs without spines and curved hairs, few vertical hairs; retrolateral trichobothrium of tibia 1 at 12%, prolateral trichobothrium apparently absent on tibia 1, present on other legs; tarsus 1 with>10 pseudosegments, but only distally a few visible in dissecting microscope; tarsus 4 with complex comb-hairs ventrally ( Fig. 23 View FIGURES 18 – 25 ). Male gonopore without epiandrous spigots ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 18 – 25 ). ALS with one widened, one pointed, and five cylindrically shaped spigots ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 26 – 31 ).

Variation. Tibia 1 in other males: Cameroon (type locality, N=9): 3.4–3.8 (mean: 3.54), Ghana (N=20): 3.0–3.7 (mean: 3.33), Congo DR (N=20): 3.2–3.7 (mean: 3.45). No variation seen in genitalia and chelicerae.

Female. In general similar to male. Tibia 1: Cameroon (N=6): 3.2–3.4 (mean: 3.27), Ghana (N=22): 2.9– 3.3 (mean: 3.08), Congo DR (N=20): 3.0–3.4 (mean: 3.21). Epigynum very inconspicuous from outside, barely distinguishable from surrounding cuticle but somewhat protruding, with pair of pockets close together ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 26 – 31 ); with round pore plates and complex ‘valve’ separating uterus externus from uterus internus ( Figs. 17 View FIGURES 13 – 17 , 31 View FIGURES 26 – 31 ).

Distribution. Apparently widely distributed, currently known from three localities in Ghana, Cameroon, and Congo DR ( Fig. 74 View FIGURE 74 ).

Material examined. CAMEROON: Southwest Province, Fako Division, Limbe Subdivision, 1.4 km NE of Etome: type above, together with 7ɗ4Ψ, in USNM. Same data, 3ɗ2Ψ in CAS. GHANA: Kakum forest (5°20’N, 1°23’W), fogging in secondary forest, Nov. 19, 2005 (R. Jocqué, D. De Bakker, L. Baert), ~25ɗ29Ψ in MRAC (217.690); same data but various dates (Nov. 15–24, 2005), ~8ɗ8Ψ in MRAC (217.689, 217.721, 217.730, 217.734, 217.738); same data but primary forest, various dates (Nov. 14–25, 2005), ~22ɗ37Ψ in MRAC (217.693, 217.702, 217.709, 217.718, 217.736). CONGO DR: Bas-Congo, Mayombe, Luki Forest Reserve, fogging in primary rainforest, Nov. 4–13, 2006 (D. De Bakker, J. P. Michiels), ~27ɗ54Ψ in MRAC (4 vials, separated from 219.850–1, 219.853–5); same locality, beating along trail in primary rainforest, Nov. 5, 2006 (D. De Bakker, J. P. Michiels), 1ɗ1Ψ in MRAC (219.973).

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

MRAC

Musée Royal de l’Afrique Centrale

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Pholcidae

Genus

Nyikoa

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