Dysdera kourosh Bellvert, Zamani & Dimitrov, 2024

Bellvert, Adrià, Dimitrov, Dragomir, Zamani, Alireza & Arnedo, Miquel A., 2024, Integrating museum collections and molecules reveals genus-level synonymy and new species in red devil spiders (Araneae, Dysderidae) from the Middle East and Central Asia, European Journal of Taxonomy 921 (210), pp. 210-235 : 224-226

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2024.921.2429

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:02633F29-4CDF-4027-BEBF-07AD2F925B42

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10671232

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2242E86D-6C29-47C0-883C-A7A549D8039E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:2242E86D-6C29-47C0-883C-A7A549D8039E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dysdera kourosh Bellvert, Zamani & Dimitrov
status

sp. nov.

Dysdera kourosh Bellvert, Zamani & Dimitrov sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:2242E86D-6C29-47C0-883C-A7A549D8039E

Figs 18–20 View Figs 18–20

Diagnosis

Dysdera kourosh sp. nov. resembles D. naouelae sp. nov., D. mikhailovi , and D. sagartia by the well-developed, wide crest, interior sclerite significantly wider than the exterior one, and the characteristic lateral margin of the lateral sheet. The male differs by (1) the lateral margin of the lateral sheet pointed dorsally ( Fig 20 View Figs 18–20 ), vs thin, sharp, more sclerotized and almost perpendicular to the embolic division in D. naouelae ( Fig. 14 View Figs 9–14. 9–11 ), and significantly wider in D. mikhailovi ( Fomichev & Marusik 2021: fig. 46), and D. sagartia , and (2) the concave crest ( Fig. 18 View Figs 18–20 ), vs rounded and not notched in the other three species.

Etymology

The specific epithet is a noun in apposition after Cyrus the Great – Kourosh in Persian, which translates as Lord of the Sun – the founder of the first Persian empire.

Type material

Holotype

IRAN • 1 ♂; Fars Province, Jahrom ; 29.75° N, 52.68° E; 25 Mar. 2013; SMF. GoogleMaps

Description

Male ( Figs 18–20 View Figs 18–20 )

PROSOMA. 2.77 long; maximum width 2.11; minimum width 1.37. Red, frontally darker, becoming lighter towards the back; smooth with some small black grains mainly at the front. Anterior border roughly round, about ½ of carapace length; anterior lateral borders convergent; rounded at maximum dorsal width, posterior lateral borders rounded; posterior margin narrow, straight. Eye diameters:AME 0.13; PLE 0.10; PME 0.10; AMEs on edge of the anterior border, separated from one another by about 1 diameter, close to PLEs; PMEs very close to one another, less than ¼ of PME diameter from PLEs. Labium trapezoid-shaped, its base wider than its distal part, borders slightly curved; longer than wide at base; semicircular groove at the tip. Sternum orange, darkened on borders; very slightly wrinkled, mainly between legs and anterior border; uniformly covered in slender black setae.

CHELICERAE. 1.26 long, about ½ of carapace length in dorsal view; fang 1.12 long; paturon dorsal and ventral side completely covered with piligerous granulations. Cheliceral inner groove medium-size, about ⅖ of cheliceral length; armed with three teeth and lamina at base; D =B>M; D triangular, located near segment tip; B close to basal lamina; M close to B. Legs orange. Lengths of leg segments: fe1 2.36; pa1 1.45; ti1 2.00; me1 2.06; ta1 0.56; total 8.43; fe2 2.04; pa2 1.29; ti2 1.73; me2 1.92; ta2 0.49; total 7.48; fe3 1.59; pa3 0.89; ti3 1.08; me3 1.57; ta3 0.51; total 5.64; fe4 2.04; pa4 1.07; ti4 1.59; me4 1.98; total 6.69; fe Pdp 1.38; pa Pdp 0.73; ti Pdp 0.63; ta Pdp 0.70; total 3.45; leg formula: 1>2>4>3. Spination: palp: one spine on pa, three spines on fe distal internal; leg1 two terminal spines on forward margin; leg2 one terminal spine on the forward margin. Fe3d spines in two rows; forward 2; backward 1; pa3 1 ventral; tb3d spines arranged in two bands; proximal 1.0.1; medial-proximal 0; medial-distal 0; distal 1.0.1.; tb3v spines arranged in three bands; proximal 0.1.0; medial-proximal 1.1.0; medial-distal 0; distal 1.0.0; with two terminal spines. Fe4d spines in two rows; forward 1; backward 5; pa4 1 ventral medial; tb4d spines arranged in two bands; proximal 1.0.1; medial-proximal 0; medial-distal 0; distal 1.0.1; tb4v spines arranged in three bands; proximal 0.1.1; medial-proximal 1.1.0; medial-distal 0; distal 1.0.0; with two terminal spines. Dorsal side of the frontal legs covered with small piligerous grains; ventral side of the pedipalp covered with small piligerous grains. Claws with 8 teeth or less; hardly larger than claw width.

OPISTHOSOMA. 2.54 long; cream-colored. Abdominal dorsal setae 0.02 long; thick, slightly curved, compressed, blunt, tip not enlarged; uniformly, thickly distributed.

PALP ( Figs 18–20 View Figs 18–20 ). T slightly shorter than ED; external distal border straight; internal sloped backward. ED the same T axis in lateral view, internal distal border not expanded. IS wider than ES, continuous to tip ( Fig. 19 View Figs 18–20 ). ED tip sloped towards back in lateral view. C present, long, slightly concave at the middle, seen from lateral view ( Figs 18, 20 View Figs 18–20 ); distal border round, the posterior border with a small sclerotized apophysis, markedly expanded, perpendicular to ED. AC absent. LF absent. L well developed; external border sclerotized, not folded, with processus-like basal lateral apophysis. LA absent. F absent. AL present, very poorly developed; proximal border in posterior view fused with DH. P not fused to T; perpendicular to T in lateral view; lateral length from ⅖ to ½ of T width; ridge present, parallel to T; not expanded, upper margin smooth, distally ridge-like expanded, back margin slightly folded towards the internal side.

Female

Unknown.

Distribution

Known only from the type locality in Fars Province, southern Iran.

Remarks

The species belongs to the aculeata group (sensu Deeleman-Reinhold & Deeleman 1988).

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Dysderidae

Genus

Dysdera

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF