SPINTHARINAE

Agnarsson, Ingi, 2004, Morphological phylogeny of cobweb spiders and their relatives (Araneae, Araneoidea, Theridiidae), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 141 (4), pp. 447-626 : 467-468

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2004.00120.x

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7E1687E1-422A-6C1F-FC64-F9EF8D2FFACD

treatment provided by

Diego

scientific name

SPINTHARINAE
status

 

SPINTHARINAE : CLADE 45

Forster et al. (1990) discussed the possible composition of Spintharinae . They pointed out that a hooded ‘paracymbium’ ( Figs 75B View Figure 75 , 92F–I, M View Figure 92 ) was present in Spintharus and many other genera (explicitly including Anelosimus , Chrosiothes , Chrysso , Coleosoma , Helvibis , Nesticodes , Rugathodes , Spintharus , Tekellina , Theridula , Thwaitesia and Thymoites ). Yoshida (2001a) synonymized Spintharinae with Theridiinae , based on the same character, which he realized is also present in Theridion . The character of choice was unfortunate, as is evident from the present analysis.

First, Chrosiothes and Thwaitesia both, in fact, have a hook-lock system ( Fig. 92K View Figure 92 , presumably overlooked by these authors), albeit with a groove present underneath the hook, whereas the remainder only have a hood. Second, both the current study and that of Arnedo et al. (2004) indicate that the hood found in Spintharus is not homologous to that found in the lost colulus clade (see Fig. 105); rather, it may be homologous to the groove lying underneath the hook of Thwaitesia and several related taxa. Here the subfamily Spintharinae is again used (following, e.g. Arnedo et al., 2004; contra Yoshida, 2001b).

The following genera included in this study belong in Spintharinae : Episinus , Spintharus and Thwaitesia . Based on similarity in morphology (e.g. abdominal shape and humps) and web type (H-shaped spintharine) it is likely that Chrosiothes and Moneta belong in this group. The remaining genera in Spintharinae sensu Forster et al. all belong to the lost colulus clade and have all been transferred to Theridiinae ( Yoshida, 2001b) . Molecular evidence suggests that Stemmops may belong to Spintharinae ( Arnedo et al., 2004) ; morphologically this arrangement may be supported by a spintharine cymbial hood that is found in some Stemmops (pers. observ.).

Unambiguous synapomorphies of Spintharinae include: conductor huge (63, Figs 46A–D View Figure 46 , 83A–D View Figure 83 , 90F, G View Figure 90 ), conductor folded (66, Fig. 90F, G View Figure 90 ), cheliceral base thin (118, Fig. 84C View Figure 84 ), abdomen with humps (142), colulus small (173, Fig. 70A View Figure 70 ), tarsal comb bristle dorsal margin notched (196, Fig. 84E View Figure 84 ), and web modified (225, Fig. 97A View Figure 97 ). Egg sac outermost fibre loosely spun (232, Fig. 88C View Figure 88 ) is an ambiguous synapomorphy (ACCTRAN); there are no observations recorded for Spintharus .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Theridiidae

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