Nesticus canei, Hedin & Milne, 2023

Hedin, Marshal & Milne, Marc A., 2023, New species in old mountains: integrative taxonomy reveals ten new species and extensive short-range endemism in Nesticus spiders (Araneae, Nesticidae) from the southern Appalachian Mountains, ZooKeys 1145, pp. 1-130 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1145.96724

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:830628C2-76CD-4641-BFC6-144CD775ED6B

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F17F97DD-6F1D-4A48-B9B7-122075D9EAE6

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:F17F97DD-6F1D-4A48-B9B7-122075D9EAE6

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Nesticus canei
status

sp. nov.

Nesticus canei sp. nov.

Fig. 40A-D View Figure 40

Material examined.

Type material: Holotype: USA - North Carolina, Yancey Co. • holotype ♂; Hwy 19W along Cane River , near Egypt-Ramseytown Fire Station , near Lewisburg ; 35.9921°N, - 82.3927°W; 11 Aug. 2004; M. Hedin, R. Keith, J. Starrett, S. Thomas leg.; MCH 04_043 (SDSU_TAC000671) GoogleMaps ; Paratypes: - Yancey Co. • ♂, ♀; Hwy 19W along Cane River , near Egypt-Ramseytown Fire Station , near Lewisburg ; 35.9921°N, - 82.3927°W; 11 Aug. 2004; M. Hedin, R. Keith, J. Starrett, S. Thomas leg.; MCH 04_043; Non type material: - Yancey Co. • 9♀, 17 imm; Hwy 19W along Cane River , near Egypt-Ramseytown Fire Station, near Lewisburg; 35.9921°N, - 82.3927°W; 11 Aug. 2004; M. Hedin, R. Keith, J. Starrett, S. Thomas leg.; MCH 04_043 GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis.

The male palp is like that of Nesticus gertschi (Fig. 39A, B View Figure 39 ) but the distal end of the tegular apophysis is acute rather than blunt, and the basal portion of median apophysis is relatively more expanded (Fig. 40A, B View Figure 40 ). The distal paracymbial process lacks the subdistal processes as found in N. gertschi . Female with dorsal portion of internal anterior lobes/plates well sclerotized, rounded anteriorly and curving ventrally (Fig. 40C, D View Figure 40 ).

Description of ♂ holotype

(SDSU_TAC000671). Carapace dusky cream to orange, conspicuous faint dark pigment behind ocular area, along carapace margin bleeding inwards. Legs pale yellow to cream. Abdomen mostly pale cream, with crisp paired lateral pigmentation blotches. All eyes approximately equal in size, except for AMEs, ~ 1/4 width of ALEs. Eyes with rings of dark pigment. CL 1.6, CW 1.3, abdomen length 2, total body length 3.6. Leg I total length 10.45 (3, 0.65, 3.1, 2.55, 1.15), leg formula 1423, leg I / CW ratio 8.0. Palp tegular apophysis with a 90-degree bend, distal end acute and blade-like. Lateral process of median apophysis concave, broadening and well-sclerotized along edge, distal process drawn into thin tip that closely parallels tegular apophysis tip. Paracymbium with strong ventral process, distal process consistent with species group (spatulate) and without other processes, dorsal process translucent blade of medium width, reaching above ventral process, weakly serrated at tip.

♂ Variation.

The palp of the paratype male is similar to the holotype.

Description of ♀ paratype

(SDSU_TAC000672). Carapace dusky cream, very faint dark pigment behind ocular area, along carapace margin bleeding inwards. Legs pale yellow to cream. Abdomen with paired, lateral darker marking on a dirty gray background. Eyes approximately equal in size, except for AMEs, ~ 1/4 width of ALEs. Eyes with rings of dark pigment. CL = 1.2, CW 1.05, abdomen length 1.55, total body length 2.75. Leg I total length 8.1 (2.3, 0.55, 2.3, 2, 0.95), leg formula 1423, leg I / CW ratio 7.7. Epigynum, viewed laterally, with a prominent nose-shaped, cream-colored median septum, like other members of the species group. Viewed dorsally, dorsal-projecting portion of internal anterior lobes well sclerotized, rounded anteriorly and curving ventrally. Sclerotization making these appear as dark circles sitting above epigynum when viewed ventrally. Viewed dorsally, spermathecae below epigynal pocket, angled obliquely upwards, approximately banana-shaped.

♀ Variation.

Adult females from the type locality vary in body size and in carapace and abdomen color (dark vs. light) but share a similar epigynum.

Distribution and natural history.

Known only from the type locality from along the Cane River, a tributary of the Nolichucky River. Adjacent collections have thus far only resulted in the collection of non-sister Nesticus templetoni (Fig. 30 View Figure 30 ) and N. paynei further east (Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ). We hypothesize that N. canei has a very small geographic distribution. More collecting effort in the immediate vicinity of the type locality is needed to understand the geographic extent of this apparently microendemic species.

Specimens from the type collection were found to be relatively common in void spaces beneath rocks in a small shaded boulderfield in roadside forest, at approximately 700 meters in elevation.

Etymology.

Named after the Cane River, a small north-flowing river found only in Yancey County, North Carolina.

Remarks.

Morphologically very similar to Nesticus gertschi and sister to this taxon on UCE trees (Figs 3 View Figure 3 , 4 View Figure 4 ). This species is of conservation importance because of an apparently naturally small geographic distribution.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Nesticidae

Genus

Nesticus