Nesticus dilutus Gertsch, 1984

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/C665A04B-6907-536B-B347-854FA7568153

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Nesticus dilutus Gertsch, 1984
status

 

Nesticus dilutus Gertsch, 1984 View in CoL View at ENA

Fig. 23A-C View Figure 23

Nesticus dilutus Gertsch, 1984: 27, figs 94-96; Hedin and Dellinger 2005: 10, figs 13, 14.

Material examined.

New collections from type locality: USA - Tennessee, Rhea Co. • 2♂, 10♀; Grassy Creek Cave, south of Old Washington; 23 Aug. 1992; M. Hedin, J. Hedin leg.; Non type material: - Rhea Co. • ♀; Starve Rock Cave (TRH7); 26 Mar. 2016; K.S. Zigler, M.L. Niemiller, N. Mann leg.; KSZ 15-566 .

Diagnosis.

A close morphological and genetic relative of Nesticus tennesseensis . This species differs most conspicuously from the former in that the basal, dorsal process of the paracymbium is absent ( Hedin and Dellinger 2005, fig. 13). The tegular apophysis has a narrow, L-shaped base with a gradually tapering tip, although this condition is found in some northern populations of N. tennesseensis (see Fig. 21B View Figure 21 ). Epigyna very similar to N. tennesseensis , but possess more widely separated, pointed medial margins when viewed dorsally (Fig. 23B, C View Figure 23 ) rather than the extended parallel medial margins in N. tennesseensis (Fig. 22B, D, F View Figure 22 ), and the overall shorter (anterior to posterior) epigynal plate. More troglomorphic (depigmented, lacking median eyes, with proportionately long legs) than all known populations of N. tennesseensis (see Hedin and Dellinger 2005).

Variation.

The female specimen from Starve Rock Cave has an epigynum very similar to specimens from the type locality.

Distribution and natural history.

This troglomorphic taxon was previously known only from the type locality (Grassy Creek Cave), but is now known from two nearby caves in east-central Tennessee (Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ). Starve Rock Cave is very near Grassy Creek Cave and may share a subterranean connection.

Remarks.

Sister to Nesticus tennesseensis on UCE trees (Figs 3 View Figure 3 , 4 View Figure 4 ), but N. dilutus sequences are embedded within a clade of N. tennesseensis sequences on the mitochondrial gene tree (Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ). This latter pattern is attributed to either deep coalescence or gene tree estimation error.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Nesticidae

Genus

Nesticus

Loc

Nesticus dilutus Gertsch, 1984

Hedin, Marshal & Milne, Marc A. 2023
2023
Loc

Nesticus dilutus

Gertsch 1984
1984