Melecosa, Marusik, Yuri M., Omelko, Mikhail M. & Koponen, Seppo, 2015

Marusik, Yuri M., Omelko, Mikhail M. & Koponen, Seppo, 2015, A survey of East Palaearctic Lycosidae (Araneae). 11. Two new genera from the Acantholycosa complex, Zootaxa 3985 (2), pp. 252-264 : 258-259

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3985.2.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:77F77A09-2767-4EC5-ADA8-46A28BF5AE76

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5661051

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CA3F87D3-F469-A40C-66C4-FACDFDD01586

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Melecosa
status

gen. nov.

Melecosa View in CoL gen. n.

Type species: Sibirocosa alpina Marusik, Azarkina & Koponen, 2004 .

Etymology. The generic name is formed from two elements, with the first element derived from the scientific name of the badger ( Meles ) and ending -cosa. The gender is masculine.

Diagnosis. Melecosa gen. n. can be distinguished from the somewhat similar Sibirocosa by having 3 pairs of ventral tibial spines on leg I ( Figs 5‒6 View FIGURES 1 ‒ 6 ; 5–6 pairs in Sibirocosa ); tegular apophysis with two pointed arms ( Figs 40‒42 View FIGURES 40 ‒ 44 , 45‒46 View FIGURES 45 ‒ 50 ) (basal arm in Sibirocosa only, cf. Fig. 10 View FIGURES 7 ‒ 12 ), large paleal process (Pp) and lack of distinct terminal apophysis ( Fig. 46 View FIGURES 45 ‒ 50 ) (terminal apophysis well developed, more robust than embolus in Sibirocosa ), shallow epigynal fovea ( Figs 49‒50 View FIGURES 45 ‒ 50 ), two apical pockets (one in Sibirocosa , Fig. 37 View FIGURES 28 ‒ 39 ) and large heads of receptacles ( Figs 32‒33 View FIGURES 28 ‒ 39 , 50 View FIGURES 45 ‒ 50 ).

Description. See species description.

Relationships. As in Gulocosa gen. n., it is difficult to trace the relationships of this new genus based on somatic characters or the features of copulatory organs. The epigyne in this genus is rather similar to that of Sibirocosa and that is why it was originally placed in the genus. The two genera, although generally similar in appearance, clearly differ in the fovea depth ( Figs 37‒39 View FIGURES 28 ‒ 39 , 49‒50 View FIGURES 45 ‒ 50 ), number of apical pockets and size of receptacle heads ( Figs 32‒33, 38‒39 View FIGURES 28 ‒ 39 ). The males of the two genera differ by the shape of the tegular apophysis and the width and thickness of the embolus. The most striking difference between the two genera is the lack of a distinct terminal apophysis in Melecosa gen. n. and a strongly developed one in Sibirocosa ( Figs 10 View FIGURES 7 ‒ 12 , 40‒42 View FIGURES 40 ‒ 44 ).

Three genera, Gulocosa gen. n., Melecosa gen. n. and Sibirocosa have, a high position (location) of the embolic base, which lies almost at the same level as the upper edge of palea ( Figs 8, 10 View FIGURES 7 ‒ 12 , 40 View FIGURES 40 ‒ 44 ), which is unique for Pardosinae. These characters can be connected with the thickness of embolus but do not indicate close relationships.

Note. We cannot homologise parts of the embolic division in this genus with certainty with other Pardosinae genera. It appears that this genus lacks a terminal apophysis and instead has a huge palear process. Composition. Only the type species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Lycosidae

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