Hexapopha itabaiana, Feitosa & Ott & Bonaldo, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5329.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BDC2B521-8DC4-4680-A210-5CAEF611F02B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8244131 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D344879B-FFB1-5E72-FF13-39DCFB6CFE01 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Hexapopha itabaiana |
status |
sp. nov. |
Hexapopha itabaiana sp. nov.
Figs 42–43 View FIGURES 42 View FIGURES 43 ; Map 3 View MAP 3
Type material: Holotype: male from Estaç „o Ecológica da Serra Itabaiana, Itabaiana, Sergipe, Brazil (10º40’S, 37º25’W) Oct. 14–20, 1999, A.D. Brescovit et al., leg., 1♁, deposited in IBSP 68166, PBI_OON 52525 GoogleMaps . Paratypes: same data as holotype, 1♁ ( IBSP 68163 View Materials , PBI _ OON 52568 ); 1♁ ( IBSP 68162 View Materials , PBI _ OON 52584 ) GoogleMaps .
Etymology. The specific name is a toponymic referring to the type locality.
Diagnosis. Males differ from those of other species with conductor length half the embolus length or shorter ( H. santosi sp. nov., H. rheimsae sp. nov., H. ruizi sp. nov. and H. ramirezi sp. nov., Figs 34J View FIGURES 34 , 36J View FIGURES 36 , 41J View FIGURES 41 , 45J View FIGURES 45 ) as follows: from H. santosi sp. nov. and H. rheimsae sp. nov., by the absence of a median concavity on the sternum ( Fig. 43B View FIGURES 43 ); from H. ruizi sp. nov. by the endite`s P1 transversal, not lamellar ( Fig. 43D View FIGURES 43 ) (anteriorly directed, lamellar in H. ruizi sp. nov.); from H. ramirezi sp. nov. by the posterior end of carapace angulated in lateral view and by the abdominal scuta strongly sclerotized ( Figs 42B View FIGURES 42 , 43A View FIGURES 43 ) (posterior end of carapace nearly straight in lateral view, abdominal scuta weakly sclerotized in H. ramirezi sp. nov.).
Description. Male (PBI_OON 52525). Total length 1.67. CEPHALOTHORAX: Carapace pale orange, with Coxapopha -like pattern, pars cephalica domed in lateral view, surface of elevated portion of pars cephalica smooth, sides finely reticulate, fovea present ( Figs 42B–C View FIGURES 42 ). Eyes ALE circular, PME circular, PLE oval; posterior eye row straight from above, procurved from front; ALE separated by their radius to diameter, ALE-PLE separated by less than ALE radius, PME touching throughout most of their length, PLE-PME separated by less than PME radius ( Fig. 42E View FIGURES 42 ). Sternum longer than wide, pale orange, median concavity absent, with radial furrows between coxae I–II, II–III, III–IV, furrow wrinkled, surface smooth, without pits, microsculpture absent ( Figs 42D View FIGURES 42 , 43B View FIGURES 43 ). Mouthparts: Chelicerae distal region unmodified ( Fig. 42E View FIGURES 42 ). Labium anterior margin not indented at middle, much wider than long ( Fig. 42D View FIGURES 42 ). Endites with a median projection (mp), a P1 and a P2; mp short, directed anteriorly; P1 very short, situated laterally to mp. P2 lamellar, situated anteriorly to mp ( Figs 43C–E View FIGURES 43 ). ABDOMEN: dorsum soft portions pale orange. Book lung covers large, ovoid. Dorsal scutum pale orange, covering full length of abdomen, no soft tissue visible from above. Epigastric scutum not protruding. Postepigastric scutum pale orange, almost semicircular, covering nearly full length of abdominal length ( Figs 42B,G View FIGURES 42 , 43F View FIGURES 43 ). LEGS: pale orange. GENITALIA: Epigastric region with sperm pore situated at level of posterior spiracles. Palp proximal segments pale orange; embolus tip flattened, conductor present, without projections, shorter than embolus ( Figs 42G–I View FIGURES 42 , 43H–I View FIGURES 43 ).
Female. Unknown.
Other material examined. None.
Distribution. Known only from type locality, Itabaiana, state of Sergipe, Brazil ( Map 3 View MAP 3 ).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.