Draconarius substrophadatus K. Liu, J. Liu & X. Xu, 2021

Liu, Ji-he, Xiao, Yong-hong, Zhang, Meng-zhen, Xu, Xiang & Liu, Ke-ke, 2021, Four new coelotine species (Araneae, Agelenidae, Coelotinae) from South China, with the first description of the male of Coelotes septus Wang, Yin, Peng & Xie, 1990, ZooKeys 1029, pp. 93-112 : 93

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1029.63060

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F0461DBC-2C7E-4091-B4C8-EBB2C76CEAD9

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C6F360E9-8144-4878-9C84-502ADE78A6D5

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C6F360E9-8144-4878-9C84-502ADE78A6D5

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Draconarius substrophadatus K. Liu, J. Liu & X. Xu
status

sp. nov.

Draconarius substrophadatus K. Liu, J. Liu & X. Xu sp. nov. Figure 5 View Figure 5

Material examined.

Holotype ♀, China, Jiangxi Prov., Ji’an City, Jinggangshan County Level City , Ciping Town , Dajing Village , Dajing Forest Farm , 26°34'12"N, 114°7'19.2"E, 956 m, 27 Aug. 2015, Zhi-wu Chen et al. leg. GoogleMaps

Etymology.

The name refers to its similarity to D. strophadatus (Zhu & Wang, 1991).

Diagnosis.

The female of this species is similar to that of D. strophadatus in having the labium-like atrium, the long horn-shaped epigynal teeth and the waved copulatory ducts, but differs by the epigynal teeth separated by 1/2 their length (vs. 1/4 in D. strophadatus ) and the copulatory ducts from sub-anterior part of vulvae extending to median part forming a C-shaped turn (vs. from anterior part of vulvae extending to median part forming a S-shaped turn in D. strophadatus ) (Fig. 5C, D View Figure 5 ).

Description.

Habitus as in Fig. 5A, B View Figure 5 . Total length 8.4. Carapace 3.74 long, 2.64 wide. Eye sizes and interdistances: AME 0.08; ALE 0.21; PME 0.14; PLE 0.19; AME-AME 0.06; AME-ALE 0.08; PME-PME 0.14; ALE-ALE 0.40; PME-PLE 0.13; PLE-PLE 0.59; ALE-PLE 0.13; AME-PME 0.15; AME-PLE 0.29. MOA: 0.41 long; 0.24 anterior width, 0.30 posterior width. Chelicerae with a large basial tubercle, three promarginal teeth (median largest) and two retromarginal teeth (proximal larger). Leg measurements: I 10.16 (2.72, 1.36, 2.2, 2.75, 1.13); II 8.59 (2.26, 1.05, 1.5, 2.45, 1.33); III 8.18 (2.31, 1, 1.81, 1.89, 1.17); IV 9.32 (2.5, 1.05, 2.28, 2.14, 1.35). Abdomen 4.48 long, 2.08 wide.

Coloration. Carapace yellow-brown, posteriorly with dark, narrow, radial stripes. Chelicerae dark yellow-brown. Endites, labium, and sternum dark yellow-brown. Legs yellow-brown. Abdomen brown, dorsally with six pale chevron stripes on the sub-medial part.

Epigyne (Fig. 5C, D View Figure 5 ). Atrium, labium-like, arising from posterior. Epigynal teeth long, horn-like, located at anteromedian of epigynum. Copulatory openings located at sub-posterior part of the atrium, covered by a transverse plate. Copulatory ducts S-shaped, extending from sub-posterior to antero-lateral part of vulva, then back, connecting with anterolateral part of spermathecae. Spermathecae ampullate, separated by less than their lengths. Fertilization duct short, located posteriorly on spermathecae, curved posteriorly.

Male. Unknown.

Comments.

Unfortunately, only one specimen of Draconarius substrophadatus sp. nov. was found, as well as of D. strophadatus . They share the similar characters of long epigynal teeth, the labium-like atrium located posteriorly, and the waved copulatory ducts, and the new species is tentatively placed in the genus Draconarius . Hopefully, finding the males of these two species in the future will reveal their generic placement.

Distribution.

Known only from the type locality in Jiangxi Province, China (Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Agelenidae

Genus

Draconarius