Matinta maddisoni, Matos & Ruiz, 2023

Matos, Tainá D. S. & Ruiz, Gustavo R. S., 2023, On the taxonomy of the jumping spider genus Matinta Ruiz & Maddison, 2019, with a taxonomic revision of the vicana species-group (Araneae: Salticidae: Amycini), Zootaxa 5343 (2), pp. 126-150 : 135

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5343.2.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:63876BA9-D973-40E1-BB4B-03F60CD088A7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8324681

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D587F3-F148-FFC0-FF79-A2F2FD19EFEE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Matinta maddisoni
status

sp. nov.

Matinta maddisoni sp. nov.

Figs 19–22 View FIGURES 19–22 , 36–37 View FIGURES 31–43 , 46 View FIGURES 44–49 , 52 View FIGURES 50–55 , 58–59 View FIGURES 56–59 , 73–74 View FIGURES 69–74 , 80 View FIGURES 75–81 , 88–89 View FIGURES 82–92

Type material. Holotype: ♁ from Cordillera de Cutucú , road from Patuca to Santiago, Morona Santiago, Ecuador, 2.806⁰S 78.246⁰W, 1000 m el., 13.VII.2004, Maddison, Agnarsson, Iturralde & Salazar leg. ( WPM#04-040 ), deposited in QCAZ (temporarily in UBC-SEM) . Paratype: 1♀ from Ecuador, Morona Santiago, 6.6 km N of Limón to Méndez , 2.923⁰S 78.408⁰W, 1000 m el., 14.VII.2004, Maddison, Agnarsson, Iturralde & Salazar leg. ( WPM#04-041 ), deposited in QCAZ (temporarily in UBC-SEM) .

Etymology. Species named in honor of the world-known arachnologist Wayne P. Maddison, who collected the type specimens.

Diagnosis. The males of M. maddisoni are similar to those of the species within the vicana species-group, especially those of M. aragog for having mastidia, separate prolateral cheliceral teeth, a bump on the cheliceral fang and a more symmetrical palpal bulb. Males of M. maddisoni can be distinguished from those M. aragog for not having the bifid embolus tip and for having a squared RTA in retrolateral view (triangular in M. aragog ) ( Figs 36–37 View FIGURES 31–43 , 46 View FIGURES 44–49 , 52 View FIGURES 50–55 ). The females of M. maddisoni differ from those of the other species in which females are known ( acutidens species-group, M. fasciata , M. silvae , M. opiparis , M. pardo and M. steindachneri ) for having C-shaped copulatory openings facing laterally ( Figs 58–59 View FIGURES 56–59 ).

Description. Male ( Figs 19–20 View FIGURES 19–22 ). Total length: 5.40. Carapace reddish, black posteriorly, 3.03 long, 2.31 wide and 1.77 high. Ocular area 1.79 long. Anterior eye row 2.07 and posterior 1.96 wide. Chelicera dark brown, frontally with an oblique keel, a depression, a mastidion, with paracondylic projection and a bump on fang ( Figs 73 View FIGURES 69–74 , 80 View FIGURES 75–81 ); PMT: 2, RMT: 5, PIMT: 4, RIMT: 0 ( Fig. 88 View FIGURES 82–92 ). Palp ( Figs 36–37 View FIGURES 31–43 , 46 View FIGURES 44–49 , 52 View FIGURES 50–55 ) dark brown. Sternum yellow. Legs 3412; I: dark brown; II–III: femur yellow, with dark brown tip; patella and tibia dark brown; metatarsus and tarsus yellow; IV: light brown. Length: Leg I 5.56 (femur: 1.51; patella: 1.06; tibia: 1.60; metatarsus: 0.71; tarsus: 0.68); II 5.04 (1.65; 0.95; 1.25; 0.70; 0.49); III 5.93 (2.02; 0.87; 1.38; 0.95; 0.71); IV 5.64 (1.92; 0.81; 1.33; 0.98; 0.60). Leg spination: femur I–IV d1-1-1, p0-0-2, r0-0-1; patella I–II 0; III–IV p0-1-0, r0-1-0; tibia I v2-2-2, p1-0-0, r0; II v2-2-2, p1-1-1, r0; III v1r-2-1r, p0, r0; IV v2-1r-2; p0, r0; metatarsus I–II v2-2; III v2-2, p2-0-2, r1-0-2; IV v2-2, p2-0-2, r1-1-2. Abdomen dorsally light brown with dark spots along the entire length ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 19–22 ); ventrally with wide longitudinal black stripe ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 19–22 ). Spinnerets light brown.

Female ( Figs 21–22 View FIGURES 19–22 ). Total length: 6.95. Carapace yellow, 3.42 long, 2.50 wide and 1.92 high. Ocular area 1.77 long, orange. Anterior eye row 2.23 and posterior 2.13 wide. Chelicera light brown ( Fig. 74 View FIGURES 69–74 ); PMT: 2, RMT: 6, PIMT: 3, RIMT: 4 ( Fig. 89 View FIGURES 82–92 ). Palp and sternum yellow. Legs 3421, yellow. Leg length: I 5.60 (femur: 1.42; patella: 1.12; tibia: 1.50; metatarsus: 0.88; tarsus: 0.68); II 5.77 (1.85; 1.03; 1.37; 0.85; 0.67); III 6.88 (2.46; 0.99; 1.50; 1.17; 0.76); IV 6.31 (2.21; 0.68; 1.33; 1.38; 0.71). Leg spination: femur I–IV d1-1-1, p0-0-2, r0-0-1; patella I–IV 0; tibia I v2-2-2, p0-0-1, r0; II v1r-2-2, p0-0-1, r0; III v1-0-2, p1-0-1, r1-1-1; IV v1-0-1; p1-0-1, r1-1-1; metatarsus I–II v2-2; III v2-2, p1-0-2, r1-0-2; IV v2-2, p1-0-2, r1-1-2. Abdomen as in male. Epigyne ( Figs 58–59 View FIGURES 56–59 ): copulatory ducts meeting medially and diverging posteriorly, folding dorsally and entering the posterior spermathecae. Spinnerets light brown.

Distribution. Known only from Ecuador.

QCAZ

Museo de Zoologia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Salticidae

Genus

Matinta

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