Scirites finitimus, Dupérré, Nadine & Paquin, Pierre, 2007

Dupérré, Nadine & Paquin, Pierre, 2007, Revision of the North American genus Scirites (Araneae, Linyphiidae), Zootaxa 1460, pp. 47-58 : 52-54

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.176406

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6241671

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/890A87E0-FFCD-FFFC-F9D9-AE4EF68BF9E3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Scirites finitimus
status

sp. nov.

Scirites finitimus View in CoL new species

( Figs 1 View FIGURES 1 , 10–18 View FIGURES 10 – 17 View FIGURE 18 )

Type material.— HOLOTYPE: Canada: Ontario: Richmond [45.18N, 75.83W] 1ɗ 26.vi.–11.vii.1978, pitfall, calcareous bog, C.D. Dondale & J.H. Redner ( CNC); ALLOTYPE: 1Ψ, same data as holotype; PARATYPES: Canada: Ontario: Alfred [45.48N, 74.83W] 1Ψ 16.vi.1981, Berlese, humus of tree bases in sphagnum bog, A. Davies ( CNC); Oliver bog, 3km south of Galt [43.31N, 80.28W] 20.–26.v.1987 1ɗ, expanse hollow, D. Blades ( CNC); Richmond [45.18°N, 75.83°W] 4ɗ 1Ψ 26.vi.–11. vii.1978, 5 ɗ 5Ψ 12.vii.– 27. viii.1978, 2 Ψ 28.vii.–22.viii.1978, pitfall, calcareous bog, C.D. Dondale & J.H. Redner ( CNC); North Gower [45°08°N, 75°43°W] 1ɗ 25.v.–15.vi.1978, pitfall, beaver meadow in mixed woods, L. LeSage ( CNC); USA: New York: Tompkins County, McLean Bog [42.55N, 76.29W] 2ɗ 2Ψ 08.v.1919, 1ɗ 30.iv.1930, 1ɗ 06.v.1920, S.C. Crosby & C.R. Bishop ( AMNH); Washington: Stevens County, Little Pend Oreille Natural Area Preserve, North of Coffin Lake [48.594N, 117.550W] 1ɗ 2Ψ 23.vi.1992, sphagnum bog, 951m elevation [3120 feet], R. Crawford ( UWBM).

Diagnosis.— See S. pectinatus .

Description.— Male (n=5): Total length: 1.12–1.27; carapace length: 0.51–0.55; carapace width: 0.44– 0.48; carapace smooth, shiny, light brown to brown, carapace median line suffused with dark grey forming a trident in the eye region, carapace border suffused with dark grey, 2–3 erect setae along midline, cephalic eye region somewhat raised and flat ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 10 – 17 ). Sternum brown, suffused with grey. Chelicerae light brown, promargin with 1 large and 4 small teeth, retromargin with 4 denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ not visible. Abdomen uniformly coloured, light to dark grey, densely covered with decumbent hairs. Legs light yellow, tibia I–IV with one dorsal macroseta; metatarsus I with dorsal trichobothrium, Tm I 0.52–0.62, metatarsus I with 7 curved megaspines, Tm IV absent. Palpal tibia rather long and acuminate, bearing a small curved sclerotized apophysis on the ectal side ( Figs 13, 14 View FIGURES 10 – 17 ); embolic division rather simple, embolus tip spine-like, tailpiece elongate and projecting basally, tegulum (T) rather large, protegulum with protegular papillae, suprategulum well sclerotized, distal suprategular apophysis (DSA) sclerotized becoming membranous, fundus visible ( Figs 11, 12 View FIGURES 10 – 17 ); paracymbium small, bearing 2 short setae ( Fig. 13 View FIGURES 10 – 17 ).

Female (n=5): Total length: 1.28–1.44; carapace length: 0.50–0.63; carapace width: 0.44–0.50; carapace coloration as in male, 4–5 erect setae along midline. Coloration of sternum and chelicerae as in male; promargin of chelicerae with 1 large and 4 small teeth, retromargin with 5 denticles. Cheliceral stridulatory organ not visible. Abdomen as in male. Legs coloured as in male, tibia I–IV with one dorsal macroseta; metatarsus I with dorsal trichobothrium, Tm I 0.52–0.60, Tm IV absent. Female epigynal plate well sclerotized, somewhat rectangular ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 10 – 17 ); posterior edge of ventral plate U-shaped covering less than half the dorsal plate; spermathecae rounded situated each side of the junction of ventral plate and dorsal plate ( Figs 15, 16 View FIGURES 10 – 17 ); copulatory ducts comma-shaped and well separated ( Figs 16, 17 View FIGURES 10 – 17 ).

Distribution.— The species is known from southern Ontario and New York and from one isolated record in Washington ( Fig. 18 View FIGURE 18 ).

Habitat.— All known records but one were collected in sphagnum bogs which suggest that S. finitimus new species may be a bog specialist. The record from the West Coast comes from one of the rare birch bogs found in Washington state (R. Crawford, pers. comm.)

Etymology.— The specific name finitimus , -a, -um, is a rarely used Latin term for neighbouring, related to, resembling, referring to the similitude between the two known species of the genus. Remarks.— The record listed from Washington by Buckle et al. (2001) refers to Scirites finitimus new species.

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History

UWBM

University of Washington, Burke Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Linyphiidae

Genus

Scirites

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