The new Andean jumping spider genus Urupuyu and its placement within a revised classification of the Amycoida (Araneae: Salticidae) Author Ruiz, Gustavo R. S. Author Maddison, Wayne P. text Zootaxa 2015 4040 3 251 279 journal article 39443 10.11646/zootaxa.4040.3.1 589c20cd-ac9b-4155-8b98-8c0742b5d849 1175-5326 245740 392A2F34-0B0C-4298-BBF5-76A82CED0C59 Subfamily Gophoinae Simon, 1901 Gophoeae Simon, 1901 : 588 ( Type genus: Gophoa Simon, 1901 , synonymized with Cotinusa Simon, 1900 by Galiano 1963 : 360). ( Thiodininae sensu Simon 1901 : 545 ; Petrunkevitch 1928 : 185 ; Roewer 1954 ; Edwards et al. 2005 ; Hill 2012 ; see also comments under Thiodininae ). Monophyly: Long mistaken as the “ Thiodininae ”, this group is well supported by molecular data ( Figs 36 , 37 , 39, 41, 43 ) and is easily recognized by a series of morphological features, though each of the features is missing in some species of this group. First, most species have two pairs of bulbous setae on the ventral surface of the tibia of the front leg, unique among spiders, thought to enhance sensation for the handling of prey ( Hill 2012 ). Second, many species have a carapace/femur I stridulatory apparatus ( Maddison 1987 ), but it is not clear whether this structure evolved on one of the branches within this subfamily or is a synapomorphy reversed in subgroups. Third, most species have a well developed RTA accompanied by a sinuous RvTA in the male palp (e.g. Galiano 1963 : pl. XL, figs 1–4). The embolus is also articulated with the tegulum by a well-developed hematodocha ( Fig. 52 ), though whether this is a synapomorphy or a plesiomorphy is unclear. We note that the molecular results ( Figs 37 , 41 ) support the separation of Nilakantha and Colonus by Bustamante et al. (2015).