Gelanor innominatus Chamberlin, 1916

(Figs. 25–26)

Gelanor innominatum Chamberlin, 1916: 262, pl. 20, fig. 6.

Type. Female holotype, PERU, San Miguel, 6000 feet, July 1911. Yale Peruvian Expedition (MCZ, Examined).

Additional material examined. None.

Diagnosis. Females of Gelanor innominatus can be recognized by their rectangular epigynal septum (Fig. 25 G) and diamond-like abdomen shape (shared with G. altithorax). Males are unknown.

Description. Female holotype. Habitus as in Figs. 25 A–E. Total length 5.25. Cephalothorax 2.71 long, 2.08 wide, 1.08 high; abdomen 2.54 long, 3.08 wide, 1.35 high. The entire specimen is brown; the original pigmentation has presumably faded. Sternum 1.55 long, 1.08 wide. Labium 0.29 long, 0.42 wide. Clypeus 0.14 high. AME interdistance 0.17; PME inter-distance 0.1; PME–AME distance 0.17; AME–ALE distance 0.29; PME–PLE distance 0.39. Chelicerae dark orange, 0.98 long, 0.56 wide (Fig. 25 C). Epigynum as in Figs. 26 F–I, with a large, rectangular septum and a concave anterior edge; spermathecae rounded and externally fused.

Variation. Unknown, only one adult specimen available for study.

Distribution. Only known by its type locality in San Miguel, Peru (Fig. 26).