Kelabita Huber gen. n.
Pholcus andulau group: Huber et al. 2016a: 47.
Type species.
Pholcus andulau Huber, 2011.
Etymology.
Named for the Kelabit, an indigenous Dayak people of the Sarawak/North Kalimantan highlands of Borneo with a minority in the neighboring state of Brunei. Gender feminine.
Diagnosis.
Medium size, light coloured pholcids with long legs, six eyes, cylindrical abdomen (Huber et al. 2016a: figs 193-196). Distinguished from similar species in other genera ( Meraha, Apokayana, Teranga, Muruta) by unique, partly sclerotized embolus with strong sclerotized pointed processes (Huber 2011a: fig. 570; Huber et al. 2016a: figs 200, 210); also by combination of: male chelicerae with pair of pointed apophyses close to median line and directed toward each other (Huber 2011a: fig. 572; Huber et al. 2016a: fig. 202); ALS with eight spigots each (Huber 2016 a: figs 217, 218); male palps not reddish or orange; large unsclerotized ‘knob’ on posterior edge of female external genitalia, directed toward anterior (Huber 2011a: fig. 573; Huber et al. 2016a: figs 203, 213). In the field they can be distinguished from most other genera (except Meraha) by their domed webs among the vegetation (up to 2 m above the ground), usually with the apex of the dome attached to the underside of a leaf.
Distribution.
Northern Borneo (Huber et al. 2016a: fig. 153).
Composition.
Only two species newly transferred from Pholcus: K. andulau (Huber, 2011); K. lambir (Huber, 2016).