Kintaqa Huber gen. n.

Pholcus buatong group: Huber et al. 2016a: 38.

Type species.

Pholcus buatong Huber, 2011.

Etymology.

The name honours the Kintaq, a Mon-Khmer ethnic group in Thailand. Gender feminine.

Diagnosis.

Medium size, light coloured pholcids with long legs, six or eight eyes, and cylindrical abdomen (Huber et al. 2016a: figs 143-152). Distinguished from similar species in other genera ( Tissahamia, Cantikus, Pribumia) by distinctive dorsal bulging of male palpal patella (Huber 2011a: figs 581, 823; Huber et al. 2016a: fig. 155) and by epigynum with large, heavily sclerotized ‘knob’ (Huber et al. 2016a: figs 184, 187, 190); also by combination of: complete reduction of distal anterior apophyses on male chelicerae (Huber 2011a: figs 582, 825; Huber et al. 2016a: fig. 156); ALS with eight spigots each (Huber et al. 2016a: figs 166, 183); male palps not reddish or orange.

Distribution .

Southern Thailand and northern mainland Malaysia (Huber et al. 2016a: fig. 153).

Composition.

Five species, all newly transferred from Pholcus: K. buatong (Huber, 2016); K. fuza (Yao & Li, 2017); K. mueangensis (Yao & Li, 2017); K. satun (Huber, 2011); K. schwendingeri (Huber, 2011).