identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03D6CA5AFFFBFF87FF38826EFDD39EFE.text	03D6CA5AFFFBFF87FF38826EFDD39EFE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Guyruita Guadanucci, Lucas, Indicatti & Yamamoto 2007	<div><p>Guyruita Guadanucci, Lucas, Indicatti &amp; Yamamoto, 2007</p><p>Guyruita Guadanucci et al., 2007: 992, figs 1−15; Fonseca-Ferreira et al. 2017: 182; Fukushima &amp; Bertani, 2018: 396, figs 2−39; World Spider Catalog, 2025.</p><p>Type-species: Guyruita cerrado Guadanucci et al., 2007, by original designation.</p><p>Distribution: Brazil and French Guiana.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D6CA5AFFFBFF87FF38826EFDD39EFE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Santos, Naila Amanda S.;Almeida, Marlus Queiroz;Morais, Jose Wellington De;Bertani, Rogerio	Santos, Naila Amanda S., Almeida, Marlus Queiroz, Morais, Jose Wellington De, Bertani, Rogerio (2025): New species of Jambu Miglio, Perafán & Pérez-Miles, 2024 and Guyruita Guadanucci, Lucas, Indicatti & Yamamoto, 2007 (Araneae: Theraphosidae) from Brazil, with notes on Hapalopus Ausserer, 1875. Zootaxa 5660 (2): 243-254, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5
03D6CA5AFFFBFF82FF388132FA809982.text	03D6CA5AFFFBFF82FF388132FA809982.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Guyruita tepequem Santos & Almeida & Morais & Bertani 2025	<div><p>Guyruita tepequem sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs 1, 2)</p><p>Diagnosis. Males of G. tepequem sp. nov. resemble those of G. cerrado by the medially long embolus being ca. 2.5 times longer than the tegulum (Fig. 2G–I). They differ from males of G. cerrado and those of all other Guyruita species by the embolus tip having a distal torsion as well as the dorsal abdominal pattern dark with conspicuous lateral clear spots and a single large ovoid clear spot on the dorsum center (Fig. 1D). Females are unknown.</p><p>Etymology. The specific name is a noun in apposition taken from the type locality, Serra do Tepequem, in the State of Roraima, Brazil.</p><p>Type material. Holotype male from Brazil, State of Roraima, Amajari, Serra do Tepequem, SESC [3°4459’N, 61°4400’W], 14–29.XII. 2015, Boldrini and Rafael col., INPA-ARA 9117.</p><p>Description. Holotype male. Carapace: 3.48 long, 3.01 wide. Chelicera: 1.23 long. Legs: Formula: IV–I–II-III. Legs (femur, patella, tibia, metatarsus, tarsus, total): I: 3.65, 1.95, 3.16, 2.49, 1.82, 13.07; II: 3.09, 1.51, 2.48, 2.36, 1.54, 10.98; III: 2.48, 1.27, 1.77, 2.48, 1.35, 9.35; IV: 3.51, 1.47, 3.69, 3.34, 1.64, 13.65. Palp: 1.98, 1.11, 1.76, -, 0.48, 5.33. Mid-widths: femora I–IV= 1.68, 1.60, 2.15, 1.64, palp= 1.09; patellae I–IV= 1.42, 1.32, 1.43, 1.46, palp= 1.00; tibiae I–IV= 1.42, 1.06, 1.20, 1.03, palp= 1.16; metatarsi I–IV= 0.82, 0.72, 0.73, 0.84; tarsi I–IV= 0.76, 0.70, 0.60, 0.55, palp= 1.00. Abdomen: 3.56 long, 2.03 wide. Spinnerets: PMS 0.45 long, 0.16 wide, 0.10 apart. Basal, middle, and apical segments of PLS, 0.70 long, 0.31 wide; 0.53 long, 0.27 wide; 0.66 long, 0.18 wide, respectively (Fig. 1E). Carapace: 1.15 times longer than wide; cephalic region not raised, thoracic striae inconspicuous. Fovea: Straight, deep, 0.40 wide (Fig. 1A). Clypeus 0.36. Eyes: tubercle 0.36 high, 0.51 long, 0.62 wide. Anterior row slightly procurved. Posterior row straight. Eye size and interdistances: AME 0.19, ALE 0.15, PME 0.12, PLE 0.10; AME–AME 0.045, AME–ALE 0.032, ALE–ALE 0.51, PME–PLE 0.017, PME–PME 0.39, ALE–PLE 0.032, PLE–PLE 0.52 (Fig. 1C). Maxilla: 1.07 longer than wide. Cuspules: ca. 156/134 over ventral inner heel. Labium: 0.50 long, 0.58 wide, with ca. 157 cuspules on anterior half, spaced by one diameter of each other. Labio-sternal groove large, shallow, flattened. Sigilla not evident. Chelicerae: Basal segment with 5 teeth and 5 small teeth on promargin. Sternum: 1.65 long, 1.59 wide. Sigilla: three pairs, anterior and median rounded, one diameter from margin; posterior fusiform, less than one diameter from margin (Fig. 1B). Clavate trichobothria: 4 on tarsus I; 7 on tarsus II; 9 on tarsus III; 13 on tarsus IV; 12 on palpal tarsus. Scopula: Tarsi of legs I–IV fully scopulated; III, less dense; divided by a band of bristles in III. Metatarsus I fully scopulated; II–IV 1/2 apical; with band of interspersed bristles in II, divided by band of bristles in III. IRC absent. Spines: leg I: fe 0, pa 0, ti p2-0-v7, me v2, ta 0; leg II: fe d1-0-v1, pa 0, ti p2-0-v5, me p2-0-v4, ta 0; leg III: fe 0, pa p1, ti p1-r2-v5, me d3-p3 v4-1-3ap, ta 0; leg IV: fe d1, pa 0, ti r2-v3-3ap, me d2-p3-r1-v4, ta 0; palp: fe d1, pa 0, ti d1-p1, ta 0. Palp (Fig. 2G–I): bulb pyriform with embolus tapering. Embolus long, straight, not flattened, with distal torsion, 2.49 long in retrolateral view, ca. 2.5 times tegulum length. Thin distal width, tapering distally; basal, middle and distal width 0.58, 0.17, 0.06, respectively. Tegulum: 0.58 long, 0.64 high in retrolateral view. Cymbium triangular with subequal lobes, lacking well developed process on retrolateral lobe. Tibial apophysis (Fig. 2A–C): two slightly curved processes on prolateral leg I, with weakly developed bases, slightly ventro-retrolaterally positioned. R process with subterminal spine ca. ½ its length, prolateral and retrolateral processes closely positioned. Prolateral process longer, with spine one third shorter than process on retrolateral face. Metatarsus I straight when folded touches outer side of retrolateral process. Metatarsi and tarsi I, II discolored.</p><p>Color pattern: Chelicerae dark brown, carapace and legs dark brown. Carapace, chelicerae and legs covered with fine plumose whitish setae (Fig. 1A). Abdomen dorsal pattern symmetrical, with 6 dark stripes extending on both sides, with two bands connected to other points at apical end of midline. An ovoid, large, pale spot on abdomen dorsum. Ventrally mostly pale, with darker spots (Fig. 1D).</p><p>Natural history: The specimen was hand collected at night in humid tropical forest soil.</p><p>Distribution. Known only from the type locality, Tepequem, in the State of Roraima, Brazil (Fig. 7).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D6CA5AFFFBFF82FF388132FA809982	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Santos, Naila Amanda S.;Almeida, Marlus Queiroz;Morais, Jose Wellington De;Bertani, Rogerio	Santos, Naila Amanda S., Almeida, Marlus Queiroz, Morais, Jose Wellington De, Bertani, Rogerio (2025): New species of Jambu Miglio, Perafán & Pérez-Miles, 2024 and Guyruita Guadanucci, Lucas, Indicatti & Yamamoto, 2007 (Araneae: Theraphosidae) from Brazil, with notes on Hapalopus Ausserer, 1875. Zootaxa 5660 (2): 243-254, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5
03D6CA5AFFFEFF82FF3885AFFBA7984B.text	03D6CA5AFFFEFF82FF3885AFFBA7984B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Jambu Miglio, Perafan & Perez-Miles 2024	<div><p>Jambu Miglio, Perafán &amp; Pérez-Miles, 2024</p><p>Jambu Miglio, Perafán &amp; Pérez-Miles, 2024: 231, figs 1–10.</p><p>Type species Jambu paru Miglio, Perafán &amp; Pérez-Miles, 2024, by original designation.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D6CA5AFFFEFF82FF3885AFFBA7984B	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Santos, Naila Amanda S.;Almeida, Marlus Queiroz;Morais, Jose Wellington De;Bertani, Rogerio	Santos, Naila Amanda S., Almeida, Marlus Queiroz, Morais, Jose Wellington De, Bertani, Rogerio (2025): New species of Jambu Miglio, Perafán & Pérez-Miles, 2024 and Guyruita Guadanucci, Lucas, Indicatti & Yamamoto, 2007 (Araneae: Theraphosidae) from Brazil, with notes on Hapalopus Ausserer, 1875. Zootaxa 5660 (2): 243-254, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5
03D6CA5AFFFEFF8EFF3884E7FEBB985A.text	03D6CA5AFFFEFF8EFF3884E7FEBB985A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Jambu yanomami Santos & Almeida & Morais & Bertani 2025	<div><p>Jambu yanomami sp. nov.</p><p>(Fig. 3–5)</p><p>Diagnosis. Male can be distinguished from all other species of the genus by the absence of a PA on the ring-shaped keel (See Fukushima et al. 2005), as well as the short embolus (Fig. 5D–I). The female can be distinguished from all other congeners by the unique shape of the spermathecae, each composed of two separate receptacles, each ending in single, rounded lobe (Figure 3C).</p><p>Etymology. The generic name is a homage to the Yanomami Indians. The type locality is located in Yanomami indigenous territory, in an area overlapping the Pico da Neblina National Park, in Amazonas, about 3000 metres high. For the Yanomami, it is a sacred place, home of the Spirits.</p><p>Type material. Holotype female from Brazil, State of Amazonas, São Gabriel da Cachoeira; <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-66.00694&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=0.80027777" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -66.00694/lat 0.80027777)">Pico da Neblina</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-66.00694&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=0.80027777" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -66.00694/lat 0.80027777)">Bebedouro velho</a> – 400 m, Amostra 2 [0°47’43”N, 66°0’25”W], 26 September 2007, Nancy Lo Man Hung col., INPA ARA9118; 1 male paratype from Brazil, State of Amazonas, São Gabriel da Cachoeira; <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-66.00694&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=0.80027777" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -66.00694/lat 0.80027777)">Pico da Neblina, Cachoeira do Tucano</a> – 100 m, Amostra 3 [0°48’01”N, 66°0’25”W], 23 September 2007, André Nogueira col., INPA ARA9119.</p><p>Other material examined. BRAZIL, State of Roraima, Iracema, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-61.433334&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=2.3666668" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -61.433334/lat 2.3666668)">Serra de Campos Novos</a> [2º22’N, 61º26’W], 3 males, P. Nunes, A. Fourmet &amp; F. Curcio col., 10 June 2012, INPA ARA9118 ; ARA9119 .</p><p>Description. Holotype female. Carapace: 5.57 long, 5.24 wide. Chelicerae: 2.77 long. Legs: Formula: IV-I-III-II. Length (femur, patella, tibia, metatarsus, tarsus, total): I: 3.78, 2.52, 2.69, 2.24, 1.20, 12.43; II: 3.34, 2.39, 2.30, 2.29, 1.12, 11.44; III: 3.37, 1.98, 2.18, 2.95, 1.18, 11.66; IV: 4.18, 2.03, 2.90, 4.38, 1.20, 14.69. Palp: 2.99, 1.85, 2.14, -, 1.87, 8.85. Midwidths: femora I–IV= 3.35, 3.10, 3.21, 2.70, palp= 2.35; patellae I–IV= 3.18, 2.93, 2.54, 2.71, palp= 2.20; tibiae I–IV= 2.77, 2.44, 2.25, 2.12, palp= 2.18; metatarsi I–IV= 1.79, 1.65, 1.46, 1.48; tarsi I–IV= 1.48, 1.29, 1.13, 1.12, palp= 1.45. Abdomen 6.17 long, 4.51 wide (Fig. 3E). Spinnerets: PMS 0.51 long, 0.30 wide, 0.52 apart. Basal, middle, and apical segments of PLS, 0.93 long, 0.46 wide; 0.53 long, 0.41 wide; 0.68 long, 0.28 wide, respectively (Fig. 3F). Carapace: 1.06 times longer than wide; cephalic region raised, thoracic striae faint, shallow, narrow. Fovea: procurved, deep, 0.83 wide (Fig. 3A). Clypeus absent. Eight eyes on tubercle 0.65 high, 0.95 wide, 0.69 long. Anterior eye row slightly procurved, posterior row recurved. Eye size and interdistances: AME 0.22, ALE 0.25, PME 0.17, PLE 0.20;AME–AME 0.10, AME–ALE 0.06, ALE–ALE 0.62, PME–PLE 0.05, PME–PME 0.47, ALE–PLE 0.08, PLE–PLE 0.69 (Fig. 3D). Maxillae: 1.88 longer than wide. Cuspules: ca. 84/83 on upper mound in inner angle. Labium: 0.77 long, 0.91 wide, with ca. 7 cuspules rounded, concentrated on anterior half, spaced by more than diameter from each other. Labio-sternal groove shallow, flat, with pair of sigilla. Chelicerae: basal segment with 8 large teeth and 3 tiny on promargin. Sternum: 2.30 long, 2.37 wide. Three pairs of sigilla, rounded, all one diameter from margin (Fig. 3B). Legs. Clavate trichobothria: in two rows on distal ¾ of tarsi: 15 on tarsus I; 18 on tarsus II; 15 on tarsus III; 17 on tarsus IV; 17 on palpal tarsus. Scopula on tarsi I–IV densely scopulate, scopula I–II entire, III–IV divided by wide band of longer conical setae. Metatarsi I scopulate on distal ⅓, II scopulate on apical ¼, III apically scopulate, IV without scopula. Superior tarsal claws with two or three small teeth. Claws: IRC absent, palpal claw bare. Spines: leg I: fe d1-0-0, pa 0, ti v1, me v5, ta 0; leg II: fe d1-0-0, pa d1, ti d0-p1-v1, me d0-p1-v7, ta 0; leg III: fe d1, pa d0-p2-r1-v0, ti d0-p3-r2-v4, me d2-p4-r2-v10, ta 0; leg IV: fe d1, pa d0-p1-r1-v0, ti d0-r3-v2, me d4-p2-r4-v8, ta 0; palp: fe d1-0-0, pa 0, ti v5, ta 0. PC absent. Spermathecae: two separate receptacles, each ending in single, rounded lobe (Fig. 3C). Color pattern (preserved in alcohol): Chelicerae brown, carapace and legs brown. Abdomen dorsally dark brown; ventrally brown. Abdomen: dense cover of setae, including urticating setae type IV (Fig. 5E).</p><p>Description. Paratype male (INPA ARA9119). Carapace 5.82 long, 5.46 wide. Chelicerae: 1.87 long. Legs: Formula: IV–I–III-II. Lengths (femur, patella, tibia, metatarsus, tarsus, total): I: 4.86, 2.75, 3.55, 3.35, 1.56, 16.07; II: 4.44, 2.40, 3.12, 3.39, 1.63, 14.98; III: 4.08, 2.23, 3.05, 4.25, 1.60, 15.21; IV: 5.00, 2.29, 4.05, 6.26, 1.74, 19.34. Palp: 2.73, 1.72, 2.49, -, 0.94, 7.88. Midwidths: femora I–IV= 3.24, 3.34, 3.22, 3.20, palp= 2.19; patellae I–IV= 2.85, 2.71, 2.62, 2.70, palp= 2.34; tibiae I–IV= 2.51, 2.11, 2.23, 2.32, palp= 2.45; metatarsi I–IV= 1.57, 1.39, 1.50, 1.68; tarsi I–IV= 1.21, 1.20, 1.12, 1.04, palp= 1.68. Abdomen 5.45 long, 3.92 wide (Fig. 4D). Spinnerets: PMS 0.45 long, 0.20 wide, 0.10 apart. Basal, middle, and apical segments of PLS, 0.74 long, 0.41 wide; 0.37 long, 0.34 wide; 0.32 long, 0.23 wide, respectively (Fig. 4E). Carapace: 1.06 times longer than wide; cephalic region raised, thoracic striae faint, shallow and narrow. Fovea 0.70 wide (Fig. 4A). Clypeus absent. Eyes: tubercle 0.46 high, 0.93 wide, 0.67 long. Anterior row straight, posterior slightly recurved. Eye size and interdistances: AME 0.22, ALE 0.26, PME 0.14, PLE 0.22;AME–AME 0.11, AME–ALE 0.03, ALE–ALE 0.51, PME–PLE 0.02, PME–PME 0.46, ALE– PLE 0.06, PLE–PLE 0.63 (Fig. 4C). Maxillae: 1.63 longer than wide. Cuspules: ca. 80/72 over ventral inner heel. Labium: 0.70 long, 0.77 wide, with 8 cuspules. Labiosternal groove shallow, flat, with pair of sigilla. Chelicerae: basal segment with 8 large teeth and 3 tiny on promargin. Sternum: 2.32 long, 2.42 wide (Fig. 4B). Sigilla: three pairs, rounded, all one diameter from margin (Fig. 4B). Clavate trichobothria: 13 on tarsus I; 15 on tarsus II; 12 on tarsus III; 15 on tarsus IV; 4 on palpal tarsus. Scopula: apical on cymbium. Scopula on tarsi I–IV dense, scopula I–II entire, III–IV divided by wide band of longer conical setae. Metatarsi I scopulate on distal ¼, II scopulate on apical ⅓, III apically scopulate, IV without scopula. IRC absent. Spines: leg I: fe d3-0-0, pa d1, ti d0-p1-v5, me d0-p1-v6, ta 0; leg II: fe d2-0-0, pa 0, ti d0-p1-v8, me d1-p1-v6, ta 0; leg III: fe 0, pa d0-p1-r1-v0, ti d0-p1-v5, me d0-p3-r4-v5, ta 0; leg IV: fe d1-0-0, pa p2-r2-v0, ti d0-p3-r4-v8, me d2-p3-r5-v11, ta 0; palp: fe d1, pa 0, ti d2-p3-v4, ta 0.</p><p>Palp (Fig. 5D–I): Embolus short, rougtly the same length as tegulum. Embolus broad. PS weakly developed, short, confined to distal embolus. PI and A absent. RS close to embolus tip, lacking PA.</p><p>Tibial apophysis: double, positioned ventro-prolaterally on tibia I with paired tibial processes, RP slightly longer and more slender than PP, straight, with short megaspine close to its apex. PP incrassate and slightly curves with short megaspine, one third shorter than length of process. Straight metatarsus I which, when folded, touches external side of retrolateral lobe. Metatarsi and tarsi I and II discolored (Fig. 5A–C).</p><p>Color pattern: carapace, chelicerae and leg covered with fine plumose whitish setae. Abdomen dorsally dark brown; ventrally brown; with dense cover of setae, including urticating setae type IV (Fig. 5D).</p><p>Distribution. Brazil, States of Amazonas (Pico da Neblina Reserve) and Roraima (Serra de Campos Novos) (Fig. 8).</p><p>Remark. The genus Jambu was recently erected and diagnosed by the presence of type IV urticating setae and a spatulate, wide, paraembolic apophysis on the palpal bulb (Miglio et al. 2024). They also have a pronounced tegular apophysis on the palpal bulb, the male tibial apophysis is very sclerotized, composed of two convergent processes, and the female spermathecae has a single lamp-shaped or heart-shaped receptacle. Males and females have dorsal abdominal patterns of dark brown spots on a lighter brown background (Miglio et al. 2024). This new species has urticating setae IV on the abdomen dorsum and a similar abdominal pattern, as in other Jambu species. The male also has tibial apophysis with two very sclerotized and convergent processes. However, there is no pronounced tegular apophysis on palpal bulb nor a paraembolic apophysis, and the spermathecae of female is composed of two receptacles. However, there is little doubt the new species belongs to Jambu, especially by the presence of a ring-shaped keel near the embolus tip, that, even though not bearing a paraembolic apophysis as other Jambu species, has a series of denticles similar to those found in other species of the genus. Hapalopus and other closely related genera, as Jambu, represent a very speciose group of theraphosine species that only recently began to be deeply studied (Fukushima et al. 2005, Fonseca-Ferreira et al. 2017, Miglio et al. 2024). There is a profusion of undescribed species and morphological variations that will challenge the diagnoses, the monophyly, and the validity of related genera recently erected, as Jambu and Notahapalopus Sherwood et al., as is the case with the new species herein described.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D6CA5AFFFEFF8EFF3884E7FEBB985A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Santos, Naila Amanda S.;Almeida, Marlus Queiroz;Morais, Jose Wellington De;Bertani, Rogerio	Santos, Naila Amanda S., Almeida, Marlus Queiroz, Morais, Jose Wellington De, Bertani, Rogerio (2025): New species of Jambu Miglio, Perafán & Pérez-Miles, 2024 and Guyruita Guadanucci, Lucas, Indicatti & Yamamoto, 2007 (Araneae: Theraphosidae) from Brazil, with notes on Hapalopus Ausserer, 1875. Zootaxa 5660 (2): 243-254, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5
03D6CA5AFFF2FF8EFF3884D7FB7F9D74.text	03D6CA5AFFF2FF8EFF3884D7FB7F9D74.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Chromatopelma cyaneopubescens (Strand 1907)	<div><p>Chromatopelma cyaneopubescens (Strand, 1907)</p><p>Eurypelma cyaneopubescens Strand, 1907: 35; Roewer, 1942: 238.</p><p>Delopelma cyaneopubescens Petrunkevitch, 1939: 252 .</p><p>Chromatopelma cyaneopubescens Schmidt, 1995: 25; Schmidt &amp; Herzig, 1997: 12, f. 1-2; Schmidt, 1997: 15, f. 23-24; Schmidt 2000: 11, f. 1.</p><p>Proshapalopus variegatus Caporiacco, 1955: 281; Huber, Samm &amp; Schmidt, 1996: 42; Rudloff 1997: 5; N. Syn.</p><p>Metriopelma variegata: Bertani 2001: 286.</p><p>Hapalopus variegatus: Gabriel 2016: 86.</p><p>(Fig. 6)</p><p>Type material. Holotype female of Proshapalopus variegatus Caporiacco, 1955, from Venezuela, Falcon, Santa Ana, Marcuzzi col., X-1948, deposited at UCV XII-529, examined.</p><p>Remarks. The holotype of Proshapalopus variegatus Caporiacco, 1955 is a small female having a single fused spermatheca (Fig. 6A), a faded pattern of dark stripes on the abdomen dorsum and a central spot with urticating setae (Fig. 6B). It is possible to see two dark spots on the dorsal anterior area of the abdomen connected by a narrow dark band (Fig. 6B), a pattern unusual in theraphosids. These characters match with those found in females of Chromatopelma cyaneopubescens which are endemic to the region of the type locality of P. variegatus, Santa Ana, in the Paraguana Peninsula in the State of Falcon, Venezuela. Therefore, Proshapalopus variegatus Caporiacco, 1955 is herein considered a junior synonym of Chromatopelma cyaneopubescens (Strand 1907) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D6CA5AFFF2FF8EFF3884D7FB7F9D74	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Santos, Naila Amanda S.;Almeida, Marlus Queiroz;Morais, Jose Wellington De;Bertani, Rogerio	Santos, Naila Amanda S., Almeida, Marlus Queiroz, Morais, Jose Wellington De, Bertani, Rogerio (2025): New species of Jambu Miglio, Perafán & Pérez-Miles, 2024 and Guyruita Guadanucci, Lucas, Indicatti & Yamamoto, 2007 (Araneae: Theraphosidae) from Brazil, with notes on Hapalopus Ausserer, 1875. Zootaxa 5660 (2): 243-254, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5660.2.5
