Tupigea Huber, 2000
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2010.524319 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A887D8-FF86-FFB4-B8E5-DBB3FDB2FA1F |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Tupigea Huber, 2000 |
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Tupigea Huber, 2000 View in CoL View at ENA
Tupigea Huber 2000: 314 View in CoL ; type species: T. lisei Huber, 2000 View in CoL .
Diagnosis
See Huber (2000). A character not previously mentioned that seems to be diagnostic for Tupigea is the paired receptaculum-like structures in the female internal genitalia. They have previously been illustrated for T. nadleri , T. paula and T. cantareira
(Continued)
Note: Grey-shaded entries are those species that were found at only one locality. Collection codes are provided for unnamed species to facilitate retrieval.
(figs. 1298 and 1307 in Huber 2000 and fig. 39 in Machado et al. 2007), and also occur in T. angelim , T. penedo , T. ale , T. guapia , T. maza and T. teresopolis ( Figures 5E View Figure 5 , 7E View Figure 7 , 8D,E View Figure 8 , 10B,E View Figure 10 ). They were not shown in the figure of the type species T. lisei (fig. 1271 in Huber 2000), but this may be because they are very poorly visible unless the cleared genitalia are stained, and this was not done in Huber 2000.
Description
See Huber (2000). Short vertical hairs on male legs may not only occur on tibiae but also on femora ( T. penedo , T. ale , T. guapia , T. teresopolis ; Figure 9A View Figure 9 ). Prolateral trichobothrium absent on tibia 1, present on other tibiae. Sexual dimorphism usually inconspicuous (except for longer male legs and larger female abdomen; Figure 4 View Figure 4 D–F), but distinct in T. teresopolis ( Figures 3D,E View Figure 3 , 4 View Figure 4 L–N). Females sometimes with conspicuous genital plugs ( Figures 4C,H View Figure 4 , 6H View Figure 6 ). Pore plate morphology extremely variable among species ( Figures 6N View Figure 6 , 9M View Figure 9 , 11M View Figure 11 ). Males and females with comb-hairs distally on tarsus 4 ( Figure 11C View Figure 11 ).
Composition and distribution
The genus now includes 13 species, but two of them continue to be known only from females and to be tentatively assigned ( T. altiventer , T. iguassuensis ; Huber 2000). The genus appears to be largely restricted to the Serra do Mar biogeographical sub-region of the Atlantic Forest ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ), but at least in the north and in the south it extends into the neighbouring sub-regions.
Natural history
Tupigea includes both leaf-litter species and species that live in close association with the underside of green (alive) leaves ( Figure 3 View Figure 3 A–G). Leaf-litter species are rather dark, short-legged, have a globose abdomen and eye triads close together ( Figure 4A,D,I View Figure 4 ) while leaf-dwelling species are pale greenish (the green colour gets lost in ethanol), have longer legs, and triads are farther apart ( Figures 3 View Figure 3 A–E, 4L–P). The leaf-dwelling T. ale and T. teresopolis were observed to build very fine single-layered webs with a diameter of about 20–40 cm, extending from the underside of a leaf towards the nearby vegetation ( Figure 3F View Figure 3 ). During the day, these spiders are always found hanging from that part of the web that is attached to the underside of the leaf. Males and females of these two and of other species often share one web. When disturbed, they slowly move to another part of the sheet; they could never be induced to vibrate. In contrast, the litter-dwelling T. penedo runs quickly when disturbed; no web could be seen in this (or any other litter-dwelling) species.
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.
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Tupigea Huber, 2000
Huber, Bernhard A. & Rheims, Cristina A. 2011 |
Tupigea
Huber BA 2000: 314 |