Idiops Perty, 1833
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.780.1581 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:932663A6-D83D-49E0-B1F7-87F7DA8DC086 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5762223 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B4126E-E86B-FFA6-EEC8-FDC5FEE2FAC8 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Idiops Perty, 1833 |
status |
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Genus Idiops Perty, 1833 View in CoL View at ENA
Idiops Perty, 1833: 197 View in CoL (type species by monotypy: I. fuscus Perty, 1833 View in CoL ).
Acanthodon Guérin, 1838: 163 (type species by monotypy: A. petitii Guérin, 1838 ). Synonymized by O. Pickard-Cambridge 1870: 107.
Dendricon O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1889: 250 (type species by monotypy: D. rastratum O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1889). Synonymized by Pocock 1895: 223.
Pseudidiops Simon, 1889: 215 (type species by monotypy: P. opifex Simon, 1889 ). Synonymized by Raven 1985: 139.
Juambeltzia Mello-Leitão, 1946: 6 (type species by monotypy: J. clara Mello-Leitão, 1946 ). Synonymized by Schiapelli & Gerschman de Pikelin 1971: 58.
Idiops View in CoL – O. Pickard-Cambridge 1870: 101. — Simon 1892: 89. — Roewer 1953: 5. — Raven 1985: 139. — Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002: 68.
Acanthodon – Walckenaer 1837: 434. — Simon 1892: 90; 1903: 350. — Pocock 1897: 731.
Type species
Idiops fuscus Perty, 1833 View in CoL
Composition
Idiops includes 102 species, of which 24 occur in the Neotropical region, including the four new species herein described: I. fuscus Perty, 1833 , the type species, I. argus Simon, 1889 , I. bonapartei Hasselt, 1888 , I. cambridgei Ausserer, 1875 , I. camelus (Mello Leitão, 1937) , I. carajas Fonseca-Ferreira, Zampaulo & Guadanucci, 2017 , I. clarus ( Mello-Leitão, 1946) , I. duocordibus sp. nov., I. germaini Simon, 1892 , I. guri sp. nov., I. harti ( Pocock, 1893) , I. hirsutipedis Mello-Leitão, 1941 , I. minguito Ferretti, 2017 , I. mocambo sp. nov., I. nilopolensis Mello-Leitão, 1923 , I. opifex ( Simon, 1889) , I. petiti ( Guérin, 1838) , I. piluso Ferretti, Nime & Mattoni, 2017 , I. pirassununguensis Fukami & Lucas, 2005 , I. sertania sp. nov., I. siolii (Bücherl, 1953) , I. rastratus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1889) , I. rohdei Karsch, 1886 and I. tolengo Ferretti, 2017 .
Distribution
South America, Africa, Syria, Israel, Yemen, India, Myanmar and Thailand. Here we present the updated distribution of the Neotropical species of the genus ( Figs 3–4 View Fig View Fig ).
Diagnosis
The species of Idiops differ from all other Idiopinae by having the coxae without spines and by the chelicerae with a row of large teeth along the retromargin and small teeth concentrated in the basal third of the promargin and arranged in a row or randomly ( Fig. 5A–B View Fig ; except I. harti ( Pocock, 1893)) . Idiops harti differs from all other species of the genus by having only one prolateral row of large teeth ( Fig. 5C View Fig ).
Description
Small to medium sized spiders, with Neotropical species with total length ranging between 5.4 mm and 19.1 mm. Brown color, with variation between yellowish brown and almost entirely black ( Fig. 2A–F View Fig ). Anterior lateral eyes close to clypeal edge ( Fig. 6A View Fig ). Chelicerae with a prolateral row of large teeth and a retrolateral row of smaller teeth ( Fig. 6B View Fig ), retrolateral teeth occupying basal third of chelicerae, arranged in a row ( Fig. 5A View Fig ) or randomly ( Fig. 5B View Fig ), except I. harti , with retrolateral teeth absent ( Fig. 5C View Fig ), and rastellum consisting of a distinct process with large spines ( Fig. 6C View Fig ). Legs with three tarsal claws, paired claws with teeth and third claw smooth ( Fig. 6D View Fig ). Adhesive scopula absent, pseudoscopula present in males ( Fig. 6D View Fig ). Sternum with two anterior pairs of small marginal sigillae. Abdomen oval, without ornaments or sclerotic spots ( Fig. 2A–F View Fig ). Four spinnerets; posterior lateral spinnerets trisegmented and with a domed apical segment, posterior median spinnerets with one short segment. Males with enlarged palpal tibia, with retrolateral depression bordered by robust spines ( Fig. 6E–F View Fig ). Copulatory bulb presents an embolus with median curvature, subapical torsion, apical expansion, usually in flattened shape (embolar lamella) ( Fig. 7E–F View Fig ) or pointed shape (distal embolar tooth) ( Fig. 19E View Fig ) (with the exception of I. petiti ; Fig. 26E–F View Fig ). Leg I with a double tibial apophysis, with apical branch wider than basal branch ( Fig. 6G View Fig ) (with the exception of I. germaini ; Fig. 18H View Fig ), with putative slit organ between the two branches ( Fig. 6H– I View Fig ). Metatarsus I smooth (with the exception of I. duocordibus sp. nov., I. petiti and I. pirassununguensis , which have a subapical prolateral projection ( Figs 17I View Fig , 26I View Fig , 27I View Fig )). Idiops females have cuspules on labium and maxillae. In I. duocordibus sp. nov., I. opifex and I. rastratus , cuspules occupy entire ventral region of maxillae ( Figs 17K View Fig , 29K View Fig ). Tibia III presents dorsal depression in I. fuscus , I. camelus , I. pirassununguensis and I. rohdei . Spermathecae with sclerotized basal area, divided into two outward-sloping ducts, each one connected to rounded terminal receptacles ( Fig. 7L View Fig ) (with the exception of I. duocordibus sp. nov., I. petiti and I. siolii ; Figs 17L View Fig , 26L View Fig , 34C View Fig ) that have receptacles with lobular expansions.
Natural history
Spiders of the genus Idiops live in tubular silk-lined burrows, which are closed by a hinged lid (operculum), which functions as a trapdoor ( Fig. 1A–F, H–L View Fig ). The burrows, which can be found on ravines ( Fig. 1G View Fig ) and on the ground ( Fig. 1L View Fig ), are dug with the help of the rastellum and first legs ( Coyle et al. 1992). The opercula are usually camouflaged with mosses ( Fig. 1A–D View Fig ), grains of sand and clay ( Fig. 6E–F View Fig ), and small leaves and pieces of dry grass ( Fig. 6H–K View Fig ) ( Coyle et al. 1992; Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002). These burrows provide a suitable microclimate that protects the spiders from predators, parasites and microbial infections, and behave as effective expansions for ambushing prey ( Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002; Pérez-Miles & Perafán 2017). Idiops spiders live in a variety of habitats, ranging from dry environments with scattered vegetation and harder soils to more humid environments with dense vegetation and softer soils ( Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002; Gupta et al. 2013; RFF pers. obs.). Some species can occasionally be found in termite mounds or in soil deposited near the base of trees ( Gupta et al. 2015) and inside tree bark and rotten trunks ( Pickard-Cambridge 1889: fig. 5; pers. obs.). Finally, some species can be found in degraded environments, often close to human dwelling and agricultural environments ( Mirza & Sanap 2012; Gupta et al. 2013). In Brazil, specimens of Idiops were found in urban vegetation fragments, located even in large cities, such as São Paulo ( I. camelus ), Rio de Janeiro ( I. germaini ) and Brasília ( I. pirassununguensis ) (RFF pers. obs.).
Females and juveniles spend most of their lives in the burrows, leaving only during events of capturing prey and disposing of undigested parts. Males, after reaching adulthood, leave their burrows and wander in search for females to copulate ( Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002; Pérez-Miles & Perafán 2017).Although less common, it is possible to find males living in individual burrows ( Siliwal et al. 2020; RFF pers. obs.). It is common to find several nearby burrows, with spiders often belonging to the same population (Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002), with records reaching the density of 20 individuals per m² for I. bombayensis Siliwal, Molur & Biswas, 2005 ( Mirza & Sanap 2012). At night, the spiders position themselves near the opening, with the trapdoor slightly ajar and wait for the prey that, upon approaching and being noticed, is captured and taken inside ( Coyle et al. 1992). If disturbed, the spider closes the operculum firmly, holding the trapdoor with its anterior legs, and as a last resort, goes to the bottom of the burrow ( Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002; Pérez-Miles & Perafán 2017; pers. obs.). In case there is an egg sac inside the burrow, the female positions itself on top of it to better protect its contents. The egg sac is usually oval and can contain up to 250 eggs held together by thick silk lining (as in I. joida Gupta, Das & Siliwal, 2013 ) ( Gupta et al. 2013). In cases of adverse environmental events, these spiders can abandon their burrows, migrate to apparently more stable environments and build new burrows ( Dippenaar-Schoeman 2002; Pérez-Miles & Perafán 2017).
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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Idiops Perty, 1833
Fonseca-Ferreira, Rafael, Guadanucci, José Paulo Leite, Yamamoto, Flávio Uemori & Brescovit, Antonio Domingos 2021 |
Juambeltzia Mello-Leitão, 1946: 6
Schiapelli R. D. & Gerschman de Pikelin B. S. 1971: 58 |
Mello-Leitao C. F. 1946: 6 |
Dendricon O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1889: 250
Pocock R. I. 1895: 223 |
Pickard-Cambridge O. 1889: 250 |
Pseudidiops
Raven R. J. 1985: 139 |
Simon E. 1889: 215 |
Idiops
Dippenaar-Schoeman A. S. 2002: 68 |
Raven R. J. 1985: 139 |
Roewer C. F. 1953: 5 |
Simon E. 1892: 89 |
Pickard-Cambridge O. 1870: 101 |
Acanthodon Guérin, 1838: 163
Pickard-Cambridge O. 1870: 107 |
Guerin F. E. 1838: 163 |
Acanthodon
Simon E. 1903: 350 |
Pocock 1897: 731 |
Simon E. 1892: 90 |
Walckenaer C. A. 1837: 434 |
Idiops
Perty M. 1833: 197 |