Bowie indicus ( Gravely, 1931 )

Sankaran, Pradeep M. & Joseph, Mathew M., 2023, The hitherto unknown male of Bowie indicus (Gravely, 1931) (Araneae: Ctenidae), Journal of Natural History 57 (1 - 4), pp. 19-24 : 20-23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2022.2160282

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7620653

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1B5E87DE-FFC5-B967-FE63-928AFCAB23CF

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bowie indicus ( Gravely, 1931 )
status

 

Bowie indicus ( Gravely, 1931)

( Figures 1 View Figure 1 (a–e, 2))

Ctenus indicus Gravely, 1931: 234 View in CoL , fig. 2H–I (♀). Tikader and Malhotra 1981: 114, figs 6A–C (♀). Sankaran and Sebastian 2018: 403, figs 1C, F, 2C–E, 7A–C (♀). Karthika and Sunil Jose 2020: 55, fig. 1A–C (subadult ♀).

Bowie indicus Jäger, 2022: 39 , figs 161–162, 184–189 (♀, tip of retrolateral tibial apophysis of ♂).

Material examined

India, Kerala, Trivandrum, Kallar near Ponmudi, on the way to Meenmutty Waterfalls (8.71777N, 77.12694E; 90 m a.s.l.), 22 January 2019, leg. M.S. Pradeep, from ground, by hand: 1 ♂ without left leg II and left pedipalp ( ADSH201037 View Materials ). GoogleMaps

Diagnosis

Males of B. indicus are closely related to the males of Bowie cladarus ( Jäger, 2012) as both possess a massive retrolateral tibial apophysis with easily broken branched tip, semicircular embolus with distal part being covered by conductor and embolus with membranous extension, but can be distinguished from the latter species by tip of retrolateral tibial apophysis with four branches (vs three in B. cladarus ), cymbium with retrobasal process (vs absent in B. cladarus ) and median apophysis with prolateral extension (vs absent in B. cladarus ) (compare Figure 2 View Figure 2 (a–b) with Jäger 2012, figs 60–61).

Description

Male in alcohol ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 (a–d)). Carapace, clypeus, chelicerae, endites, labium, sternum, leg and pedipalp segments dark brown; carapace with indistinct black streaks, medially and laterally with broad patches formed of short white hairs, former extending to middle of ocular quad, lateral margin bearing white setae. Leg segments with blackish shading, covered with short white hairs. Pedipalp segments covered with short white hairs. Opisthosoma elongate rectangular, hirsute, yellowish brown with greyish-black shading, rear end with indistinct transverse black bands, venter greyish-black, with creamy-white streaks and scattered patches formed of short white hairs. Spinnerets yellowish brown; fovea narrow, longitudinal, straight, dark. Cheliceral promargin with three and retromargin with four teeth. Femora III–IV retrobasally with a few small humps, each consisting of numerous tiny, tubercles ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 (b–d)); all metatarsi with distal scopulae; all tarsi with complete scopulae, with well-developed claw tuft. Body length 15.72. Carapace 9.06 long, 7.11 wide. Opisthosoma 6.66 long, 4.76 wide. Eye sizes and interdistances: ALE 0.26, AME 0.36, PLE 0.41, PME 0.46; ALE–ALE 1.53, AME–ALE 0.49, AME–AME 0.21, AME–PME 0.12, PLE–PLE 1.83, PME– ALE 0.18, PME–PME 0.11. Clypeus height at AMEs 0.18, at ALEs 0.79. Length of chelicerae 2.77. Length of pedipalp and legs: pedipalp (right) 13.80 [5.55, 2.35, 3.30, 2.60], I 32.90 [8.74, 3.83, 8.72, 8.74, 2.87], II (right) 30.00 [8.12, 3.79, 7.55, 8.07, 2.47], III 24.59 [7.11, 3.09, 5.64, 6.73, 2.02], IV 35.13 [9.26, 3.33, 8.14, 11.58, 2.82]. Leg formula: 4123. Spination of pedipalp: femur pld 1 do 7 rld 1, patella spineless, tibia rl 1 rld 1, tarsus/cymbium spineless; legs: femur I pl 1 pld 2 do 3 rld 4, II pl 1 pld 3 do 3 rld 4, III pld 4 do 3 rld 4, IV pld 4 do 3 rld 3; patellae I–IV pld 1 rld 1; tibia I pl 1 plv 5 do 2 rl 2 rld 1 rlv 5, II pl 1 plv 5 do 3 rl 2 rlv 5, III pl 2 plv 3 do 3 rl 2 rlv 3, IV pl 2 plv 3 do 3 rl 2 rlv 3; metatarsus I pl 3 pld 1 plv 2 rl 3 rld 2 rlv 2 vt 1, II pl 3 pld 1 plv 3 rl 3 rld 1 rlv 3, III pl 3 pld 1 plv 3 rl 3 rld 1 rlv 3, IV pl 3 pld 1 plv 3 rl 3 rld 2 rlv 4; tarsi I–IV spineless. Pedipalp ( Figures 1 View Figure 1 (e), 2): tibia very long, 2.5 times longer than the tibia of B. cochinensis ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 (e–f)), distoventrally provided with a few long black setae (omitted in Figure 2 View Figure 2 ) ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 (e)). Retrolateral tibial apophysis long, massive, with basal stalk and easily broken tip having four branches, with a short membranous triangular process visible only in retrolateral view ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ; RTA, arrows 1–5). Ventral tibial apophysis short, thumb-like, directed at 2 o̍clock ventrally ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ; VTA). Cymbium tip conical with smoothly rounded apex, with a broad, flat retrobasal process having irregular margin ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 (a); RCP). Tegulum and subtegulum highly sclerotised ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ; T, ST). Median apophysis broad, baso-retrolateral, concave in ventral view, with a flat distoprolateral extension ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ; MA). Conductor membranous, flat, distomedial, partly folded to cover the distal part of embolus ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ; C). Embolus stout, semi-circular in ventral view, with blunt tip, with short embolic base, with basoprolateral membranous extension ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 (a); E, EB, ME).

Female. For redescription and illustrations of the female, see Sankaran and Sebastian (2018).

Distribution

India: Kerala, Tamil Nadu ( Gravely 1931; Tikader and Malhotra 1981; Sankaran and Sebastian 2018; Karthika and Sunil Jose 2020; Jäger 2022).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Ctenidae

Genus

Bowie

Loc

Bowie indicus ( Gravely, 1931 )

Sankaran, Pradeep M. & Joseph, Mathew M. 2023
2023
Loc

Bowie indicus Jäger, 2022: 39

Jager P 2022: 39
2022
Loc

Ctenus indicus

Karthika K & Sunil Jose K 2020: 55
Sankaran PM & Sebastian PA 2018: 403
Tikader BK & Malhotra MS 1981: 114
Gravely FH 1931: 234
1931
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