Nanometa, SIMON, 1908

Álvarez-Padilla, Fernando & Hormiga, Gustavo, 2011, Morphological and phylogenetic atlas of the orb-weaving spider family Tetragnathidae (Araneae: Araneoidea), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 162 (4), pp. 713-879 : 786-788

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00692.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10545812

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7D5E87AD-C020-554C-FCD7-4EB5D72EF922

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Nanometa
status

 

NANOMETA SIMON, 1908 View in CoL View at ENA ( FIGS 4F View Figure 4 , 87–91 View Figure 87 View Figure 88 View Figure 89 View Figure 90 View Figure 91 )

Type species: Nanometa gentilis Simon, 1908 . The type specimen of N. gentilis is a female from Western Australia deposited at the Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris (examined).

Diagnosis: Nanometa can be distinguished from other tetragnathids by the following combination of characters: small size (body length c. 3–4 mm); abdomen covered with silver guanine patches; ramified median tracheal trunks ( Fig. 87B–D View Figure 87 ); absence of femoral trichobothria; denticles between the cheliceral fang furrows ( Fig. 87D View Figure 87 ); flat epigynum ( Fig. 89A View Figure 89 ); copulatory ducts modified as sacs and separated from the spermathecae ( Figs 89B, D View Figure 89 , 91C View Figure 91 ); male book lung with a stridulatory file ( Fig. 87A View Figure 87 ); male coxa IV mesal surface with cusps ( Fig. 88F View Figure 88 ); cheliceral ectal margin rugose and dimorphic (the female cheliceral surface is smooth, Fig. 88A, E View Figure 88 ); and cymbial ectobasal process and cymbial ectomedian process present ( Fig. 90A, C View Figure 90 ). Description: Female: cephalic fovea absent ( Fig. 88B View Figure 88 ). Ocular area higher than carapace lateral margins ( Fig. 88A View Figure 88 ). Labium trapezoidal, wider than long and rebordered; sternum longer than wide ( Fig. 88C View Figure 88 ). Anterior surface of chelicerae smooth; cheliceral boss present ( Fig. 88A View Figure 88 ). Eyes subequal in size, juxtaposed, and on a tubercle ( Fig. 88A View Figure 88 ). Secondary eyes with canoe-shaped tapetum. Clypeus height approximately one AME diameter. Booklung cuticle smooth. Tracheal spiracle located near the spinnerets, without accessory glands ( Fig. 87C View Figure 87 ). ALS with c. 30 piriform spigots. PLS and PMS with c. eight aciniform spigots. PLS distal end of aggregate spigots embracing tip of flagelliform spigot ( Fig. 87H View Figure 87 ). Epigynal plate flat, copulatory openings ventrally orientated and in the shape of pits ( Fig. 89A View Figure 89 ). Spermathecae walls well sclerotized, fertilization ducts short and slightly curved ( Figs 89B View Figure 89 , 91C View Figure 91 ). Accessory gland openings grouped on a common pit near the spermatheca ducts junction ( Fig. 89B–D View Figure 89 ).

Male: body length and cephalothorax morphology as in the female, except that the anterior cheliceral cuticle is rugose and the booklung covers have an stridulatory organ ( Figs 87A View Figure 87 , 88E View Figure 88 ). PLS triplet reduced to nubbins ( Fig. 87G View Figure 87 ). Epiandrous fusules concentrated in two groups and immersed in pits ( Fig. 87E View Figure 87 ). Palpal patella without macrosetae, palpal tibia slightly longer than wide ( Fig. 90A, D View Figure 90 ). Paracymbium very small, smaller than the cymbial ectobasal process ( Fig. 90E View Figure 90 ). Tegulum wider than long, spherical to oval ( Fig. 91A View Figure 91 ). Conductor edges well sclerotized and fused to the tegulum; centre of conductor membranous (it expands when repeatedly transferred between KOH 10% and distilled water; Fig. 91A View Figure 91 ). Embolic apophysis without processes; embolus and its base continuous and well sclerotized ( Fig. 91A View Figure 91 ). Sperm duct spiralled without switchbacks.

Natural history: Nanometa is a monotypic genus endemic to Australia ( Platnick, 2009); however, at least 20 more species from Australia (including Tasmania) remain to be described (Ray Forster, unpubl. data). These spiders build horizontal webs with c. 16 spirals, c. 16 radii, and open hubs ( Fig. 4F View Figure 4 ). They are found in forests building their webs in the low vegetation.

Taxonomy: Nanometa has never been revised, and new species wait to be described ( Forster & Forster, 1999). The specimens studied for the diagnosis and description belong to an undescribed species morphologically similar to N. gentilis , which we have also coded in the phylogenetic analysis. Davies (1988: fig. 17) illustrated another undescribed Nanometa species similar to the one that we examined. The anatomy of Nanometa is similar to that of the specimens referred in the text as ‘Nanometine sp.’; however, this latter undescribed species differs considerably in size (7.0 mm body length, in comparison with Nanometa , which is 4.0 mm). This ‘ Nanometinae sp.’ is similar in size to that illustrated by Davies (1988), also from Queensland, and referred there as ‘Metine sp.’ ( Davies, 1988: fig. 17), and the same species as ‘metaine from Australia’ in Álvarez-Padilla et al. (2009). We decided to leave this species unnamed until its phylogenetic placement is resolved using a larger taxonomic sample of Nanometinae . The morphology plus behaviour data set recovered Nanometa as sister to ‘ Orsinome sarasini ( Fig. 144 View Figure 144 ); when these data are combined with the DNA sequences, Nanometa is placed as sister to ‘ Nanometinae sp.’ ( Fig. 143A, B View Figure 143 ).

PMS

Peabody Essex Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Tetragnathidae

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