Charinus perquerens, Miranda & Giupponi & Prendini & Scharff, 2021

Miranda, Gustavo Silva de, Giupponi, Alessandro P. L., Prendini, Lorenzo & Scharff, Nikolaj, 2021, Systematic revision of the pantropical whip spider family Charinidae Quintero, 1986 (Arachnida, Amblypygi), European Journal of Taxonomy 772, pp. 1-409 : 64-65

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.772.1505

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9B82A32F-0A07-47E3-8684-FED7C8EBF1E9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5536717

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3ED8B7F8-C8A9-400C-B62C-793ACDD69184

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:3ED8B7F8-C8A9-400C-B62C-793ACDD69184

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Charinus perquerens
status

sp. nov.

Charinus perquerens View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:3ED8B7F8-C8A9-400C-B62C-793ACDD69184

Figs 27 View Fig , 32 View Fig ; Table 2 View Table 2

Diagnosis

Charinus perquerens sp. nov. can be separated from other Charinus in Amazonia and northern South America by means of the following combination of characters: relatively large size; female gonopod cushion-like; pedipalp femur with four dorsal spines and four ventral spines ( Fig. 32E–F View Fig ).

Charinus perquerens sp. nov. can be differentiated from C. magalhaesi sp. nov., the closest species geographically, by the greater number of pedipalp spines, including four dorsal spines and four ventral spines on the femur.

Etymology

Noun in apposition taken from the noun ‘ perquerens ’, meaning ‘researcher’, honoring scientists of the National Institute for Amazonian Research (INPA), Manaus, Brazil.

Type material

Holotype BRAZIL • ♀; Amazonas, Manaus, Campus INPA ; 03°05′41.67″ S, 59°59′22.41″ W; 17–19 Mar. 2015, A.P.L. Giupponi and G.S. Miranda leg.; INPA ex MNRJ 9283 View Materials . GoogleMaps

Paratypes BRAZIL • 7 juv.; same collection data as for holotype; MNRJ 9283 View Materials GoogleMaps .

Description

CARAPACE. Six anterior setae ( Fig. 32A View Fig ); frontal process triangular ( Fig. 32C View Fig ). Small granules, densely scattered between ocular triads and among sulci. Median eyes and median ocular tubercle absent ( Fig. 32C View Fig ); lateral eyes well developed, seta posterior to each lateral ocular triad; lateral ocular triad well separated from carapace margin ( Fig. 32A View Fig ).

STERNUM. Tritosternum projected anteriorly with typical setation, long, surpassing base of pedipalp coxae ( Fig. 32B View Fig ); other sternal platelets narrow and concave, with pair of setae anteriorly; pentasternum with four setae anteriorly and without seta near membranous region.

CHELICERAE. Small, flat tooth on retrolateral surface of basal segment, opposite to bifid tooth; seta absent on retrolateral surface of cheliceral claw; cheliceral claw with five teeth; three or four rows of 20 setae on prolateral surface of cheliceral basal segment; bifid tooth on basal segment with dorsal cusp larger than ventral cusp.

OPISTHOSOMA. Ventral sacs and ventral sac cover absent.

GENITALIA. Female genital operculum with prominent setae posteromedially and some smaller setae near margin; gonopod cushion-like markedly sclerotized from base to apex. Male unknown.

PEDIPALPS. Coxal dorsal carina with one to three prominent setae encircled by round carina and two or three setae at margin. Femur with four dorsal spines and four ventral spines ( Fig. 32E–F View Fig ); three prominent setiferous tubercles between first dorsal spine and proximal margin; one setiferous tubercle between ventral spine 1 and proximal margin. Patella with three dorsal spines in primary series ( Fig. 32E View Fig ); prominent setiferous tubercle distal to spine I, one fifth length of spine I; two ventral spines; prominent setiferous tubercle between spine I and distal margin. Tibia with ventral spine distally and two setae between spine and distal margin. Tarsus with two dorsal spines, proximal spine one-third length of distal spine ( Fig. 32D View Fig ); cleaning organ with 28 setae in ventral row.

LEGS. Tibia of leg I with 21 articles; tarsus I with 35–37 articles; first tarsal article shorter than subsequent articles. Leg IV basitibia with three pseudo-articles, without sclerotized, denticulate margin projecting from apex of articles; trichobothrium bt situated in proximal third of pseudo-article; distitibia trichobothrium bc situated closer to sbf than to bf, sc and sf series each with five trichobothria.

Measurements

See Table 2 View Table 2 .

Distribution

Known only from the type locality.

Natural history

Found under tree trunks and stones in area of secondary tropical forest.

INPA

Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Amblypygi

Family

Charinidae

Genus

Charinus

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF