Smeringopina fon, Huber, Bernhard A., 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3713.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C5F0BC11-92C0-4B30-9DB3-200882AC8950 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6162007 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B20287ED-FFF3-FF82-B990-C12BFC053BD9 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Smeringopina fon |
status |
sp. nov. |
Smeringopina fon View in CoL new species
Figs. 310–317 View FIGURES 304 – 317 , 343–348 View FIGURES 343 – 348
Type. ♂ holotype from Benin, Kpinkonzoumé sacred forest (6°20.8'N, 2°18.0'E), 25.xi.2008 (S. Tchibozo), in ZFMK (Ar 10228).
Other material examined. SAO TOMÉ AND PRÍNCIPE: Príncipe: West Coast near Maria Correia Plantation, 8.65 air km WSW Santo Antonio de Príncipe (1°36.0’N, 7°21.2’E), near beach, 22.–24.iv.2001 (C.E. Griswold), 1♂ 1♀ 1 juv. in CAS.
NIGERIA: Kawara, Dekina (7°42’N, 7°01’E), x.1965 – v.1966 (J.H. Davis), 1♀ in USNM.
Etymology. Named for the Fon people, a major West African ethnic group in Benin and southwest Nigeria; noun in apposition.
Diagnosis. Easily distinguished from known congeners by shape of procursus (distinctive ventral element; Fig. 344 View FIGURES 343 – 348 ), male chelicerae (shapes of lateral and median projections; Fig. 345 View FIGURES 343 – 348 ), and epigynum (shape of anterior plate with pair of processes and deep posterior indentation; Figs. 310 View FIGURES 304 – 317 , 347 View FIGURES 343 – 348 ).
Male (holotype). Total body length 3.9, carapace width 1.3. Leg 1: 40.6 (9.8 + 0.6 + 9.8 + 18.6 + 1.8), tibia 2: 6.3, tibia 3: 4.2, tibia 4 missing; tibia 1 L/d: 79. Distance PME-PME 160 µm, diameter PME 125 µm, distance PME-ALE 45 µm, distance AME-AME 35 µm, diameter AME 95 µm. Carapace ochre-yellow with darker mark posteriorly, lateral margins and two pairs of lateral marks; ocular area with dark ventral mark, clypeus with brown pattern, sternum dark brown; legs ochre-yellow, with dark rings subdistally on femora and tibiae and in patella area, tips of femora and tibiae whitish; abdomen gray with darker pattern dorsally, laterally, and ventrally. Habitus as in Figs. 313–314 View FIGURES 304 – 317 , ocular area slightly elevated, secondary eyes with very indistinct ‘pseudo-lenses’; clypeus with pointed apophysis near rim ( Fig. 314 View FIGURES 304 – 317 ); deep thoracic pit and pair of shallow furrows diverging behind pit. Chelicerae as in Fig. 345 View FIGURES 343 – 348 , with three rows of ridges (on lateral apophyses, on median projections, and in-between), without modified hairs. Palps as in Figs. 315–317 View FIGURES 304 – 317 ; coxa unmodified; trochanter with ventral sclerotized hump; femur with whitish ventral area bordered retrolaterally by sclerotized flap, without prolateral modification; prolateral femur-patella joint strongly shifted toward ventrally; tarsus with some slightly stronger hairs dorsally; procursus with distinctive ventral element, complex prolateral structures, without hinge ( Figs. 343, 344 View FIGURES 343 – 348 ); bulb with weakly sclerotized simple process ( Fig. 346 View FIGURES 343 – 348 ; sperm duct apparently opens at base of this process). Legs without spines and curved hairs, with few vertical hairs, retrolateral trichobothrium on tibia 1 at 1%; prolateral trichobothrium present on all tibiae; pseudosegments barely visible.
Variation. Tibia 1 in other male: 9.2; tibia 2/4: 5.9/5.8.
Female. In general similar to male; clypeus unmodified. Tibia 1: 7.0 (missing in second female). Epigynum with large anterior plate with pair of processes and deep posterior indentation ( Figs. 310–311 View FIGURES 304 – 317 , 347 View FIGURES 343 – 348 ); weakly curved posterior plate; internal genitalia as in Figs. 312 View FIGURES 304 – 317 and 348 View FIGURES 343 – 348 .
Distribution. Known from Benin, Nigeria, and Príncipe Island ( Fig. 293 View FIGURE 293 ).
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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