Namea nigritarsus, Rix & Wilson & Harvey, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4861.1.5 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:44321429-80FA-45AC-90D6-E3E13C961BFC |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4535963 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FAE2227F-8DE5-430E-8E6C-CE5526363071 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:FAE2227F-8DE5-430E-8E6C-CE5526363071 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Namea nigritarsus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Namea nigritarsus sp. nov.
( Figs 8, 12 View FIGURES 4–12 , 13 View FIGURE 13 , 15a, b View FIGURES 14–21 , 55–67 View FIGURES 55–64 View FIGURES 65–67 ) http://zoobank.org/?lsid= urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:FAE2227F-8DE5-430E-8E6C-CE5526363071
Namea bunya Raven, 1984: 15 (in part; cited paratype specimens QMB S785 View Materials from Mount Mee ).
Namea excavans Raven, 1984: 29 (in part; cited paratype specimen QMB S830 View Materials from Mount Mee ).
Namea sp . ‘D’Aguilar’ Rix et al., 2020: 683 View Cited Treatment , 686, figs 2, 3, 105, 106, 108.
Type material. AUSTRALIA: Queensland: male holotype, Mount Glorious , pitfall trap, rainforest, 1987/88, R. Goundy ( QMB S111534 View Materials ) .
Other material examined. Australia: Queensland: 1 juvenile, D’Aguilar National Park, Mount Glorious, Maiala section, lower rainforest circuit, 27°19’54”S, 152°45’44”E, hand collected from burrow, rainforest, 10 April 2019, M. Rix, J. Wilson ( QMB S111458 View Materials DNA) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, same data except 2 February 2019 ( QMB S111375 View Materials DNA) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, D’Aguilar National Park, Mount Mee section, 27°05’10”S, 152°41’14”E, hand collected from burrow, rainforest, 532 m, 18 February 2019, M. Rix, J. Wilson ( QMB S111390 View Materials DNA) GoogleMaps ; 1 juvenile, same data except The Mill Rainforest Walk , 27°04’54”S, 152°42’36”E, 293 m ( QMB S111398 View Materials DNA) GoogleMaps ; 2 males, Mount Mee, Neurum Creek (GM99), pitfall trap, rainforest, 550 m, 13 Febraury– 30 August 1979, G. & S. Monteith ( QMB S785 View Materials ) ; 1 male, same data except (GM90), 26 February –26 June 1978 ( QMB S830 View Materials ) .
Diagnosis. Males of Namea nigritarsus can be distinguished from those of all other described congeners except N. bunya and N. nebo by the following combination of four characters: embolus long, reflexed and whip like ( Figs 65–67 View FIGURES 65–67 ); retroventral margin of palpal tibia with single, isolated, proximal macroseta ( Figs 65, 66 View FIGURES 65–67 ); tibia I with prolateral (p) macrosetae ( Figs 62, 64 View FIGURES 55–64 ); and macroseta v1 on tibia I short, not reaching beyond ventro-distal margin of tibia I ( Fig. 64 View FIGURES 55–64 ). Males can be further distinguished from those of N. bunya by the longer macroseta v1 on tibia I ( Fig. 64 View FIGURES 55–64 ; cf. Rix et al. 2020, fig. 121); and from those of N. nebo by the shape of the palpal bulb, which is produced along its transverse axis and swollen near the base of the embolus ( Fig. 66 View FIGURES 65–67 ; cf. Figs 78–80 View FIGURES 78-80 ), the shallower, only slightly concave ventro-distal excavation anterior to macroseta v1 ( Fig. 64 View FIGURES 55–64 ; cf. Fig. 77 View FIGURES 68–77 ), and absence of a covering of downy, reflective setae on the carapace ( Figs 55, 57 View FIGURES 55–64 ; cf. Figs 68, 70 View FIGURES 68–77 ).
Females are unknown.
Description (male holotype): Total length 11.6. Carapace 5.3 long, 3.9 wide. Abdomen 4.9 long, 3.1 wide. Carapace ( Fig. 55 View FIGURES 55–64 ) dark chocolate-brown and sparsely setose; lateral margins with fringe of anteriorly curved, porrect black setae, longest posteriorly; fovea straight. Eye group ( Fig. 58 View FIGURES 55–64 ) rectangular, twice as wide as long, PLE–PLE/ALE–ALE ratio 1.0; AME separated by less than their own diameter; PME separated by 3.6 X their own diameter; PME and PLE almost contiguous. Maxillae each with field of ca. 50 cuspules confined to heel and inner proximal corner ( Fig. 59 View FIGURES 55–64 ); labium without cuspules. Abdomen ( Figs 56, 61 View FIGURES 55–64 ) oval, dark brown with course pale beige-brown marbled pattern dorsally, and pale beige-brown ventrally with finer dark brown mottling, the latter concentrated slightly anterior to spinnerets; covered with short, fine setae. Legs ( Figs 55, 62–64 View FIGURES 55–64 ) dark tan-brown, with light scopulae on tarsi I–IV and distal half of metatarsi I–II; tibia I with 3 prodorsal, 2 prolateral, 3 proventral and 3 ventral macrosetae; macroseta v1 not reaching beyond ventro-distal margin of tibia I ( Fig. 64 View FIGURES 55–64 ). Leg I: femur 4.1, patella 2.6, tibia 3.1, metatarsus 3.5, tarsus 2.3, total length 15.6. Leg I femur–tarsus/carapace length ratio 2.9. Pedipalpal tibia ( Figs 65–67 View FIGURES 65–67 ) 2.7 X longer than wide, with isolated, proximal retroventral macroseta, 1 retrodistal macroseta, 1 dorsal macroseta, and 1 prodistal macroseta. Cymbium ( Figs 65–67 View FIGURES 65–67 ) setose, distally cleft in retrolateral view, with distal scopula. Bulb ( Figs 65–67 View FIGURES 65–67 ) produced along transverse axis and swollen near base of embolus, with long, whip-like, reflexed embolus arising from proventral base of bulb.
Etymology. The specific epithet is a noun derived from the Latin nigra (adjective: ‘black’), and the Latin tarsus (noun: ‘foot’), in reference to the dark colouration of the distal legs of this species in life ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 4–12 ).
Distribution. Namea nigritarsus is endemic to the D’Aguilar Range, where it is known from rainforest at Mount Glorious, Mount Mee ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–3 ) and possibly also Mount Nebo ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 4–12 ).
Remarks. This attractive species occurs in rainforest habitats over much of the D’Aguilar Range, where it has been recorded syntopically at various locations with a number of other species, including N. brisbanensis , N. gowardae and N. salanitri . The spiders are smaller than all of the aforementioned species, and are distinctive in life, with reddish legs and the appearance of black ‘socks’ on the tarsi and metatarsi ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 4–12 ). Burrows have been found in rainforest banks, and sometimes have silk extending out from the main entrance hole ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 4–12 ). Little is known of its biology or life history, other than that males appear to be active in autumn or winter.
QMB |
Queensland Museum, Brisbane |
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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Namea nigritarsus
Rix, Michael G., Wilson, Jeremy D. & Harvey, Mark S. 2020 |
Namea bunya
Raven, R. J. 1984: 15 |
Namea excavans
Raven, R. J. 1984: 29 |