Karaops durrantorum, Crews, 2023

Crews, Sarah C., 2023, But wait, there's more! Descriptions of new species and undescribed sexes of flattie spiders (Araneae, Selenopidae, Karaops) from Australia, ZooKeys 1150, pp. 1-189 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1150.93760

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A38C5FB6-9F66-4F85-8788-AAA53D21704D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/97BA1BD5-54EA-4A2F-BA7A-AF4F7B99FC5E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:97BA1BD5-54EA-4A2F-BA7A-AF4F7B99FC5E

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Karaops durrantorum
status

sp. nov.

Karaops durrantorum View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs 64C View Figure 64 , 65A, B View Figure 65 , 66A, C View Figure 66 ; Maps 1 View Map 1 , 9A View Map 9

Material examined.

Holotype: Western Australia • ♂ (reared in captivity); Cape Range National Park, Mandu Mandu Gorge Trail , hill above car park; 22°09.045'S, 113°52.999'E; ~ 16 m; 10 May 2016; S. Crews, J. DeJong leg.; under rocks in area with spinifex; sel_1136; SCC16_019; (WAM T155512) GoogleMaps . Other material examined: 3 imm. (2 different instars present); same data as holotype; sel_1135, 1137-1138; (WAM T155513, 155514) GoogleMaps 2 imm.; Cape Range National Park , Shothole Canyon Road; 22°03.118'S, 114°01.276'E; ~ 90 m; 10 May 2016; S. Crews, J. DeJong leg.; under rocks; sel_1139-1140; SCC16_020 (WAM T155515, 155516) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis.

Karaops durrantorum sp. nov. is most similar to K. burbidgei and K. nyangumarta by the large tegular lobe, the relatively short embolus that does not follow the edge of the bulb, and the twisted distal part of the conductor (Fig. 65A View Figure 65 ). It can be differentiated from K. burbidgei by the median apophysis. In K. burbidgei , the median apophysis has a long base and a short branch, and the median apophysis of K. durrantorum sp. nov. has a large, wide base and a narrow branch that is nearly the length of the base. Additionally, the spermophor of K. burbidgei is undulate, with much of it near the top of the tegular lobe. In K. durrantorum sp. nov., the spermophor is U-shaped, reaching the bottom of the tegular lobe medially. Karaops burbidgei is not known to occur on the mainland, only on Barrow and Varanus Islands.

Karaops durrantorum sp. nov. differs from K. nyangumarta in that the former is nearly half the size of the latter. The median apophysis branch is hooked in K. nyangumarta and straighter in K. durrantorum sp. nov., and the spinules on the median apophysis of K. nyangumarta are denser and shorter, covering a larger area than those on the median apophysis the new species. The spermophor of K. nyangumarta is very broad, forming a J-shape from the retrolateral side of the tegular lobe to the middle, then is narrowed abruptly (Fig. 63C View Figure 63 ). In K. durrantorum sp. nov., the width of the spermophor is uniform throughout the tegular lobe (Fig. 65A View Figure 65 ).

Description.

Male (holotype). Total length 3.24. Carapace: length 1.72, width 2.26. Chelicerae: promargin with three teeth, two nearest fang very close together, smallest closest to fang, other two roughly same size, retromargin with two teeth (1-0-1). Eyes: AER recurved, PER strongly recurved; diameters AME 0.12, ALE 0.08, PME 0.19, PLE 0.27; interdistances AME-PME 0.06, PME-ALE 0.07, ALE-PLE 0.23, PME-PME 0.65, ALE-ALE 0.89, AME-AME 0.34, PLE-PLE 1.12. Sternum: length 0.89, width 1.2. Abdomen: length 1.87, width 1.23. Color (in life Fig. 66A, C View Figure 66 /preserved Fig. 64C View Figure 64 ): Carapace: pale yellowish brown with darker spots, three pair laterally, four spots medially, and two anteriorly between lateral and medial/yellowish white, markings indistinct; setose, with thin, white setae medially and laterally around eye area, red setae around eyes, sparse, darker, shorter, thicker setae present from approximately middle to posterior/after preservation, red setae around eyes and thicker, darker setae remain. Chelicerae: tan, paturon with curved, dark mark frontally (Fig. 66A View Figure 66 )/pale whitish yellow, dark marks distinct; cheliceral setae sparser anteriorly and laterally, denser and much stouter on inner cheliceral margin. Maxillae: yellowish white. Labium: dusky, pale distally. Sternum: pale yellowish white. Abdomen: dorsally golden brown, with multi-colored setae, reddish w-shaped mark on anterior half, another posteriorly, posterior third darker overall, longitudinal darker median band, originates anteriorly, extended just past halfway, several small, dark dots along band and posteriorly and laterally/centrally whitish, golden brown anterolaterally, darkened posteriorly, dark spots more distinct as they are from pigment and hair setae have come off in ethanol; ventrally yellowish white. Spinnerets: posterior with red setae dorsally, indistinct in preserved specimen, anterior with dusky markings laterally. Legs: yellowish white, Tr II-IV with black spot prolaterally, Fm leg I-III with a dark spot prolaterally, two dark marks ventrally, other Fm with pale marks basally, and pale annulations distally, Pt with dark area ventrally at Fm-Pt joint, Ti with dark annulation at Pt-Ti joint and pale annulation distally, darker ventrally, Mt with dusky area at Ti-Mt joint and Mt-Ta joint, Ta dusky at tips; spination leg I Fm d 1-1-1, pr 1-1-1, rl 0-0-1, Ti v 2-2-2-2-2, Mt v 2-2-2-2; leg II Fm d 1-1 1, pr 0-0-1, Ti v 2-2-2-2-2, Mt v 2-2-2-2; leg III d 1-1-1, pr 0-0-1, rl 0-1-1, Ti v 2-2, Mt v 2; leg IV Fm d 1-1, pr 0-0-1, rl 0-1-1, Ti 2-2, Mt v 2; leg formula 3241; measurements leg I 8.53 (2.48, 0.97, 2.22. 1.88, 0.98); leg II 10.6 (3.28, 1.02, 2.71, 2.38, 1.21); leg III 11.57 (3.65, 0.99, 2.72, 2.77, 1.44); leg IV 9.85 (3.05, 0.88, 2.37, 2.44, 1.11). Palp: spination Fm d 0-1-2; 1.98 (0.59, 0.30, 0.40, 0.69); dusky area at base of Ti dorsally (Fig. 35C, H View Figure 35 ); vRTA rounded triangular in retrolateral view, oblong in ventral view, dRTA squared off distally in retrolateral view, slightly curved ventrally, roughly the same size as vRTA; Cy tip with somewhat dense brush of setae (Fig. 66A View Figure 66 ), Cy triangular, extended slightly further retrobasally in ventral view; rbcp small; C large, twisted, flattened both at tip and retrolaterally, extended dorsally and ventrally (Fig. 35H View Figure 35 ), heavily sclerotized tip, with CS that covers E and TS that covers CS; E somewhat short, arising from large TL, not following edge of bulb but in prolateral quarter of bulb, extended apically, hooked retrolaterally, beginning ~ 7 o'clock, ending at ~ 12:30 o'clock; MA with broad base, single branch, slightly curved, nearly as long as base, base with long, somewhat sparse Sp along top edge.

Female. The female of this species is undescribed, but a specimen has been located in the collection at WAM and will be described in a forthcoming publication.

Etymology.

This species is named after Brad and John Durrant, two people who helped me immensely before, during, and after my field work. Name in genitive case.

Distribution.

Known from only the Cape Range National Park, Western Australia (Fig. 66C View Figure 66 , Map 9A View Map 9 ).

Natural history.

This species is found in the Cape Range subregion of the Carnarvon bioregion. The climate is semi-desert to subtropical, with summer and winter rainfall. The subregion contains high ecosystem and species diversity, although the subterranean terrestrial invertebrate fauna is poorly surveyed ( Kendrick and Mau 2002).

At least two different instars were collected. Molting occurs from every month to every other month, the shortest time being three weeks. According to the data, males are present in late October, when it is dry and starting to become warmer. sel_1135 lived for 1.5 years beyond collection, and although it molted eight times, it did not reach adulthood (Suppl. material 2: tables S1, S20). This species was collected under rocks.

Discussion.

The bioregion comprises diverse habitats on Quaternary alluvial, aeolian and marine sediments atop Cretaceous strata. The Cape Range is elevated limestone, with rugged topography and karstic features.

This species appears to be endemic to the area. It is most morphologically similar to Karaops burbidgei , and there were likely connections between the North West Cape Peninsula and Barrow Island to the mainland during times of lower sea level. Molecular data, however, do not indicate that they are each other’s closest relatives (Suppl. material 1).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Selenopidae

Genus

Karaops