Bavia capistrata (C.L. Koch, 1846)

Cao, Qi, Li, Shuqiang & Żabka, Marek, 2016, The jumping spiders from Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, China (Araneae, Salticidae), ZooKeys 630, pp. 43-104 : 47

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.630.8466

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F8019AB2-1F4A-4CD0-90C6-777F69D77D70

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4D9C2FFB-002D-4E0A-80D6-2EE36D909877

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Bavia capistrata (C.L. Koch, 1846)
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Araneae Salticidae

Bavia capistrata (C.L. Koch, 1846) View in CoL Figs 5, 6, 43

Maevia capistrata C.L. Koch, 1846: 76, fig. 1331 (♂).

Bavia capistrata : Żabka 1988: 435, figs 37-39 (♂, removed from synonymy with Evarcha flavocincta ).

Material examined.

1♂, CHINA, Yunnan, Mengla County, Menglun Town, Xishuangbanna Nature Reserve: nearby fish pond (21°57.883'N, 101°12.147'E, 839 m), ravine rainforest, 15 August 2011, Q. Zhao & Z. Chen leg.; 1♀, CHINA, Yunnan, Mengla County, Xiaolongha Village, Xishuangbanna Nature Reserve: Biological diversity corridor (21°24.265'N, 101°37.300'E, 653 m), seasonal rainforest, 27 June 2012, Q. Zhao & Z. Chen leg.

Diagnosis.

Differs from the closely related Bavia aericeps Simon, 1877 (see Żabka 1988: figs 29-36) by the tibia with a distinct dorsal apophysis (Fig. 5B) and serrated embolus (Fig. 5D). The females differ from Bavia aericeps by the horizontal position of the copulatory openings (Fig. 6A) vs. the inclined copulatory organs and the arc-shaped posterior epigynal margin (Fig. 6A) vs. triangular.

Description.

Male. Well described by Żabka (1988).

Female. Total length 8.70, CL 3.44, CW 2.75, AL 5.26, AW 1.92. Eye measurements: AME 0.69, ALE 0.28, PME 0.06, PLE 0.29, AER 2.00, PER 2.00, EFL 1.88. Clypeus 0.16 high. Legs: I 6.92 (2.13, 1.35, 1.75, 1.14, 0.55); II 5.50 (1.70, 1.06, 1.26, 0.98, 0.50); III 5.33 (1.60, 0.95, 1.00, 1.19, 0.59); IV 9.09 (2.25, 1.00, 1.74, 1.74, 0.63).

Carapace reddish-brown, lighter dorsally, ocular area dark brown (Fig. 6C) with white setae. Chelicerae dark brown. Maxillae elongate with white tips. Labium dark brown with white tips. Sternum yellowish. Abdomen long with light broad median stripe and grey margins. Venter with few longitudinal rows of white dots. Spinnerets brownish grey. Legs I more robust and darker than others. Legs II–IV yellowish. Spination of leg I: femur d2-1-0; tibia v2-2-2, metatarsus p2-0-2. Epigyne strongly sclerotised along the posterior midline margin (Fig. 6A). Copulatory openings slit shaped, with strongly sclerotised edges. Distance between the openings subequal to 1.5 times the length of a copulatory opening. Copulatory ducts short and strongly sclerotised, receptacles close to each other. The length and width of receptacles subequal to the copulatory ducts. Fertilisation ducts located at the joined part of the copulatory ducts and receptacles (Fig. 6B).

Distribution.

Malaysia to Australia, Pacific Islands, and South China.

Remark.

Female of Bavia capistrata is described for the first time.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Salticidae

Genus

Bavia