Kukulcania brevipes (Keyserling, 1833)

Brescovit, Antonio D. & Santos, Adalberto J., 2013, The spider genus Kukulcania in South America (Araneae: Filistatidae): a redescription of K. brevipes (Keyserling) and new records of K. hibernalis (Hentz), Zootaxa 3734 (3), pp. 301-316 : 302-307

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3734.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7317B702-B3AC-4DFF-90AA-BFEB44B7F6E1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F0FB6F-FF8D-F55C-FF19-361DFD7F6259

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Kukulcania brevipes (Keyserling, 1833)
status

 

Kukulcania brevipes (Keyserling, 1833) View in CoL

Figs 1A–C View FIGURES 1 , 2A–C View FIGURES 2 , 3A View FIGURES 3 , 4 View FIGURES 4 AB, 5–9

Filistata brevipes Keyserling, 1883: 221–223 (Female holotype from Peru, no other data, should be at the Museum and Institute of Zoology of the Polish Academy of Sciences (Warsaw), not found, probably lost).

Kukulcania brevipes: Lehtinen 1967: 242 View in CoL ; Platnick 2013.

Remarks. Keyserling (1883) stated that the holotype was deposited in the collection of the “Universität in Warschau”. The material from that institution was later transferred to the Museum and Institute of Zoology of the Polish Academy of Sciences ( Kazubski 1996; Mlíkovský 2007). However, despite our efforts the type specimen could not be found in that collection (D. Mierzwa and G.S. Ruiz, pers. comm.), thus we presume it is lost. In this study, we recognize K. brevipes based on the original description and on the distribution of the specimens we examined. Based on published descriptions ( Cambridge 1896, 1899, Chamberlin & Ivie 1935, 1942, Alayón- García 1972) and the additional material examined by us (see K. hibernalis material examined below and Appendix 1), we are confident that the Peruvian specimens listed below are conspecific with the type of K. brevipes . This species is similar to other species of the genus, K. hibernalis in particular, in general morphology ( Ramírez & Grismado 1997, Platnick et al. 1991, Griswold et al. 2005) and natural history (see below).

Diagnosis. Males of Kukulcania brevipes can be distinguished from other species of the genus by the presence of a pair of ventral lines of stout spines on the tibiae of palp and leg I ( Figs. 1A View FIGURES 1 , 2A View FIGURES 2 , 8A View FIGURES 8 ). The male palp differs from other species in the presence of long and flattened setae on the apex of cymbium and in the embolus not coiled, gently sinuous ( Figs. 1A–C View FIGURES 1 , 5A View FIGURES 5 ). Females can be recognized by the spermathecae positioned anteriorly to the copulatory ducts ( Figs. 3A View FIGURES 3 , 4 View FIGURES 4 AB).

Description. Male (IBSP 163503, Lima, Provincia de Cañete, Lunahuana). Carapace yellow brown, black striated, with cephalic area brown ( Fig. 8A View FIGURES 8 ). Chelicerae yellow with grey bands and orange fang. Labium, endites and sternum yellow. Palp yellow, cymbium orange ( Fig. 1A–C View FIGURES 1 ). Legs yellow-brown, with orange tarsus ( Fig. 2A View FIGURES 2 ). Tarsus I flexible, pseudosegmented ( Fig. 2A View FIGURES 2 ). Abdomen brownish dorsally and laterally, with ventral area yellowish ( Fig. 8A View FIGURES 8 ). Total length 7.00. Carapace length 2.8, width 2.5, with shallow fovea. PME separated by their diameter. Palp measurements: femur 3.5, patella 0.8, tibia 3.4. Leg measurements: I femur 5.6/ patella 1.5/ tibia 6.0/ metatarsus 6.6/ tarsus 3.2/ total 22.9; II 4.5/ 1.2/ 4.0/ 4.8/ 2.8/ 17.3; III 4.1/ 1.1/ 3.4/ 4.0/ 2.4/ 15.00; IV 5.8/ 1.5/ 5.2/ 6.0/ 3.0/ 21.50. Spines (only surfaces with spines): palp, femur v15-17 pairs, d1-1-1-1; legs, I femur v16-18 pairs, d1-1-1-1 (all median), p1-1-1-1-1, r1-1-1-1; tibia v2-1m-2-2-2-1m-1r, p0-1-1; metatarsus v2-1r-1m-2-1m-2- 2-1m-2-1m-3, p0-1-0; tarsus v1r-2-2r-1m-1r- 1m (short), p0-1-0; II femur v9-10 pairs, p0-1-0, r0-1-0, d 1-1-1-1 (all median), tibia v2-1m-1p-2-2-1r-1p, p0-1-0, metatarsus v2-2-2-3, p0-1-1, tarsus v2-2-2 (short); III femur v8-10 pairs, patella d1-1-1-1 (all median), p2-2-1, r2-2-2-1, tibia v2-2-2, p0-0-1, r0-1-1, metatarsus v2-2-2-3, tarsus v1-1- 1 (short); IV femur v8-10 pairs, r0-1-0, d1-1-1-1-1-1 (all median), p1-1-1-1-1, r1-1-1, tibia v2-2-2- 1m, r0-0-1, metatarsus v2-1r-2-1p-2-3, p0-1-0; tarsus v10-12 pairs (short). Calamistrum absent. Tarsus and metatarsus with curved chemosensory setae ( Fig. 6E View FIGURES 6 ). Trichobothria rounded, with elevated border ( Fig. 5C View FIGURES 5 ). Palp without tibial apophysis, cymbium long and oval, covered with long and thin setae ( Fig. 5D View FIGURES 5 ) and apical, distally flattened dorsolateral setae ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 5 AB). Tegulum globose, not fused to cymbium. Embolus sinuous, enlarged at tip ( Fig. 5A View FIGURES 5 ). Abdomen 4.2 long. Cribellum a large, divided plate without spigots ( Fig. 7A View FIGURES 7 ). Spinneret spigots as in female (see below).

Female. (IBSP 163503, Lima, Provincia de Cañete, Lunahuana). Carapace brown with cephalic area black ( Figs. 8 View FIGURES 8 BC). Chelicerae black. Endites, labium and sternum orange brown. Palps brown, with femur yellowish ( Fig. 2B View FIGURES 2 ). Legs brownish with longitudinal orange stripes dorsally on tibiae ( Fig. 2C View FIGURES 2 ). Abdomen dorsally and laterally black, ventrally brownish ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 8 BC). Total length 10.20. Carapace length 4.5, width 3.6. Chelicerae fused at base, promarginal lamina and fang short ( Fig. 5E View FIGURES 5 ). Palp measurements: femur 2.3, patella 1.4, tibia 1.4, tarsus 1.6. Palpal claw short, with 7–9 short teeth ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 6 BC). Leg measurements: I: femur 5.4/ patella 2.0/ tibia 5.0/ metatarsus 4.7/ tarsus 2.3/ total 19.40; II: 4.3/ 1.8/ 3.3/ 3.3/ 1.8/ 14.50; III: 3.3/ 1.7/ 2.5/ 2.8/ 1.6/ 11.90; IV: 4.8/ 1.9/ 4.1/ 3.8/ 1.8/ 16.40. Spines: pedipalp, femur v15-20 pairs with a basal group of 10-15, tibia v0-1-3, p1-1-3, tarsus v2-2-2-1; legs, I femur v14-16 pairs, d1-1-1, tibia v2-2-1r-2, metatarsus v2-1, r-2-2-2, p0-0-01, r0-0-1, tarsus v6-8 short pairs, p1-1-1-1 (short), r1-1-1-1 (short); II femur v14-16 pairs, d1-1-1, p1-0-0, tibia v2-2-21r-2, metatarsus v2-1, r-2-2-2, p0-0-2, r0-0-2, tarsus as leg I; III v14-16 pairs, d1-0-0, tibia v2-1, r-2-4, p0-1-1, metatarsus v2-2-2-1, p-4, p1-1-2, tarsus as in leg I; IV v14-16 pairs, d1-0-0, tibia 1p-1p-1p, metatarsus 1p-1p-4, tarsus as in leg I. Third claw curved with three long teeth ( Fig. 5F View FIGURES 5 ). Calamistrum composed of 12–14 flattened setae, organized in an irregular row ( Fig. 6A View FIGURES 6 ). Abdomen 6.2 long. Cribellum located in a wide sclerotized plate, cribellar spigots clubshaped, organized in two spinning fields ( Fig. 7B View FIGURES 7 ). Anterior lateral spinnerets with a mesal fringe of stout setae ( Fig. 7C View FIGURES 7 ), spinning field with three major ampullate gland spigots, two at the border and one inside a field with piriform gland spigots ( Fig. 7D View FIGURES 7 ). Posterior median spinnerets with three large paracribellar gland spigots, with flattened apex, along with one minor ampullate gland and at least one aciniform gland spigots ( Fig. 7E View FIGURES 7 ). Posterior lateral spinnerets with three large, paracribellar gland spigots at the margin of spinning field, which is covered by aciniform gland spigots ( Fig. 7F View FIGURES 7 ). Spermathecae globose, hyaline dorsally and sclerotised ventrally ( Figs. 3A View FIGURES 3 , 4 View FIGURES 4 AB), covered with pores and, presumably, dorsal gland ducts ( Fig. 6F View FIGURES 6 ). Copulatory ducts slender, covered laterally by an internal hyaline plate ( Figs. 4 View FIGURES 4 AB).

Natural history. Specimens were collected in villages and rural areas in coastal Peru, always associated to buildings, walls or piles of construction debris. Females were found inside silken tubes between stones or bricks, with the tube entrance generally surrounded by a dense net of cribellar threads ( Fig. 8D View FIGURES 8 ), a web structure already reported for other filistatids ( Lopardo & Ramírez 2007). Males were usually found wandering close to female retreats. One specimen was captured close to the entrance of a female retreat, while plucking the cribellar threads with the first leg (presumably courting the female inside – as seen in K. hibernalis by Barrantes & Ramírez 2013). Several females were collected holding spherical egg-sacs with the chelicerae and palps ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 8 BC), as described for K. geophila by Cokendolpher & MacDonald (2007). A constant contact between the female and the egg-sac was also reported for K. hibernalis by Curtis & Carrel (1999), though without more details. These observations suggest that maternal care is common in members of this genus, possibly even in other genera of the family (see Cokendolpher & MacDonald 2007).

Distribution: Known from Peru and northern Chile ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 ).

Material examined: PERU: Ayacucho: Huamanga Province: Piura (13°9'47”S 74°13'28”W), VII/1966, O.M. Garcia coll., 1♀ ( IBSP 2019); Ica: Pisco Province: Humay (13°42'2.1”S 75°49'15”W, 495 m), 19.VI.2012, 1♀ 4 juv. ( IBSP 163511); Lima: Canta Province: Santa Rosa de Quives (La Cabaña, 11°40'2"S 76°47'18"W), 14.VII.1985, D. Silva D. coll., 1♂ ( MUSM); 19.V.1985, D. Silva D. coll., 1♂ ( MUSM); 19.V.1984, S. Cárdenas coll., 1♀ ( MUSM); Atehuaycan, (Km 16.5, 12°3'0”S 77°2'60”W, 800m), W. Paredes coll. 8♀ ( MUSM); Cocachacra (Km 54, de la Carretera Central, 11°54'48”S 76°32'18”W), 23/VII/1988, R. Tejada coll., 2♀ 2 juv. ( MUSM); San Bartolo (12°22'60”S 76°46'60”W), 26/XI/1989, E. Bedos coll., 2♀ ( MUSM); Rimac (12°3'0”S 77°2'60”W), 27/III/1986, V. León coll., 1♀ ( MUSM); (Km 55, Carretera Rimac–Canta, Valle del Chillón, 11°54'59”S 77°4'29”W), 31/X/1978, Maury coll., 4♀ ( MUSM); Cañete Province: Asia (12°46'52.6”S 76°33'26.6”W, 47m), 18/VI/2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 2♀ 13 juv. ( IBSP 163500); Chilca (12°31'35.8”S 76°42'12.1”W, 135m), 18/VI/2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 9♂ 21♀ 3 juv. ( IBSP 163512-163513; UFMG 13223); Chilca (Via Santo Domingo de los Olleros, 12°27'1.4”S, 76°37'28.4”W, 250m), 18.VI.2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 1♀ ( IBSP 163508); Lunahuana (12°58'36.86”S 76°9'46.02”W, 423m), 1♀ ( MUSM); ditto, 18/VI/2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 10♀ 23♀ 8 juv. ( IBSP 163498; 163501, 163503-163504; UFMG 13224); ditto, 3♀ 3 juv. ( IBSP 163510); Mala (12°36'52.1”S 76°37'3.8”W, 114m), 18.VI.2012, A.D. Brescovit coll., 2♀ 2 juv. ( IBSP 163509); Chincha Province: Grocio Prado (13°24'53.4”S 76°6'13”W, 143 m), 19/VI/2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 1♂ 3♀ ( IBSP 163495); Los Aquijes (14°5'48”S 75°41'27”W), 3/III/1984, I. Bohorquez M. coll., 1♀ ( MUSM); Nasca (14°56'31”S 75°29'39”W), IV/1990, H. Ascencios coll., 1♀ ( MUSM); Huaral Province: (Reserva Nacional de Lachay. 11°21'24.1”S 77°19'42.6”W, 230 m), 15.VI.2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 12♀ 6 juv. ( IBSP 163505; UFMG 13225); ditto, 1♀ ( IBSP 163506); ditto, 1♀ ( IBSP 163493); Huarochirí Province: Nieve Nieve (12°1'31.1”S 76°41'11.1”W, 795m), 16/VI/2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 2♀ ( IBSP 163507); Sisicaya (12°1'39.9”S 76°37'53.2”W, 1016 m), 16/VI/2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 6♀ 1 juv. ( IBSP 163494; 163497); Ricardo Palma (close to railway, 11°55'30.3”S 76°39'14.6”W), 14.VI.2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 2♂ 9♀ 5 juv. ( IBSP 163502); Lima Province: Cieneguilla (12°3'15.5”S, 76°44'37.5”W, 497 m), 16.VI.2012, A.D. Brescovit et al. coll., 2♀ 1 juv. ( IBSP 163496); ditto, 2♀ ( IBSP 163499); Lima (12°2'6”S 77°1'7”W), 05/XI/1965, A. Delgado coll., 1♀ ( IBSP 1963); Lima (in house garden, 12°2'6”S 77°1'7”W), 21.X.1986, D. Silva D. coll., 1♀ ( MUSM); III/1957, 1♀ ( MUSM); VI/1952, 2♀ ( MUSM); ( MUSM garden), 12.II.1988, D. Silva coll., 1♂ (MUSM- Ent 0504953); 3♀ (ex-MUSM 504955); (Refugio de Vida Silvestre Pantanos de Villa, 12°12'59”S 76°59'14”W), 25.VIII.1994, S. Cordoba, J. Duárez, D. Floríndez & M. Samamé coll. 5♀ 1 juv. ( MUSM); (Santa Maria de Chosica, 12º2'6”S, 77º1'7”W), 21/XI/1968, O. Meneses coll., 3juv. ( IBSP 2580); Quebrada Verde (12º13'S 76º52'W), VIII.1948, W. Weyrauch coll., 1♀ 2juv. ( CAS); Zapallal (11°50'16”S 77°6'12”W), 21/VII/1986, J. Uyene coll., 1♀ ( MUSM); Piura: Paita Province: Paita (5°5'21”S 81°6'52”W), 14.XII.1953, W. Weyrauch coll., 1♀ 5 juv. ( CAS); Tacna: Tacna Province: Ite (Humedales de Ite, 17°51'42”S 70°7'54”W), 2005, I.T. González coll., 4♀ ( IBSP 68715); Ucayali: Coronel Portillo Province: Pucallpa (8°22'57”S 74°32'17”W), 16.VIII.1972, W. Gutierrez coll., 1♀ ( MUSM); CHILE: Arica y Parinacota: Arica : Arica Province (near San Jose river, 18°28'S 70°18'W, 25m), 2012, W. Sielfeld coll., 1♀ ( MNHN).

IBSP

Instituto Biologico de Sao Paulo

UFMG

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Filistatidae

Genus

Kukulcania

Loc

Kukulcania brevipes (Keyserling, 1833)

Brescovit, Antonio D. & Santos, Adalberto J. 2013
2013
Loc

Kukulcania brevipes: Lehtinen 1967: 242

Lehtinen, P. T. 1967: 242
1967
Loc

Filistata brevipes

Keyserling, E. 1883: 223
1883
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