Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
15 April 2011 The Haplogyne Spider Genus Nopsides (Araneae, Caponiidae), with Notes on Amrishoonops
Maria Luisa Jiménez, Norman I. Platnick, Nadine Dupérré
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The caponad spider genus Nopsides Chamberlin was established on the basis of juvenile specimens from Isla Cerralvo in the Gulf of California. Adult males and females of the type (and only known) species, N. ceralbonus Chamberlin, are described for the first time, and the species is newly recorded from the Mexican mainland as well as the Baja peninsula. These animals are nopines (i.e., have subsegmented tarsi), can easily be recognized by their unique eye pattern (with four eyes in two widely separated rows), and are notable for the modifications of the inferior claws. In both sexes, the inferior claw is greatly elongated on legs I and II, but is missing entirely on legs III and IV. A single juvenile specimen, reportedly taken in Peru, shares these somatic characters and suggests that the genus might be more widespread. In a supplement, the genus Amrishoonops Makhan and Ezzatpanah is placed as a junior synonym of the anapid genus Pseudanapis Simon.

INTRODUCTION

The caponiid spider genus Nopsides is one of three nopine genera that were originally described by Chamberlin (1924) on the basis of specimens from Baja California and adjacent islands. The other two genera, Orthonops and Tarsonops, have been examined by later workers (e.g., Gertsch, 1935; Platnick, 1995), but Nopsides has remained unstudied. As indicated by Chamberlin (1924), specimens of Nopsides resemble other nopines in having subsegmented tarsi, but can be easily distinguished by their unique eye pattern, with four eyes in two widely separated rows (figs. 4, 12), and by the absence of the ventral translucent keel on the anterior metatarsi, and the translucent extension of the membrane between the anterior metatarsi and tarsi, that characterize the members of Nops MacLeay (1839) as well as Orthonops and Tarsonops.

Although Chamberlin's recognition of Nopsides as a separate genus was well justified, his specimens, including the holotype he thought to be an adult female, were actually all juveniles. In the present paper, the ninth in a series on caponiids, we present a detailed redescription of the type species, based for the first time on adult males and females.

Aside from their remarkable eye pattern and leg modifications, Nopsides specimens are notable for the modifications of the claws on the leg tarsi. In three-clawed spiders, the unpaired claw is typically much smaller than the paired claws, as well as more ventrally situated on the tarsal tip (and is hence often referred to as the inferior claw). In Nopsides, however, the third claw is sometimes enormously elongated, extending dorsally between the paired, superior claws, and sometimes even extends farther dorsally than do the superior claws (figs. 43, 46).

The only other spiders known to us that have such highly modified inferior claws are those belonging to Nops itself. Surprisingly, this highly distinctive feature does not seem to have been noticed by earlier students of that genus; the generic description provided, for example, by Chickering (1967: 2) says only “all tarsi with three claws each but third claw often hidden.” Similarly, Chamberlihs (1924: 602) description of Nopsides omitted any mention of the elongated claws and noted only: “Unpaired claw absent or aborted….”

Nops, as presently delimited, is a large genus, containing 27 described (and many other undescribed) species found throughout the Neotropics (Platnick, 2011), and it remains to be seen whether all those species show the same pattern of tarsal claw morphology. Careful examination, ideally including scanning electron microscopy, is needed to obtain accurate results. In Nopsides, both males and females have the enormously elongated inferior claws on both legs I and II; the portion of the tarsal tip that would normally be occupied by the inferior claws instead bears a laterally compressed, translucent process (figs. 42–45, 68–71) that was called a pulvillus by Petrunkevitch (1939: 190). Interestingly, the pulvillus occurs also on legs III and IV, but in both sexes of Nopsides, the inferior claws have been lost entirely on those posterior legs (figs. 48,49, 74, 75). At least some females of Nops, in contrast, have the elongated inferior claws on all their legs.

This dramatic modification of the inferior claws would seem to be an obvious synapomorphy, suggesting that Nops and Nopsides are sister taxa. However, that grouping is incongruent with the presence, in such genera as Nops, Orthonops, and Tarsonops, of two other equally dramatic leg modifications—the presence of the ventral translucent keel on the anterior metatarsi, and the translucent extension of the membrane between the anterior metatarsi and tarsi— that were mentioned above. Aside from Nopsides, the only described nopine that lacks these metatarsal and tarsal modifications is Nyetnops guarani Platnick and Lise (2007) from southern Brazil, suggesting instead that Nopsides and Nyetnops may be the most basal nopine genera, even though no pulvillus is found in Nyetnops.

Nor are the legs the only puzzling aspect of the morphology of Nopsides; in both sexes, the endites are distally widened (figs. 7, 19, 80), much as in the genera Tisentnops Platnick (1994b: fig. 26) from Chile and Diploglena Purcell (1904; see Platnick and Jäger, 2008: fig. 27) from southern Africa. Both of those genera are caponiines, however (i.e., they lack the subsegmented tarsi that are presumably synapomorphic for the subfamily Nopinae). The subfamilies Caponiinae and Nopinae were distinguished by Petrunkevitch (1939), but the former group is united by no known synapomorphies, merely by the lack of the tarsal subsegmentation that characterizes the nopines.

Equally puzzling is that, although adults of Nopsides are known only from Mexico, there is one specimen from Peru that shares the eye pattern, endite shape, and tarsal claw characteristics of the Mexican specimens, as well the enlarged palpal tarsus found in the Mexican females (figs. 56, 57). That specimen, in the collection of the California Academy of Sciences, was reportedly taken 43 miles east of Olmos, in Lambayeque province, on Jan. 18, 1955, by the experienced collectors Evert Schlinger and Ed Ross, so there is little reason to doubt its provenance. It is a fairly large specimen, and we had hoped that it would prove to be adult.

As with other nopines, the female genitalia of Nopsides are difficult to study (Sánchez-Ruiz et al., 2010), but our use of pancreatin digestion (Álvarez-Padilla and Hormiga, 2008) indicates that adult female Nopsides are characterized by a triangular receptaculum that is sclerotized only along its anterior margin, and is accompanied by a membranous structure that extends anteriorly of the sclerotized margin (figs. 83, 84). Juveniles, in contrast, show only a thickened margin of the epigastric furrow (fig. 81), and unfortunately the Peruvian female is clearly juvenile, despite its size (fig. 82).

COLLECTIONS EXAMINED

Glossary

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History, New York

CAS

California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco CA

CIB

Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste, S.C., La Paz, Mexico

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge MA

SYSTEMATICS

Nopsides Chamberlin

  • Nopsides Chamberlin, 1924: 601 (type species by original designation Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin).

  • DIAGNOSIS: Members of the genus can be separated from species of the previously known caponiid genera as follows: from the caponiine genera Caponia Simon (1887), Caponina Simon (1891, see Platnick, 1994a), Diploglena Purcell (1904), Calponia Platnick (1993), Notnops Platnick (1994b), Taintnops Platnick (1994b), Tisentnops Platnick (1994b), Laoponia Platnick and Jäger (2008), and Iraponia Kranz-Baltensperger et al. (2009) by the presence of subsegmented tarsi (figs. 39–41), and from the nopine genera Nops MacLeay (1839), Orthonops Chamberlin (1924), Tarsonops Chamberlin (1924), Nyetnops Platnick and Lise (2007), and Cubanops (Sánchez-Ruiz et al., 2010) by having four, rather than only two, eyes (figs. 4, 12), as well as by the distally expanded endites (figs. 7, 19). Moreover, they differ from specimens of Nops, Orthonops, Tarsonops, and Cubanops in lacking a translucent ventral keel on the anterior metatarsi and a translucent extension of the membrane separating the anterior metatarsi and tarsi IV, and from those of Nyetnops and Cubanops in having an unpatterned carapace.

  • DESCRIPTION: Medium-sized caponiids with four eyes (figs. 1, 2, 10, 11, 76, 77). Carapace uniformly orange, elongate oval, widest at rear of coxa II (fig. 12), gradually narrowed anteriorly, pars cephalica not elevated, with slightly elevated ocular tubercle; pars thoracica slightly elevated near middle, gradually sloping posteriorly (fig. 13); surface reticulate, with hexagonal cells, with few long dark setae in ocular area and around midline of pars thoracica (fig. 14). Thoracic groove obsolete; clypeus over three times as high as anterior lateral eyes. Four eyes in two widely separated rows (figs. 4, 12, 15, 16, 79), anterior laterals in front of smaller, darker anterior medians, that pair united by oval ring of black pigment, separated by less half their diameter; anterior laterals translucent, separated by their diameter, by less than their radius from anterior medians. Chelicerae orange, with median internal lamina and white conspicuous membranous lobe near base of fang (figs. 22, 23, 50, 51); fang thickened at base (figs. 22–24), lateral surface of paturon with long series of stridulatory ridges in both sexes (figs. 22, 50, 52), spaces between ridges occupied by smaller ridges (fig. 17); stridulatory pick sharply pointed, situated at base of prolateral side of palpal femur (figs. 29, 55). Endites anteriorly widened, truncated (figs. 7, 80), orange except for white anterior tip, almost meeting at midline (figs. 19, 58), anterior surface with distal serrula consisting of single long tooth row (figs. 20, 54), distally with strong setae. Labium orange, triangular, fused to sternum along posterior groove; labrum long, narrow (figs. 21, 53). Sternum orange, oval, sculptured with circular cells, with numerous stiff setae (fig. 18); three epimeric sclerites above coxae I, II, and III plus IV articulating each other, intercoxal triangular extensions of sternum not fused with epimera. Plagula articulating with sternum, dorsal extensions not fused with epimera. Female palpal tarsus expanded (figs. 56, 57), without claw, covered with conspicuous prolateral brush of dense, thick setae, with dorsoapical pad of shortened setae. Leg formula 4-1-2-3; legs orange, setose but without spines; femora I, II enlarged, metatarsi without region of narrow membranous sutures. Metatarsi I, II without translucent ventral, longitudinal keel (but males with row of ventral denticles) or distal translucent extension, tarsi with two segments (figs. 39–41), proximal segment longer than distal one; tarsi I, II with three claws (figs. 42, 43, 68, 69), inferior claw without teeth but with long basal portion long and erect distal, hooked portion reaching at least to top of superior claws (figs. 46, 47, 72, 73); all tarsi with apical, laterally compressed, translucent pulvillus; paired claws of all legs with six teeth, distal teeth largest; legs III, IV without median claw (figs. 44, 45, 48, 49, 70, 71, 74, 75) but with ventral pad of setae. Tarsus and tibia of all legs with several rows of very long, pilose trichobothria, their bases with semicircular rim bearing slight longitudinal ridges (fig. 38). Tarsal organ exposed, with pronounced marginal ridges (figs. 34–37, 64–67). Abdomen setose, pale gray dorsally, lighter ventrally, without dark markings, with slightly sclerotized epigastric region in males; epigastric region with two pairs of respiratory spiracles clustered around epigastric groove, anterior spiracles leading to numerous tracheoles, posterior spiracles each leading to two large tracheal trunks (sometimes fused at base) extending anteriorly into cephalothorax, single, much narrower trunk extending posteriorly for most of abdominal length, and few small tracheoles extending posteriorly (fig. 25). Six spinnerets, in typical caponiid arrangement (figs. 30, 60; Platnick et al., 1991: 56), anterior laterals with single major ampullate gland spigot (figs. 31, 61); posterior medians with several aciniform gland spigots (fig. 32), those of females with two large minor ampullate gland spigots with flat bases (fig. 62); posterior laterals longest, with numerous aciniform gland spigots (fig. 33), those of female with two minor ampullate gland spigots with flat bases (fig. 63). Male palp (figs. 3, 5, 6) with short patella, tibia short, excavated ventrally, cymbium elongated, not swollen (fig. 28), prolateral surface densely covered with strong setae (fig. 26); embolus long, erect, depressed, membranous prolaterally near curved tip (figs. 8, 9, 27). Female epigastric area with wide sclerite occupying most of space between spiracles (fig. 78), internal genitalia (figs. 83, 84) with sclerotized anterior ridge with small denticles (fig. 59), median duct leading to membranous sac.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Mexico (and possibly Peru).

FIGS. 1–9.

Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin, male. 1. Habitus, dorsal view. 2. Same, ventral view. 3. Palp, prolateral view. 4. Carapace, dorsal view. 5. Palp, ventral view. 6. Same, retrolateral view. 7. Cephalothorax, ventral view. 8. Embolus, prolateral view. 9. Same, retrolateral view.

f01_01.eps

FIGS. 10–17.

Nopsides cerabonus Chamberlin, male. 10. Habitus, dorsal view. 11. Same, ventral view. 12. Carapace, dorsal view. 13. Same, oblique view. 14. Same, lateral view. 15. Ocular region, dorsal view. 16. Same, anterior view. 17. Cheliceral stridulatory file, lateral view.

f10_01.eps

FIGS. 18–25.

Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin, male. 18. Cephalothorax, ventral view. 19. Labium and endites, ventral view. 20. Serrula, anterior view. 21. Labrum and endites, dorsal view. 22. Chelicerae, anterior view. 23. Same, posterior view. 24. Fang, posterior view. 25. Bases of tracheae, dorsal view.

f18_01.eps

FIGS. 26–33.

Nopsides cerabonus Chamberlin, male. 26. Palp, prolateral view. 27. Same, ventral view. 28. Same, retrolateral view. 29. Stridulatory pick from palpal femur, prolateral view. 30. Anterior spinnerets, apical view. 31. Anterior lateral spinneret, apical view. 32. Posterior median spinneret, apical view. 33. Posterior lateral spinneret, apical view.

f26_01.eps

FIGS. 34–41.

Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin, male. 34. Tarsal organ from leg I, dorsal view. 35. Same, leg II. 36. Same, leg III. 37. Same, leg IV. 38. Trichobothrial base from tarsus I, dorsal view. 39. Metatarsus and tarsus I, lateral view. 40. Tip of tarsus I, lateral view. 41. Same, leg II.

f34_01.eps

FIGS. 42–49.

Nopsides cerabonus Chamberlin, male, tarsal claws, lateral (42–45) and apical (46–49) views. 42, 46. Leg I. 43, 47. Leg II. 44, 48. Leg III. 45, 49. Leg IV.

f42_01.eps

FIGS. 50–59.

Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin, female. 50. Chelicerae, anterior view. 51. Same, posterior view. 52. Same, lateral view. 53. Labrum, dorsal view. 54. Serrula, dorsal view. 55. Stridulatory pick from palpal femur, prolateral view. 56. Palp, prolateral view. 57. Same, retrolateral view 58. Labrum and endites, dorsal view. 59. Genitalia, dorsal view.

f50_01.eps

FIGS. 60–67.

Nopsides cerabonus Chamberlin, female. 60. Spinnerets, apical view. 61. Anterior lateral spinneret, apical view. 62. Posterior median spinneret, apical view. 63. Posterior lateral spinneret, apical view. 64. Tarsal organ from leg I, dorsal view. 65. Same, leg II. 66. Same, leg III. 67. Same, leg IV.

f60_01.eps

FIGS. 68–75.

Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin, female, tarsal claws, lateral (68–71) and apical (72–75) views. 68, 72. Leg I. 69, 73. Leg II. 70, 74. Leg III. 71, 75. Leg IV.

f68_01.eps

FIGS. 76–84.

Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin, female. 76. Habitus, dorsal view. 77. Same, ventral view. 78. Epigastric region, ventral view. 79. Carapace, dorsal view. 80. Cephalothorax, ventral view. 81. Epigastric region, juvenile from Mexico, dorsal view. 82. Same, juvenile reportedly from Peru. 83. Genitalia, dorsal view, specimen from San Isidro, Baja California Sur. 84. Same, specimen from La Quebrada, Durango.

f76_01.eps

Nopsides ceralbonus Chamberlin
Figures 184

  • Nopsides ceralbona Chamberlin, 1924: 602, figs. 38–41 (juvenile holotype from Isla Cerralvo, Baja California Sur, Mexico, in CAS; examined, and determined to be juvenile, by R. Schick; juvenile paratypes from the same locality, in MCZ; examined).

  • Nopsides ceralbonus: Bonnet, 1958: 3115 (emendation, to match the gender of the generic name).

  • DIAGNOSIS: With the characters of the genus, male palps with a large, rounded bulb and a ventrally situated embolus with a curved tip (figs. 3, 5, 6, 8, 9), and female genitalia sclerotized only along the anterior margin of the receptaculum (figs. 83, 84).

  • MALE (figs. 149): Total length 7.1–8.9 (n = 10). Carapace 3.0–3.5 long, 2.0–2.7 wide. Femur I 1.7–2.8 long, 0.7–0.9 wide. Bulb large, relative to size of cymbium; embolus long, narrow, membranous prolaterally near apex; in ventral view broad throughout length.

  • FEMALE (figs. 5084): Total length 7.1–9.5 (n = 10). Carapace 2.8–3.2 long, 2.2–3.0 wide. Femur I 0.9–2.3 long, 0.6–0.8 wide. Internal genitalia with sclerotized anterior margin, sclerotization strongest near midline.

  • MATERIAL EXAMINED: MEXICO: Baja California: 12.7 km E El Rosario, 30°04′15″N, 115°37′10″W, Feb. 7, 1984-Apr. 2, 1984, pitfall, elev 180 m (W. Clark, P. Blom, MCZ), 1 ♂. Baja California Sur: Carambuche, 26°14′13.2″N, 112°00′06″W, Nov. 2, 2009 (C. Palacios, CIB), 3 ♂, Nov. 2, 2009, elev. 119 m (C. Palacios, CIB), 1 ♀, Mar. 18, 2010 (C. Palacios, CIB), 1 ♀, Mar. 20, 2010 (C. Palacios, CIB), 1 ♀; El Chorro, Santiago, 23°26′20″N, 109°48′15″W, Sept. 1, 2005, elev. 185 m (M. Correa, M. Jiménez, C. Palacios, CIB), 6 ♂, Oct. 28, 2005 (C. Palacios, CIB), 2 ♂; Presa La Buena Mujer, 24°05′13″N, 110°11′19″W, Aug. 25, 2004 (C. Palacios, CIB), 2 ♂; San Isidro-La Purísima, 26°12′23″N, 112°02′54″W, June 15, 2003, elev. 300 m (M. Correa, CIB), 12, June 16–17, 2003 (C. Palacios, CIB), 2 ♀, Sept. 20, 2003, pitfall, elev. 300 m (I. Posada, CIB), 1 ♀, Sept. 20, 2003 (M. Correa, G. Nieto, CIB), 2 ♂, 2 ♀; San José de Comondú, 26°23′34″N, 112°49′13″W, Oct. 28, 2002 (M. Correa, CIB), 1 ♀, Oct. 28, 2002 (C. Palacios, CIB), 1 ♂, Nov. 25, 2002 (C. Palacios, CIB), 1 ♀, Oct. 11, 2003 (M. Correa, CIB), 1 ♂. Coahuila: Delicias, Aug. 18–19, 1946 (C. Bogert, AMNH), 1 ♀. Colima: 10 mi S Colima, Aug. 1, 1954 (W. Gertsch, AMNH), 1 ♀. Durango: La Quebrada, July 30, 1947 (W. Gertsch, AMNH), 1 ♀. San Luis Potosí: 2 mi E Santo Domingo, June 6, 1941 (A., L. Davis, AMNH), 1 ♂. Tamaulipas: Route 101, km 15, Mar. 18, 1972 (J. Cooke, AMNH), 1 ♀.

  • DISTRIBUTION: Northern and central Mexico.

  • NATURAL HISTORY: During the day, these spiders hide under large stones in xeric shrubland; they apparently become active at night, as most specimens have been taken in pitfall traps. Adult males have been taken from April through November, females from March through November.

  • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    We thank Charles Griswold and Darrell Ubick for making available specimens from the CAS, and Gonzalo Giribet and Laura Leibensperger for lending specimens from the MCZ. We are indebted to Ariel Cruz-Villacorta (CIB) for help with scanning electron microscopy, to Alexander Sánchez-Ruiz and Arno Lise for their careful reviews of a draft of the manuscript, and to Steve Thurston for composing the plates.

    REFERENCES

    1.

    F. Álvarez-Padilla , and G. Hormiga . 2008. A protocol for digesting internal soft tissues and mounting spiders for scanning electron microscopy. Journal of Arachnology 35: 538–542. Google Scholar

    2.

    P. Bonnet 1958. Bibliographia araneorum. Toulouse 2 (4): 3027–4230. Google Scholar

    3.

    R. V. Chamberlin 1924. The spider fauna of the shores and islands of the Gulf of California. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 12: 561–694. Google Scholar

    4.

    A.M. Chickering 1967. The genus Nops (Araneae, Caponiidae) in Panama and the West Indies. Breviora 274: 1–19. Google Scholar

    5.

    W.J. Gertsch 1935. Spiders from the southwestern United States with descriptions of new species. American Museum Novitates 792: 1–31. Google Scholar

    6.

    Y. Kranz-Baltensperger , N.I. Platnick , and N. Dupérré . 2009. A new genus of the spider family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from Iran. American Museum Novitates 3656: 1–12. Google Scholar

    7.

    W.S. MacLeay 1839. On some new forms of Arachnida. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 2: 1–14. Google Scholar

    8.

    A. Petrunkevitch 1939. Catalogue of American spiders. Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences 33: 133–338. Google Scholar

    9.

    N.I. Platnick 1993. A new genus of the spider family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from California. American Museum Novitates 3063: 1–8. Google Scholar

    10.

    N.I. Platnick 1994a. A revision of the spider genus Caponina (Araneae, Caponiidae). American Museum Novitates 3100: 1–15. Google Scholar

    11.

    N.I. Platnick 1994b. A review of the Chilean spiders of the family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae). American Museum Novitates 3113: 1–10. Google Scholar

    12.

    N.I. Platnick 1995. A revision of the spider genus Orthonops (Araneae, Caponiidae). American Museum Novitates 3150: 1–18. Google Scholar

    13.

    N.I. Platnick 2011. The world spider catalog, version 11.5. New York: American Museum of Natural History. Internet resource ( http://research.amnh.org/iz/spiders/catalog), DOI: 10.5531/db.iz.0001. Google Scholar

    14.

    N.I. Platnick , J.A. Coddington , R.R. Forster , and C.E. Griswold . 1991. Spinneret morphology and the phylogeny of haplogyne spiders. American Museum Novitates 3016: 1–73. Google Scholar

    15.

    N.I. Platnick , and P. Jäger . 2008. On the first Asian spiders of the family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae), with notes on the African genus Diploglena. American Museum Novitates 3634: 1–12. Google Scholar

    16.

    N.I. Platnick , and A.A. Lise . 2007. On Nyetnops, a new genus of the spider subfamily Nopinae (Araneae, Caponiidae) from Brazil. American Museum Novitates 3595: 1–9. Google Scholar

    17.

    W.F. Purcell 1904. Descriptions of new genera and species of South African spiders. Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society 15: 115–173. Google Scholar

    18.

    A. Sánchez-Ruiz , N.I. Platnick , and N. Dupérré . 2010. A new genus of the spider family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from the West Indies. American Museum Novitates 3705: 1–44. Google Scholar

    19.

    E. Simon 1887. Observation sur divers arachnides: synonymies et descriptions. Annales de la Société Entomologique de France series 6, 7 (Bull.): 158–159, 167, 175–176, 186-187, 193–195. Google Scholar

    20.

    E. Simon 1891. On the spiders of the island of St. Vincent. Part 1. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1891: 549–575. Google Scholar

    SUPPLEMENT (by Norman I. Platnick)

    [1]

    In what may be the most preposterous “paper” ever produced in spider taxonomy, Dewanand Makhan and Somayeh Ezzatpanah recently attempted to establish “A new spider family, Hawkeswoodidae fam. nov. and Amrishoonops amrishi gen. et sp. nov. (Araneae) from Suriname.” This contribution was “published” in a “journal” called Calodema (136: 1–5, 2011, available online at  http://www.calodema.com/product_info.php?products_id=548&osCsid=53a785e97c5159f0410c86cc92daa5b9).

    Luckily, the family name those authors attempted to establish was stillborn (i.e., is a nomen nudum), because it lacks a type genus with “Hawkeswood-” as the root of its name, as required by Article 29.1 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. The description provided for the family occupies 3.5 lines of type, and is identical with the description provided for the designated type genus, Amrishoonops, save for a typographical error in the body length measurement. Ironically, much more space is devoted to a laudatory etymology for “Hawkeswoodidae,” which was named for the “editor” of Calodema, apparently in recognition of the total absence of competent peer review that seems to characterize that outlet.

    Those authors considered their taxon to be “closely related to the family Oonopidae.” This hypothesis was reflected also in their choice of the generic name. No evidence for that hypothesis was presented; they indicated merely that “This is the first Neotropical genus with teeth-shaped palps.” From their limited descriptions, one can determine little that is relevant to this hypothesis, but they do say “Last segment of palp small with inclosing sclerites,” implying that the male palp is entelegyne in form, rather than haplogyne (as in oonopids and their actual relatives, the other dysderoid families).

    The descriptions are accompanied by seven low-quality photographs; surprisingly, the two photographs supplied of the male palp are sufficient to show that their species belongs to the well-known anapid genus Pseudanapis Simon, 1905. That genus is characterized by the presence of two apophyses on the male palpal femur and at least one on the male palpal patella (these apophyses are what Makhan and Ezzatpanah referred to as the “teeth-like segments” on the palp). Amrishoonops is therefore here placed as a junior synonym of Pseudanapis (NEW SYNONYMY); the type species, Amrishoonops amrishi, may well be a junior synonym of Pseudanapis gertschi (Forster), but their photographs are inadequate for species-level identification.

    © American Museum of Natural History 2011
    Maria Luisa Jiménez, Norman I. Platnick, and Nadine Dupérré "The Haplogyne Spider Genus Nopsides (Araneae, Caponiidae), with Notes on Amrishoonops," American Museum Novitates 2011(3708), 1-18, (15 April 2011). https://doi.org/10.1206/3708.2
    Published: 15 April 2011
    Back to Top