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27 July 2017 Molecular and morphological evidence for a new genus of small trapdoor spiders from arid Western Australia (Araneae : Mygalomorphae : Nemesiidae : Anaminae)
Mark A. Castalanelli, Joel A. Huey, Mia J. Hillyer, Mark S. Harvey
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Abstract

The trapdoor spider family Nemesiidae comprises 14 genera in Australia, the majority of which are included in the subfamily Anaminae. Here we provide evidence from a multigene molecular analysis of most Australian genera of Anaminae for a previously unrecognised clade that also differs from its sister-genus, Aname L. Koch, by the lack of a prominent asetose ventral depression on the pedipalpal tibia and the medium-sized mating spur on tibia I of males. This depression is a characteristic of all species of Aname examined to date, and represents a newly recognised character system in the subfamily. The new genus, named Hesperonatalius, is represented by three new species – H. maxwelli, sp. nov., H. harrietae, sp. nov. and H. langlandsi, sp. nov. – all from arid Western Australia.

© CSIRO 2017
Mark A. Castalanelli, Joel A. Huey, Mia J. Hillyer, and Mark S. Harvey "Molecular and morphological evidence for a new genus of small trapdoor spiders from arid Western Australia (Araneae : Mygalomorphae : Nemesiidae : Anaminae)," Invertebrate Systematics 31(4), 492-505, (27 July 2017). https://doi.org/10.1071/IS16061
Received: 27 August 2016; Accepted: 1 March 2017; Published: 27 July 2017
KEYWORDS
arid zone
molecular systematics
morphology
systematics
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