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A taxonomic monograph of the liphistiid spider genus Heptathela, endemic to Japanese islands

Authors :
Hirotsugu Ono
Daiqin Li
Matjaž Kuntner
Xin Xu
Fengxiang Liu
Source :
ZooKeys, Vol 888, Iss, Pp 1-50 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Pensoft Publishers, 2019.

Abstract

Among the eight extant genera of primitively segmented spiders, family Liphistiidae, two are confined to East Asian islands, Heptathela Kishida, 1923 and Ryuthela Haupt, 1983. In this paper, a taxonomic revision of the genus Heptathela (Heptathelinae) from Kyushu and Ryukyu archipelago, Japan is provided. This study follows a multi-tier species delimitation strategy within an integrative taxonomic framework that is presented in a parallel paper, in which diagnosable lineages are considered as valid species. There, the initial hypothesis of species diversity (19) based on classical morphological diagnoses is tested with multiple species delimitation methods aimed at resolving conflict in data. This revision follows those analyses that converge on the species diversity of 20, which includes a pair of cryptic species that would have been undetected with morphology alone. After this revision, eight previously described species remain valid, two junior synonyms are proposed, and 12 new Heptathela species are described based on diagnostic evidence. To ease identification and to hint at putative evolutionary units, Heptathela is divided into three groups. The Kyushu group contains H. higoensis Haupt, 1983, H. kikuyai Ono, 1998, H. kimurai (Kishida, 1920), and H. yakushimaensis Ono, 1998; the Amami group contains H. amamiensis Haupt, 1983, H. kanenoi Ono, 1996, H. kojimasp. nov., H. sumiyosp. nov., and H. ukensp. nov.; and the Okinawa group contains H. yanbaruensis Haupt, 1983, H. ahasp. nov., H. gayozansp. nov., H. kubayamasp. nov., H. maesp. nov., H. otohasp. nov., H. shurisp. nov., H. tokashikisp. nov., H. untensp. nov., and H. cryptasp. nov.Heptathela helios Tanikawa & Miyashita, 2014 is not assigned to a species group. A combination of diagnostic tools augments the morphological diagnoses that, in isolation, would be prone to error in morphologically challenging groups of organisms.

Details

ISSN :
13132970 and 13132989
Volume :
888
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ZooKeys
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c22b8064b9cf01f2375ae87a7044733