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Systematic review of a new orb‐weaving spider genus (Araneae: Araneidae), with special reference to the Australasian‐Pacific and South‐East Asian fauna
Authors:MATHEW M. JOSEPH  VOLKER W. FRAMENAU
Affiliation:1. Department of Terrestrial Zoology, Western Australian Museum, Welshpool DC, WA 6986, Australia;2. School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Western Australia;3. Division of Arachnology, Department of Zoology, Sacred Heart College, Thevara, Kochi 682?013, Kerala, India;4. IT@School Project, Regional Resource Centre, Edappally, Kochi 682?024, Kerala, India
Abstract:The Australasian‐Pacific and South‐East Asian species of the new orb‐weaving spider genus Plebs with Plebs eburnus (Keyserling, 1886) as type species are revised. Following this study, Plebs includes a total of 22 species of which seven are here described new. Seven species are found in Australia, two in the Pacific region (New Caledonia, Vanuatu), and two in South‐East Asia (Papua New Guinea, The Philippines). Eleven Asian species are transferred to the new genus. Plebs represent comparatively small orb‐weaving spiders of c. 1.2–15.0 mm body length with a slightly elongated abdomen and humeral (shoulder) humps. Males of most species have two to three stout setae on the ventral side of their fourth coxae. Male pedipalps are characterized by the presence of a single macroseta on the patella, the presence of a paramedian apophysis as basal extension of the conductor, and an apical tegular protrusion. The female epigyne has a scape that is generally much longer than wide. It does not have a terminal pocket and is frequently broken off in a number of species. A phylogenetic analysis of 15 species of Plebs (those for which both sexes are known), 13 Australian/Pacific orb‐weaving spider species representing the most commonly collected clades with paramedian apophysis, three species of Nearctic Eriophora Simon, 1864, and Araneus diadematus Clerck, 1758, as outgroup, identified a single synapomorphy of Plebs based on 35 morphological and three behavioural characters: a distinct, inverted U‐shaped light pattern on the ventral side of the abdomen with two additional white spots anterolateral to the spinnerets. This analysis recovered a monophyletic clade of all Asian Plebs, suggesting a single colonization event of the genus that putatively originated in Australia. Most Plebs species appear to be active during the day. They build a regular orb‐web with vertical stabilimentum in grass and low shrubs. © 2012 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2012, 166 , 279–341.
Keywords:Australia  enamel spider  grass orb‐weavers  New Caledonia  orb‐web spider  stabilimentum  systematics  taxonomy  Vanuatu
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