Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2019-09-09
Page range: 148–150
Abstract views: 54
PDF downloaded: 2

The Indian net-casting spider name Deinopis goalparaensis Tikader & Malhotra is a nomen dubium (Araneae: Deinopidae)

Centre for DNA Taxonomy, Zoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, M-Block, New Alipore, Kolkata-700 053, West Bengal, India.
Araneae Deinopidae

Abstract

The genus Deinopis was established by MacLeay (1839) with D. lamia MacLeay, 1839 as its type species. It is the most speciose deinopid genus presently comprising 51 described species, of which two are known from India (World Spider Catalog 2019). The genus was first recorded from India with the description of the species, Deinopis goalparaensis Tikader and Malhotra, 1978 from Assam, which was described based on the females only (Tikader & Malhotra 1978) and the male still remains unknown. Thirty-six years later another species, Deinopis scrubjunglei Caleb & Mathai, 2014 was described from Chennai, Tamil Nadu based on both sexes (Caleb & Mathai 2014). Apart from these taxonomic accounts, Satam et al. (2015) provided notes on the microhabitat utilization of juvenile Deinopis spiders from Mumbai. With no other supportive studies and additional data on these spiders, Indian deinopids remain obscure and inadequately known. The goal of the present communication is to provide clarification on the taxonomic status of the poorly known Indian species D. goalparaensis, supported with illustrations.

 

References

  1. Caleb, J.T.D. & Mathai, M.T. (2014) A new species of Deinopis MacLeay (Araneae: Deinopidae) from India. Indian Journal of Arachnology, 3 (1), 1–7.

    Coddington, J.A., Kuntner, M. & Opell, B.D. (2012) Systematics of the spider family Deinopidae with a revision of the genus Menneus. Smithsonian contribution to Zoology. No. 636. Smithsonian Institution scholarly press, Washington, D.C., 61 pp.

    https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810282.636.1

    MacLeay, W.S. (1839) On some new forms of Arachnida. Annals of Natural History, 2, 1–14.

    https://doi.org/10.1080/00222933809496646

    Nalini Bai, G. & Ravindranatha, B.P. (2012) Spider diversity in IISc, Bangalore, India. Indian Journal of Arachnology, 1 (2), 50–58.

    Tikader, B.K. & Malhotra, M.S. (1978) A new record of rare spider of the family Dinopidae from India with description of a new species. Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Science 87 (B), 157–159.

    World Spider Catalog (2019) World Spider Catalog. Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern, Bern. Available from: http://wsc.nmbe.ch (accessed 22 June 2019)

    Yadav, A., Solanki, R., Siliwal, M & Kumar, D. (2017) Spiders of Gujarat: A preliminary checklist. Journal of Threatened Taxa, 9 (9), 10697–10716.

    https://doi.org/10.11609/jott.3042.9.9.10697-10716