taxonID	type	description	language	source
1394777269B79B0E9E0BAF35674A0AF5.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. The adult morphology of a potentially undescribed sister species (C. cf. madla) remains unknown. ME clade members from the neighboring Stone Oak KFR (C. platypus, C. puentecilla) have different spermathecal morphologies (large, even-sized, rounded; Cokendolpher 2004, Paquin and Duperre 2009). Cicurina madla is easily distinguished from neighboring or sympatric R clade members using genetic data, spermathecal morphology, male palpal morphology, or TI index.	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
1394777269B79B0E9E0BAF35674A0AF5.taxon	description	Description. Female spermathecal morphology as described in Paquin and Duperre (2009). Male palpus with relatively narrow, elongate cymbium, oblong tegulum, origin of embolus at ~ 6 o'clock (Figs 6, 12).	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
1394777269B79B0E9E0BAF35674A0AF5.taxon	distribution	Distribution. ME clade member known from approximately 25 caves or karst features in the Government Canyon, Helotes, UTSA and northern Culebra Anticline KFRs (Figure 5), plus two populations in Stone Oak KFR and Uvalde County (Figure 6, also figure 4 of Paquin and Hedin 2004).	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
1394777269B79B0E9E0BAF35674A0AF5.taxon	discussion	Discussion. The high TI index, elongate spermathecae holotype C. venii type specimen is either 1) actually from GCBC, but was mislabeled or placed into an incorrect vial, or 2) is actually from Bracken Bat Cave, and represents a further southern (but currently unknown) extension of the C. madla Culebra Anticline subclade (Figure 11). If the latter, sympatry with C. vespera is likely in this central region of the Culebra Anticline.	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
33ADB0F519E06811BD0546508FA3F7B4.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Based on well-supported nuclear phylogenomic analyses (Figs 1 - 2, 7), sister taxon to a clade including C. baronia, C. neovespera, and C. bullis. Cicurina vespera is morphologically very similar to the above taxa (Figure 7, Cokendolpher 2004, Paquin and Duperre 2009), best separated by geographic allopatry (Figure 8). This species can be distinguished from neighboring or sympatric ME clade members using genetic data, spermathecal morphology, male palpal morphology, or TI index.	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
33ADB0F519E06811BD0546508FA3F7B4.taxon	description	Description. Female spermathecal morphology as described in Paquin and Duperre (2009) and Cokendolpher (2004). Male palpus with relatively broad, truncate cymbium, compact tegulum, origin of embolus rotated slightly clockwise from 6 o'clock (Figs 9, 12).	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
33ADB0F519E06811BD0546508FA3F7B4.taxon	distribution	Distribution. R clade member known from 16 cave or karst features in the Culebra Anticline KFR (Figure 10); possibly also from GCBC.	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
33ADB0F519E06811BD0546508FA3F7B4.taxon	discussion	Discussion. The low TI index, rounded spermathecae holotype C. vespera type specimen is either 1) actually from Bracken Bat Cave, but was mislabeled or placed into an incorrect vial, or 2) is actually from GCBC, and represents a northern disjunct from most Culebra Anticline C. vespera populations, although we note that direct evidence for such an extension does not exist in the Government Canyon KFR (Figure 11). If the latter, rare sympatry must exist in GCBC, as other known specimens from this location represent C. madla.	en	Hedin, Marshal, Derkarabetian, Shahan, Blair, Jennifer, Paquin, Pierre (2018): Sequence capture phylogenomics of eyeless Cicurina spiders from Texas caves, with emphasis on US federally-endangered species from Bexar County (Araneae, Hahniidae). ZooKeys 769: 49-76, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.769.25814
