Citharognathus Pocock, 1895
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5701.3.5 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B598E7F2-6BC6-425F-A342-CA61BFB5D579 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E61A39-FFD6-443B-77B4-A97FFDC8EFEE |
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Plazi |
scientific name |
Citharognathus Pocock, 1895 |
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Genus Citharognathus Pocock, 1895 View in CoL
Citharognathus Pocock 1895: 179 View in CoL , 183; Waterhouse 1902: 77;
Cytharognathus Simon 1903: 944, 946; Mello-Leitão 1923: 378; Petrunkevitch 1928: 84; Neave 1939: 747; Roewer 1942: 273; Bonnet 1956: 1096; Raven 1985: 116; Smith 1988: 104, 105.
Type species. Citharognathus hosei Pocock, 1895 View in CoL , by monotypy.
Etymology. Greek cithara κιθάρα, meaning an ancient Greek musical instrument in the lyre or lyra family and Greek gnathos γνᾰ́θος, Latinized into gnathus, meaning “jaw”, referring to the sound-producing lyra between the opposing faces of the chelicerae and maxillae.
Diagnosis. Females differ from females of the other genera of Ornithoctoninae by having numerous short, stout black spinules on patella, tibia and metatarsus of leg III & IV ( Figs 9C View FIGURE 9 , 12A View FIGURE 12 , 13B View FIGURE 13 ). Females differ from females of most ornithoctonine genera by having leg IV distinctly longer and thicker than leg I; tibia IV thickest; tibia IV wider than femur IV (except Magnacrus gen. nov.). Citharognathus can be distinguished from Cyriopagopus and Magnacrus gen. nov. by having spines above the suture of the coxa of palp ( Fig. 10E View FIGURE 10 ). They can also be distinguished from Cyriopagopus by having fewer than 6 spines on metatarsus IV, and the males can be differentiated by having significantly weaker keels on the embolus than those in the Cyriopagopus ( Fig. 11A–F View FIGURE 11 ). They can be distinguished from males of Ornithoctonus because they have a spine on tibia I v, a, rl ( Fig. 10C–D View FIGURE 10 ), the keels on the embolus are significantly weaker than in Ornithoctonus and they have no notch on VTM ( Fig. 11A–F View FIGURE 11 ). They can be distinguished from males of Taksinus by having a spine on tibia I v, a, rl ( Fig. 10D View FIGURE 10 ) and the basal area of the embolus is significantly wider than in Taksinus : ERF between embolus thickness at the base in relation to embolus thickness in the middle of the embolus is 26 in Taksinus ( 40 in Citharognathus ) ( Fig. 11F View FIGURE 11 ). They can be distinguished from males of Phormingochilus and Omothymus by the basal area of the embolus which is significantly wider than in males of Citharognathus : ERF between embolus thickness at the base in relation to embolus thickness in the middle of the embolus is less than 32 in males of both genera ( 40 in Citharognathus ) ( Fig. 11F View FIGURE 11 ). Males of Citharognathus differ from Lampropelma males in that the apical embolus is not swollen (see Gabriel & Sherwood 2019) and the embolus in dorsal view emerges from the prolateral side of the tegulum ( Fig. 11D, E View FIGURE 11 ). In Lampropelma males, the embolus emerges from the retrolateral side.
Distribution. Malaysia (Borneo).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Citharognathus Pocock, 1895
Hoang, Quang Duy, Yu, Kun, Wendt, Ingo, West, Rick C. & Wirth, Volker Von 2025 |
Citharognathus
Waterhouse, C. O. & Sharp, D. 1902: 77 |
Pocock, R. I. 1895: 179 |