Bisetifer gruzin Tanasevitch, Ponomarev & Chumachenko, 2015

Nadolny, Anton A. & Turbanov, Ilya S., 2025, A review of cave spiders (Arachnida, Araneae) of the Crimean Mountains, with descriptions of two new species, ZooKeys 1230, pp. 37-80 : 37-80

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1230.137029

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FAF5D699-E6F2-4B4C-92E1-4081187E90DD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14976089

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DBA62031-8A5C-577D-A411-60A516238B14

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Bisetifer gruzin Tanasevitch, Ponomarev & Chumachenko, 2015
status

 

Bisetifer gruzin Tanasevitch, Ponomarev & Chumachenko, 2015 View in CoL

Fig. 6 C, D View Figure 6

Bisetifer cephalotus Tanasevitch, 1987: Kovblyuk 2007: 152; Mikhailov 2013: 45; Tanasevitch et al. 2015: 445–446. View in CoL

Material examined.

1 subad. ♂, 1 ♀ ( TNU 10288 ), Crimea, Simferopol Distr., nr Perevalnoye Vil., western slope of Dolgorukovskaya Yaila, Kizil-Koba (= Krasnaya) Cave , 18. XII. 2019, I. S. Turbanov leg.

Comparative material.

Bisetifer cephalotus 1 ♀ ( TNU), Russia, Krasnodar Territory, Caucasus Nature Reserve, 20 km SSW of Psebay, 1 km SW of the cordon of Tshernoretshie , Urushten River bank, forest, 10. VI. 2017, A. V. Ponomarev leg.

Distribution.

The Crimean-Caucasian disjunctive: Krasnodar Territory and the Republic of Adygea, Russia. The species has been recorded from Crimea for the first time, with the Crimean Mountains being currently the westernmost part of its range ( Tanasevitch et al. 2015; present data).

Records from the Crimean caves.

Map (Fig. 17 B View Figure 17 – blue circle). Kizil-Koba Cave on western slope of the Dolgorukovskaya Yaila (present data).

Ecology.

In the Caucasus, B. gruzin inhabits humid microbiotopes ( Tanasevitch 1987; Tanasevitch et al. 2015). In Crimea, it was found in the upper floors of Kizil-Koba Cave, with no permanent water flow ( Kovblyuk 2007; present data). The body of the Crimean specimens is depigmented, but the eyes are well developed (see Fig. 6 D View Figure 6 ). Despite the well-studied araneofauna of Crimea, B. gruzin has never been reported from epigeic biotopes, whereas all our findings are from caves. On this basis, this species could be preliminary considered an eutroglophile.

Remarks.

In Crimea, two males of another congener, B. cephalotus , were collected earlier from Kizil-Koba Cave ( Kovblyuk 2007); this material is currently stored by Valery A. Gnelitsa (Sumy, Ukraine). Since the earlier records of B. cephalotus and the newly collected specimens of B. gruzin come from the same cave, it could be suspected that they belong to the same species – B. gruzin .

In 2007, B. gruzin yet had not been described. This could have been the reason for erroneous identification, as Bisetifer species are better identified by the females (see Fig. 6 B, C View Figure 6 ), while the males have a rather similar conformation of diagnostically important characters. Possible mistakes in the identification of B. cephalotus for Crimea were discussed by Tanasevitch et al. (2015), and their conclusion has been confirmed by present data.

TNU

National Taiwan Normal University

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Linyphiidae

Genus

Bisetifer

Loc

Bisetifer gruzin Tanasevitch, Ponomarev & Chumachenko, 2015

Nadolny, Anton A. & Turbanov, Ilya S. 2025
2025
Loc

Bisetifer cephalotus

Tanasevitch AV & Ponomarev AV & Chumachenko YuA 2015: 445 - 446
Mikhailov KG 2013: 45
Kovblyuk NM 2007: 152
Bisetifer cephalotus Tanasevitch, 1987 : Kovblyuk 2007: 152 ; Mikhailov 2013: 45 ; Tanasevitch et al. 2015: 445–446 .
2007