Acanthogonatus parana
Acanthogonatus parana is a mygalomorph spider of Argentina, its name referring to its type locality: Paraná, Entre Ríos.[1] Females are most similar to those of A. centralis, but are distinguished by the narrow fundus of the spermathecae.
Acanthogonatus parana | |
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Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Mygalomorphae |
Family: | Pycnothelidae |
Genus: | Acanthogonatus |
Species: | A. parana |
Binomial name | |
Acanthogonatus parana Goloboff, 1995 | |
Description
- Female: total length 16.4 millimetres (0.65 in); cephalothorax length 6.77 millimetres (0.267 in), width 4.95 millimetres (0.195 in); cephalic region length 4.3 millimetres (0.17 in), width 3.4 millimetres (0.13 in); fovea width 0.67 millimetres (0.026 in); medial ocular quadrangle length 0.67 millimetres (0.026 in), width 1.28 millimetres (0.050 in); labium length 0.61 millimetres (0.024 in), width1.14 millimetres (0.045 in); sternum length 1.77 millimetres (0.070 in), width 1.53 millimetres (0.060 in). Its cephalic region is modestly convex, and it has a procurved fovea. Its labium possesses no cuspules. A serrula is present. Its sternal sigilla is as in A. Centralis, and it has a lightly reborder sternum. Chelicerae: rastellum is formed by long and attenuate setae. Its cephalothorax, legs and palpi are a yellowish brown colour, while its abdomen is densely mottled and ventrally pallid, with some dark spots in front of spinnerets.[1]
Distribution
This species can be found in silk tubes under boulders of calcium carbonate, at the foot of the Río Paraná. It is only known from this location, in eastern Entre Ríos Province, Argentina.
gollark: A lot of the time "revolutions" seem to just be because one smaller group wants to impose a view which "everyone totally agrees with" on everyone else.
gollark: You can do that nonviolently. I suspect most people do not actually feel the same way, so it won't do much.
gollark: Governments are national security issues because they do stupid things.
gollark: Probably trying to prevent them meddling with *law* would be good (somehow...) but I feel like not protecting their stuff at all would introduce extremely large problems.
gollark: Yes, how surprising, very large entities have large effects?
References
- Goloboff, Pablo A. "A revision of the South American spiders of the family Nemesiidae (Araneae, Mygalomorphae). Part 1, Species from Peru, Chile, Argentina, and Uruguay. Bulletin of the AMNH; no. 224." (1995).
Further reading
- Study on a Mygalomorph spider community in central Argentina: Ferretti, Nelson; Pompozzi, Gabriel; Copperi, Sofia; Pérez-Miles, Fernando; González, Alda (2012). "Mygalomorph Spider Community of a Natural Reserve in a Hilly System in Central Argentina". Journal of Insect Science. 12 (31): 1–16. doi:10.1673/031.012.3101. ISSN 1536-2442. PMC 3471799.
External links
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