Systematic revision of the pantropical whip spider family Charinidae Quintero, 1986 (Arachnida, Amblypygi)

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

  • Gustavo Silva De Miranda
  • Alessandro P. L. Giupponi
  • Lorenzo Prendini
  • Scharff, Nikolaj

The whip spider family Charinidae Quintero, 1986 is the most speciose and widely distributed in the arachnid order Amblypygi Thorell, 1883. It comprises three genera and 95 species distributed across all tropical continents and the eastern Mediterranean. Despite recent advances in the taxonomy of the family, a global revision of all its species, necessary to advance understanding of its systematics, biogeography and evolution, has never been conducted. In the present contribution, the family is revised in its entirety for the first time, including all previous names and 33 new species, 24 in the genus Charinus Simon, 1892: C. alagoanus sp. nov., C. apiaca sp. nov., C. carinae sp. nov., C. carioca sp. nov., C. carvalhoi sp. nov., C. cearensis sp. nov., C. diamantinus sp. nov., C. euclidesi sp. nov., C. goitaca sp. nov., C. guayaquil sp. nov., C. imperialis sp. nov., C. loko sp. nov., C. magalhaesi sp. nov., C. miskito sp. nov., C. mocoa sp. nov., C. monasticus sp. nov., C. palikur sp. nov., C. perquerens sp. nov., C. puri sp. nov., C. renneri sp. nov., C. sooretama sp. nov., C. souzai sp. nov., C. susuwa sp. nov., C. una sp. nov.; eight in the genus Sarax Simon, 1892: S. bilua sp. nov., S. dunni sp. nov., S. gravelyi sp. nov., S. indochinensis sp. nov., S. lembeh sp. nov., S. palau sp. nov., S. rahmadii sp. nov., S. tiomanensis sp. nov.; and one in the genus Weygoldtia Miranda et al., 2018: W. consonensis sp. nov. Taxonomic keys to the 132 species (excluding four nomina dubia) are presented and several taxonomic rearrangements implemented. Four subspecies are elevated to species level: Charinus cavernicolus Weygoldt, 2006, C. elegans Weygoldt, 2006, C. longipes Weygoldt, 2006, and Sarax bispinosus (Nair, 1934). Sarax batuensis Roewer, 1962 is removed from synonymy with Sarax buxtoni (Gravely, 1915) and S. buxtoni newly synonymized with Sarax rimosus (Simon, 1901). Stygophrynus moultoni Gravely, 1915 is transferred to Sarax, resulting in Sarax moultoni (Gravely, 1915) comb. nov. Ten species are transferred from Charinus to Sarax, resulting in new combinations: S. abbatei (Delle Cave, 1986) comb. nov., S. bengalensis (Gravely, 1911) comb. nov., S. dhofarensis (Weygoldt, Pohl & Polak, 2002) comb. nov., S. ioanniticus (Kritscher, 1959) comb. nov., S. israelensis (Miranda et al., 2016) comb. nov., S. omanensis (Delle Cave, Gardner & Weygoldt, 2009) comb. nov., S. pakistanus (Weygoldt, 2005) comb. nov., S. seychellarum (Kraepelin, 1898) comb. nov., S. socotranus (Weygoldt, Pohl & Polak, 2002) comb. nov. and S. stygochthobius (Weygoldt & Van Damme, 2004) comb. nov.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftEuropean Journal of Taxonomy
Vol/bind772
Sider (fra-til)1-409
Antal sider409
ISSN2118-9773
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2021

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
(NHMW), P. Sirvid (NMNZ), E. Curio (NMP), R. Raven (QM), P. Jäger (SMF), H. Höfer (SMNK), J. Holstein (SMNS), H. Wood (USNM), M.S. Harvey (WAM), J. Dunlop (ZMB), and M. Glaubrecht (ZMH); A. Schulze, L. Betz and J. Köhler from the Hessisches Landesmuseum Darmstadt for providing photos of the type material of Charinus socotranus and C. stygochthobius; P.A. Ali and K.B. Kunt for assistance with the identification of localities in Pakistan and Turkey, respectively. We are also greatful to L.F. de Armas, H. Enghoff, R. Gillespie, and M.S. Harvey for revising early versions of the manuscript. GSM acknowledges the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES-Brazil; www.capes.gov.br) for a Science Without Borders Ph.D. scholarship (process number 8922-13-6). GSM is currently funded by a GGI Peter Buck Postdoctoral Fellowship (Smithsonian Institution). This research received support from the SYNTHESYS Project http://www.synthesys.info, financed by European Community Research Infrastructure Action under the FP7 “Capacities” Program (DE-TAF-6158 and FR-TAF-5129). GSM and NS acknowledge the Danish National Research Foundation for support to the Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate (grant number DNRF96). Field collections and DNA sequencing involving AMNH staff and students were supported by the following awards to LP: US National Science Foundation grants DEB 0413453, DEB 0640219, DEB 1655050, DEB 2003382, DEC 0910091, DEC 0910147, DEC 1310855 and EAR 0228699; a grant from the Richard Lounsbery Foundation; and three Constantine S. Niarchos Expedition grants from the Stavros Niarchos Foundation.

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