New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae)

The known range of the South American genus Monapia, previously known only from temperate South American forests, is expanded to central and eastern Argentina and Uruguay. A monophyletic group of five species with spinose forelegs is proposed, including M. angusta, newly transferred from Arachosia,...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Publicado: 1999
Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez
Aporte de:
id paper:paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez
record_format dspace
spelling paper:paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez2023-06-08T15:13:30Z New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae) The known range of the South American genus Monapia, previously known only from temperate South American forests, is expanded to central and eastern Argentina and Uruguay. A monophyletic group of five species with spinose forelegs is proposed, including M. angusta, newly transferred from Arachosia, plus four new species: M. charrua, M. guenoana, M. fierro and M. carolina. One new species, M. tandil (from Buenos Aires Province), is proposed to be the sister group of Monapia vittata. A data matrix with 43 characters for the 13 species of the genus (plus 9 amaurobioidine outgroups) was cladistically analyzed. Although relationships among species are mostly resolved, the basal phylogeny of the genus remains unclear. The previous hypothesis of relationships of Monapia alupuran is unsupported in this new analysis. Additional records are given for M. lutea and M. dilaticollis. 1999 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
description The known range of the South American genus Monapia, previously known only from temperate South American forests, is expanded to central and eastern Argentina and Uruguay. A monophyletic group of five species with spinose forelegs is proposed, including M. angusta, newly transferred from Arachosia, plus four new species: M. charrua, M. guenoana, M. fierro and M. carolina. One new species, M. tandil (from Buenos Aires Province), is proposed to be the sister group of Monapia vittata. A data matrix with 43 characters for the 13 species of the genus (plus 9 amaurobioidine outgroups) was cladistically analyzed. Although relationships among species are mostly resolved, the basal phylogeny of the genus remains unclear. The previous hypothesis of relationships of Monapia alupuran is unsupported in this new analysis. Additional records are given for M. lutea and M. dilaticollis.
title New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae)
spellingShingle New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae)
title_short New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae)
title_full New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae)
title_fullStr New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae)
title_full_unstemmed New species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus Monapia (Araneae, Anyphaenidae, Amaurobioidinae)
title_sort new species and cladistic reanalysis of the spider genus monapia (araneae, anyphaenidae, amaurobioidinae)
publishDate 1999
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01618202_v27_n2_p415_Ramirez
_version_ 1768544815578873856