Massagris mohale
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| Massagris mohale | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
| Class: | Arachnida |
| Order: | Araneae |
| Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
| Family: | Salticidae |
| Genus: | Massagris |
| Species: | M. mohale |
| Binomial name | |
| Massagris mohale Wesołowska & Haddad, 2014 | |
Massagris mohale is a species of jumping spider that ilves in Leotho. A member of the genus Massagris, the spider is small, with a cephalothorax between 2.1 and 2.4 mm (0.083 and 0.094 in) long and an abdomen between 1.8 and 4 mm (0.071 and 0.157 in) long. It is generally brown with a distinctive pattern of a yellow serrated stripe on its abdomen. The female is lighter than the male with a yellow pattern on its brown carapace and a yellow rather than brown sternum and legs. The spider has distinctive copulatory organs. The male has a long embolus that forms three coils that sit on top of the palpal bulb and the female has a depression to the back of its epigyne, the external part of its copulatory organs, and two copulatory openings to the front. The spider was first described in 2014 and is named for the Mohale Dam where it was first found.
Massagris mohale is a jumping spider, a member of the family Salticidae, that was first described by the arachnologists Wanda Wesołowska and Charles Haddad in 2014.[1] It was one of more than 500 species that Wesołowska identified in her career.[2] They allocated the species to the genus Massagris, first raised by Eugène Simon in 1900.[3] It is named for the place where it was first found.[4]
The genus Massagris is recognised as separate from the clade Salticoida and a member of the subfamily Hisponinae.[3][5] It is the only subfamily that is recognised in Baltic Amber.[6] It was recognised as a distinctive subfamily by Wayne Maddison in 2015.[7] Phylogenetics has shown that the genus is related to Tomocyrba.[8] In 2016, Jerzy Prószyński allocated the genus to a group of genera called Hisponines.[9] Named for the related genus Hispo, the group is identified by its eyes.[10]