Phintella caledoniensis
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| Phintella caledoniensis | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
| Class: | Arachnida |
| Order: | Araneae |
| Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
| Family: | Salticidae |
| Genus: | Phintella |
| Species: | P. caledoniensis |
| Binomial name | |
| Phintella caledoniensis Patoleta, 2009 | |
Phintella caledoniensis is a species of jumping spider that is endemic to New Caledonia. A member of the genus Phintella, it was named after the archipelago where it was found.
First described in 2009 by the arachnologist Barbara Patoleta, the spider is small and measures between 4.83 and 4.89 mm (0.190 and 0.193 in) in length. It has a brown cephalothorax, the female being generally darker, that features white patches on its head faint lines that radiate from an obvious fovea, or depression in the middle. Behind the cephalothorax is a grey or grey-brown abdomen. Its legs are generally brown some of the sections being lighter than others. It is similar to the related Sri Lankan Phintella volupe and Ugandan Phintella nilotica, but can be distinguished by its copulatory organs. The female has distinctive bean-shaped spermatheca and the male a long and thin embolus that is similar in size to its palpal bulb.
Phintella caledoniensis is a species of jumping spider, a member of the family Salticidae. that was first described in 2009 by the arachnologist Barbara Patoleta.[1] The specific name is derived from the name of the archipelago of New Caledonia where it was first found.[2] Patoleta allocated the spider to the genus Phintella, first circumscribed in 1906 by Embrik Strand in a publication he co-wrote with Wilhelm Bösenberg. [3] The genus name derives from the genus Phintia, which it resembles.[4] The genus Phintia was itself renamed Phintodes, which was subsequently absorbed into Tylogonus.[5]
There are similarities between spiders within genus Phintella and those in Chira, Chrysilla, Euophrys, Icius, Jotus and Telamonia.[6] It is a member of the tribe Heliophaninae, renamed Chrysillini by Wayne Maddison in 2015.[7] Chrysillines are monophyletic.[8] The tribe is ubiquitous across most of the continents of the world.[9] It is allocated to the subclade Saltafresia in the clade Salticoida.[8] In 2017, Jerzy Prószyński grouped the genus with 32 other genera of jumping spiders under the name Chrysillines in the supergroup Chrysilloida.[10]