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Australian pirates: systematics and phylogeny of the Australasian pirate spiders (Araneae : Mimetidae), with a description of the Western Australian fauna

Danilo Harms A C D and Mark S. Harvey B C

A Systematik und Evolution der Tiere, Fakultät für Biologie, Chemie und Pharmazie, Freie Universität Berlin, Königin-Luise-Straße 1–3, 14195 Berlin, Germany.
B Department of Terrestrial Zoology, Western Australian Museum, Locked Bag 49, Welshpool D.C., WA 6986, Australia and Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West at 49th Street, New York, NY 10024-5192, USA and California Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA 94103-3009, USA.
C School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
D Corresponding author. Email: danilo.harms@museum.wa.gov.au


Abstract

Pirate spiders (Mimetidae) are well known for their specialised feeding ecology. They are vagrant araneophagic predators, enter the webs of their prey spiders and exhibit patterns of aggressive mimicry to overcome the web owner. The mimetid fauna of Australia and New Zealand currently consists of 26 species in the following three genera: Australomimetus Heimer, 1986 (18 species), Mimetus Hentz, 1832 (six species), and Ero C.L. Koch, 1836 (two species). The systematic position of the majority of Australasian mimetids was investigated through phylogenetic techniques utilising morphological character systems of 29 exemplar taxa and 87 characters, including the first examination of spinneret structure in species of Australomimetus. The results support an expanded concept for Australomimetus, which, apart from the introduced Ero aphana (Walckenaer, 1802), is found to contain the entire Australian and New Zealand mimetid fauna, also recorded from Asia. The following taxonomic changes are proposed: A. catulli (Heimer, 1989), comb. nov., A. hannemanni (Heimer, 1989), comb. nov., A. japonicus (Uyemura, 1938), comb. nov., A. mendicus (O. P. Cambridge, 1879), comb. nov. and A. sennio (Urquhart, 1891), comb. nov.; Ero luzoniensis Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 is synonymised with Ero aphana, and A. andreae Heimer, 1989 is synonymised with A. daviesianus Heimer, 1986; Mimetus tikaderi Gajbe, 1992 from India is excluded from Mimetidae, and referred to Liocranidae. The Western Australian mimetid fauna is described for the first time and comprises nine species of Australomimetus, including the following five new species: A. diabolicus, sp. nov., A. djuka, sp. nov., A. dunlopi, sp. nov., A. nasoi, sp. nov. and A. stephanieae, sp. nov. Several species-groups of Australomimetus are identified.

Keywords: Asia, Australomimetus, Ero, Mimetus, morphology, new species, New Zealand.

Invertebrate Systematics 23(3) 231–280    doi:10.1071/IS08015
Submitted: 3 April 2008    Accepted: 15 April 2009    Published: 21 July 2009





   
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