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14 June 2024 The first record of the genus Rudakius from Egypt (Araneae: Salticidae)
Doaa Mahmoud Abdel-Ghani
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The family Salticidae Blackwall, 1841 contains 6634 species in 677 genera (World Spider Catalog 2024). In Egypt there are 74 species in 33 genera (El-Hennawy 2017). The genus Rudakius was erected by Prószyński (2016), with Menemerus cinctus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1885, as its type species. Rudakius consists of seven species (previously in the genus Pseudicius) that were previously recorded from Iran to India (Prószyński 1979, 1992, Prószyński & Żochowska 1981, Andreeva, Hęciak & Prószyński 1984).

The species Rudakius ludhianaensis is known from Iran, Pakistan and India (World Spider Catalog 2024). Caleb et al. (2019) argued that the Indian material provides evidence that this species could be distributed across various altitudes, ranging from near sea level in eastern India (11 m a.s.l.) to higher mountain regions (1850 m a.s.l.) in northern Pakistan. The spiders were collected from a variety of plants, including trees (Mangifera, Pinus, Zea, Eucalyptus, Plumeria and Jasminum). The aim of the present paper is to report Rudakius ludhianaensis for the first time from Egypt, here collected from mango trees.

Material and methods

Spiders were collected in two months, January and May 2023, from mango trees belonging to two varieties: Keitt and Naomi. Specimens were hand-collected from leaves and bark fissures of the mango trees and preserved in 70% ethyl alcohol. Slides of the female copulatory organs and other specimens are deposited in the spider collection of the Department of Fruit Acarology, the Plant Protection Research Institute of the Agriculture Research Centre, Egypt. Female copulatory organs were dissected and mounted in Berlese's fluid (Walter & Krantz 2009) on microscopic glass slides for identification. Digital photographs were taken using a Galaxy S 20 FE phone camera attached to a stereomicroscope.

Rudakius ludhianaensis was identified by D. Logunov based on Tikader (1974), Logunov (2007: sub Pseudicius admirandus) and Caleb et al. (2019). The epigynes of two females were removed for study, and one subadult male was reared in the laboratory until maturity, being fed on fruit flies, Drosophila melanogaster Meigen, 1830. The map was created using Shorthouse (2010).

Results and discussion

Taxonomy

Family Salticidae Blackwall, 1841
Genus Rudakius Prószyński, 2016
Rudakius ludhianaensis (Tikader, 1974)

  • Specimens examined. EGYPT, Giza, mango orchard planted at the agricultural research centre (30.045708°N, 31.205698°E, 20 m a.s.l.). 12. Jan. 2023: 2 ♀♀, bark of mango trees. The same locality, 7. May 2023: 1 ♀, 3 juvs, 1 subadult ♂, matured on 13. May 2023, leaves of mango tree, leg. D. Abdel-Ghani.

  • Description of male (Figs 1-2). Total length: 6 mm. Carapace with a white median longitudinal stripe and two similar orange lateral stripes (as seen in fresh specimens after moulting to adult). Opisthosoma creamy-coloured, with an orange median longitudinal stripe and two similar lateral stripes (as seen in fresh specimens after moulting to adult). Four transverse broad blackish streaks (in alcohol-preserved specimens) (Fig. 1a). Legs yellowish, except from brownish patella, tibia, metatarsus, and tarsus of leg I (Fig. 1b). Palp with a long and flat femur, the ventral tibial branch of the apophysis long and slender, the dorsal tibial branch short and flattened (Fig. 2a-b).

  • Description of female (Figs 3-4). Total length: 5.3 mm. Prosoma longer than wide, carapace covered with white, black and orange hairs, longitudinal stripes along the eye field (Fig. 3a), posterior portion of the prosoma slightly sloping behind (Fig. 3c). Sternum oval with white dense hairs on the margin, narrowed in front. Chelicerae with one tooth on the inner margin and two on the outer margin (Fig. 3d). Opisthosoma covered with white and orange hairs forming a distinct pattern, posterior end with three black and a pair of white spots (Fig. 3a). Legs strong and stout, leg formula 4132 (Fig. 3b); tibiae, and metatarsi I with three spines and two pairs of ventral spines (Fig. 3e), metatarsi II with one spine and two pairs of ventral spines (Fig. 3f). Epigyne with large, oval fossae separated by median septum (Fig. 4a-b); copulatory openings in the posterior medial area. Female copulatory organs variable (possibly an artefact of slide preparation) (Fig. 4a-b).

  • Habitat. Rudakius ludhianaensis builds small silk retreats between leaves, which are open on one side. Along with this species, the following spider species were found in the same foliage: Cheiracanthium isiacum O. Pickard-Cambridge (1 ♂, 11 juvs), Euryopis episinoides (Walckenaer, 1847) (4 ♂♂, 1 ♀), Kochiura aulica (C. L. Koch, 1838) (4 ♂♂, 6 ♀♀), Latrodectus geometricus C. L. Koch, 1841 (1 ♀, 3 juvs), Poecilochroa pugnax (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1874) (1 ♀), Theridion incanescens Simon, 1890 (2 ♂♂, 3 ♀♀), T. spinitarse O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1876 (2 ♂♂, 4 ♀♀) and Uloborus plumipes Lucas, 1846 (1 ♀, 2 juvs). The most abundant species was C. isiacum, followed by K. aulica.

  • Distribution. As noted above, Rudakius ludhianaensis has been recorded from Iran, Pakistan, India (World Spider Catalog 2024) and now also Egypt (present data); it is thus reported from Egypt here for the first time (Fig. 5).

  • Note. Rudakius ludhianaensis can be distinguished from R. afghanicus using the following characters. In males of R. ludhianaensis, the embolus is thick and short and seems partially fused with the tegulum, a narrow cleft separates the embolus from the retrolateral hump of the tegulum. In females, differences are observed in the shape of the median septum, which is narrower anteriorly and widens medially and narrows posteriorly again in R. ludhianaensis. By contrast, it is wide anteriorly and medially, and narrows posteriorly in R. afghanicus.

  • Fig. 1.

    Rudakius ludhianaensis, male. a. dorsal view; b. ventral view

    img-z1-21_01.jpg

    Fig. 2.

    Rudakius ludhianaensis, palp. a. ventral view; b. prolateral view

    img-z2-2_01.jpg

    Fig. 3.

    Rudakius ludhianaensis, female. a. dorsal view; b. ventral view; c. lateral view; d. ventral view of prosoma; e. leg I spination; f. leg II spination

    img-z2-10_01.jpg

    Fig. 4.

    Rudakius ludhianaensis, female variability. a-b. epigynes of two specimens, ventral view

    img-z2-12_01.jpg

    Fig. 5.

    World distribution of Rudakius ludhianaensis

    img-z3-2_01.jpg

    Acknowledgment

    I wish to thank Dr. Dmitri Logunov (Manchester, UK) for the help with identification and for editing the English of the first draft.

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    Doaa Mahmoud Abdel-Ghani "The first record of the genus Rudakius from Egypt (Araneae: Salticidae)," Arachnologische Mitteilungen: Arachnology Letters 67(1), 1-3, (14 June 2024). https://doi.org/10.30963/aramit6701
    Received: 9 May 2023; Accepted: 9 January 2024; Published: 14 June 2024
    KEYWORDS
    Active hunter
    Jumping spiders
    mango trees
    Rudakius ludhianaensis
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