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Happy Halloween: nine new species of tree-climbing tarantula discovered

Male specimen of new species: Iridopelma oliveirai. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.
Male specimen of new species: Iridopelma oliveirai. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.


If you suffer from acute arachnophobia, this is the perfect Halloween discovery for you: a spider expert has discovered nine new species of arboreal (tree-dwelling) tarantulas in the Brazil. Although tarantula diversity is highest in the Amazon rainforest, the new species are all found in lesser-known Brazilian ecosystems like the Atlantic Forest, of which less than 7 percent remains, and the cerrado, a massive savannah that is being rapidly lost to agriculture and cattle ranching.



“Instead of the seven species formerly known in the region, we now have sixteen”, says Rogério Bertani with the Instituto Butantan in Sao Paulo, Brazil, who investigated three different tarantula genera in his country. According to the paper these genera—Pachistopelma, Typhochlaena, Iridopelma—are “the least understood both taxonomically and biologically.”



Arboreal tarantulas are generally smaller and leaner than their more well-known terrestrial cousins. Longer legs allow them to adroitly climb up and down
trees.



“In a resurrected genus with a mysterious single species known from 1841, we have now five species,” Bertani says of the genus, Typhochlaena. “These are the smallest arboreal tarantulas in the world, and their analysis suggests the genus to be very old, so they can be considered relicts of a formerly more widely distributed taxon”.



These species are both rare and cryptic, Bertain writes, noting that there are “only forty specimens” of the five species in museums.



Bertani also uncovered a new species in the Pachistopelma genus, Pachistopelma bromelicola. Both known species “inhabit tank bromeliads exclusively,” according to the paper. Tank bromeliads are flowers that survive off other plants (epiphytes) and sport leaves that create a pitcher-like shape for water-collection. Spiders can survive there by hunting insects looking for water.



Another new species, Iridopelma katiae, was discovered on a table top mountain with few trees. It has also taken to bromeliads, which Bertani says is “one of the few places for an arboreal tarantula to live that offer water and a retreat against the intense sunlight.”



All of the species are likely threatened given their high endemism. Habitat loss remains the primary threat, but Bertani also warns that the species’ bright colors may make them targets for the illegal pet trade.




A female Typhochlaena seladonia. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.
A female Typhochlaena seladonia. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.






Backside of Iridopelma katiae peeking out of bromeliad. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.
Backside of Iridopelma katiae peeking out of bromeliad. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.






Female Iridopelma marcoi. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.
Female Iridopelma marcoi. Photo courtesy of R. Bertani.






CITATION: Bertani R (2012) Revision, cladistic analysis and biogeography of Typhochlaena C. L. Koch, 1850, Pachistopelma Pocock, 1901 and Iridopelma Pocock, 1901 (Araneae, Theraphosidae, Aviculariinae). ZooKeys 230: 1-94. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.230.3500






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