Sorensenella Explained

Sorensenella is a genus in the harvestman subfamily Sorensenellinae in the family Triaenonychidae. It is endemic to New Zealand and currently includes three species and several subspecies. Members of this genus have large pedipalps armed with strong spines. The pedipalps are larger in males.

Taxonomy

The genus Sorensenella was erected by R.I. Pocock in 1903.[1] The type species is Sorensenalla prehensor and is held at the Natural History Museum, London.[2] Carl Freidrich Roewer erected the genus Akaroa in 1932,[3] but Ray Forster synonymised this under Sorensenella in his monograph on the New Zealand Laniatores.

Etymology

Although not stated by Pocock's relevant works, the genus seems likely named in honour of the in honour of the Danish Zoologist William Sørensen.Forster gave the spelling of the genus as the modified Soerensenella, following Roewer and other authors (e.g. per Roewer (1915)[4] from interpretation of the alternative spelling as Sörensenella in Pocock's introduction, p.392). However, Sorensenella Pocock 1903 can be taken as the correct original spelling, as fixed by Pocock himself in a subsequent paper as first reviser.[5]

Included species

Sorensenella contains the following species and subspecies:

Forster's (1954) revision includes keys to species for most of the genera it covers, but not for Sorensenella. However, Forster did include the species and subspecies of Sorensenella in a larger key to New Zealand Opiliones published in two parts.[6] [7]

Forster also erected the subfamily Sorensenellinae to accommodate Sorensenella Pocock, 1903 and Karamea Forster, 1954 from New Zealand, and Roeweria Lawrence, 1931[8] (now Lawrencella Strand, 1932) and Speleomontia Lawrence, 1931 from South Africa.

General appearance

In Sorensenella, the dorsal (upper) surface has one or two spinous tubercles (conical projections) located on the sides of the carapace and level with or forward of the eyemound (a raised, rounded structure with two eyes). These are pointing at or near right angles to the body. The eyemound has a small spine on the apex. Behind the eyemound, the carapace has several pairs of tubercles, while the free tergites (the rearmost portion each have a row of weak tubercles. The pedipalps are strongly armed with spines and are larger in males than females. Body colouring is typically in shades of brown, grey or black, The chelicerae and pedipalps are commonly red-brown or other shades of brown and are a lighter tone and glossier than the rest of the body. Sorensenella most closely resembles the New Zealand-endemic genus Karamea, but lacks the prominent, forward-directed eyemound spine of the latter.

Geographic range

Soerensenella is only found in New Zealand. In the North Island, it is more commonly seen in central and northern regions, with no records south of Waikanae. In the South Island it is found in the Canterbury region. Its range does not appear to overlap with that of Karamea.

Phylogenetics

Molecular studies using Sanger[9] and ultra conserved element[10] sequencing showed Sorensenella is part of a clade that includes the majority of New Zealand triaenonychid genera, as well as several genera from Australia, New Caledonia and South America. Sorensenella forms a subclade with its nearest relative Karamea, and these genera are estimated to have diverged from one another during the Cretaceous. While these studies affirm the close relationship between Soerensenella and Karamea, they do not support Forster's inclusion of Roeweria (now Lawrencella) and Speleomontia from South Africa in Sorensenellinae.

References

  1. Pocock . Reginald Innes . 1903 . On some new harvest-spiders of the order Opiliones from the southern continents . Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London . 1902 . 392–413.
  2. Forster . Raymond Robert . 1954-07-01 . The New Zealand harvestmen (sub-order Laniatores) . Canterbury Museum Bulletin . English . 2 . 1–329.
  3. Roewer . Carl Friedrich . 1931-01-01 . Über Triaenonychiden (6. Ergänzung der "Weberknechte der Erde", 1923) . Zeitschrift für wissenschaftliche Zoologie . 138 . 137–185.
  4. Roewer . Carl Friedrich . 1915 . Die Familie der Triaenonychidae der Opiliones -Laniatores.. Archiv für Naturgeschichte . 80 . 12. 61–168.
  5. Pocock . Reginald Innes . 1903 . Fifteen new species and two new genera of tropical southern Opiliones . The Annals and Magazine of Natural History . Series 7 . 11. 65 . 433–450.
  6. Forster . Raymond Robert . 1962-01-01 . A key to the New Zealand Harvestmen — part I . Tuatara . 10 . 3 . 129–137.
  7. Forster . Raymond Robert . 1963-01-01 . A key to the New Zealand Harvestmen — part 2 . Tuatara . 11 . 1 . 28–40.
  8. Lawrence . Reginald Francis . 1931-01-01 . The harvest-spiders (Opiliones) of South Africa . Annals of the South African Museum . English . 29 . 341–508.
  9. Baker . Caitlin M. . Sheridan . Kate . Derkarabetian . Shahan . González . Abel Pérez . Giribet . Gonzalo . 2020-08-14 . Molecular phylogeny and biogeography of the temperate Gondwanan family Triaenonychidae (Opiliones: Laniatores) reveals pre-Gondwanan regionalisation, common vicariance, and rare dispersal . Invertebrate Systematics . 34 . 6 . 637–660 . 10.1071/IS19069.
  10. Derkarabetian . Shahan . Baker . Caitlin M. . Hedin . Marshal . Prieto . Carlos E. . Giribet . Gonzalo . 2021-01-01 . Phylogenomic re-evaluation of Triaenonychoidea (Opiliones : Laniatores), and systematics of Triaenonychidae, including new families, genera and species . Invertebrate Systematics . 10.1071/IS20047.