{"database":"biostudies-literature","file_versions":[],"scores":null,"additional":{"omics_type":["Unknown"],"volume":["1200"],"submitter":["Maddison WP"],"funding":["Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada"],"pubmed_abstract":["The genus <i>Hivanua</i><b>gen. nov.</b> is established for the harmochirine jumping spiders of the Marquesas Islands, formerly placed in <i>Habronattus</i> F.O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1901 and <i>Havaika</i> Prószyński, 2002. The type species, <i>Hivanuatekao</i><b>sp. nov.</b> is described, and five species described by Berland are re-illustrated and moved into the genus: <i>Hivanuaflavipes</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>Hivanuanigrescens</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>Hivanuanigrolineata</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>Hivanuarufescens</i> (Berland, 1934), <b>comb. nov.</b>, and <i>Hivanuatriangulifera</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b> The female epigyne is much like that of <i>Habronattus</i>, <i>Bianor</i> Peckham & Peckham, 1896, and other harmochirines, with a centrally placed coupling pocket and two atria with crescent-shaped edges. The terminal apophysis of the male palp, which is variable throughout the pellenine subgroup of the Harmochirina, is absent in <i>H.rufescens</i> but present in <i>H.tekao</i><b>sp. nov.</b>, in which it is elbowed much as in <i>Habronattus</i>. These Pacific Island harmochirines, like the <i>Havaika</i> of Hawaii, appear to be largely foliage dwellers, unlike most of their continental relatives."],"journal":["ZooKeys"],"pagination":["215-230"],"full_dataset_link":["https://www.ebi.ac.uk/biostudies/studies/S-EPMC11099472"],"repository":["biostudies-literature"],"pubmed_title":["﻿<i>Hivanua</i>, a new genus of harmochirine jumping spiders from the Marquesas Islands (Araneae, Salticidae, Harmochirina)."],"pmcid":["PMC11099472"],"pubmed_authors":["Maddison WP"],"additional_accession":[]},"is_claimable":false,"name":"﻿<i>Hivanua</i>, a new genus of harmochirine jumping spiders from the Marquesas Islands (Araneae, Salticidae, Harmochirina).","description":"The genus <i>Hivanua</i><b>gen. nov.</b> is established for the harmochirine jumping spiders of the Marquesas Islands, formerly placed in <i>Habronattus</i> F.O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1901 and <i>Havaika</i> Prószyński, 2002. The type species, <i>Hivanuatekao</i><b>sp. nov.</b> is described, and five species described by Berland are re-illustrated and moved into the genus: <i>Hivanuaflavipes</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>Hivanuanigrescens</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>Hivanuanigrolineata</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b>, <i>Hivanuarufescens</i> (Berland, 1934), <b>comb. nov.</b>, and <i>Hivanuatriangulifera</i> (Berland, 1933), <b>comb. nov.</b> The female epigyne is much like that of <i>Habronattus</i>, <i>Bianor</i> Peckham & Peckham, 1896, and other harmochirines, with a centrally placed coupling pocket and two atria with crescent-shaped edges. The terminal apophysis of the male palp, which is variable throughout the pellenine subgroup of the Harmochirina, is absent in <i>H.rufescens</i> but present in <i>H.tekao</i><b>sp. nov.</b>, in which it is elbowed much as in <i>Habronattus</i>. These Pacific Island harmochirines, like the <i>Havaika</i> of Hawaii, appear to be largely foliage dwellers, unlike most of their continental relatives.","dates":{"release":"2024-01-01T00:00:00Z","publication":"2024","modification":"2026-05-22T03:09:20.728Z","creation":"2026-05-22T03:07:47.332Z"},"accession":"S-EPMC11099472","cross_references":{"pubmed":["38766409"],"doi":["10.3897/zookeys.1200.120868"]}}