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Mascaraneus

Mascaraneus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Mygalomorphae
Family: Theraphosidae
Genus: Mascaraneus
Gallon, 2005
Species: M. remotus
Binomial name
Mascaraneus remotus
Gallon, 2005

Mascaraneus is a spider genus in the Theraphosidae familia, containing a single species, Mascaraneus remotus. It is endemic to Serpent Island, Mauritius.

The genus and species were first described by Richard Gallon in 2005. The genus name "Mascaraneus" means "spider of the Mascarene Islands"; mixing the word "Mascarene" with the Latin word for "spider" araneus. The specific name remotus is derived from the Latin word for "remote", referring to the isolated type locality (Serpent Island).

The holotype of Mascaraneus remotus is desiccated, missing the third right leg. It lacks any stridulatory setae, and was therefore considered as ischnocoline but was not placed there, on account of the lack of any medial and proximal hairs on the tibial leg sections, and the presence of integral tarsal scopulae.

An interesting feature of Mascaraneus remotus is the lack of any stridulatory organ on the upper prolateral surfaces of the first two coxae of the legs. Such an organ, consisting of many robust setae and long plumose setae, is found on nearly every eumenophorine theraphosid (with the exception being Monocentropus that only has plumose setae).

As a near constant rule, large terrestrial theraphosids have a stridulatory organs of some shape or form. It has been suggested by some (for example, James Wood-Mason, in 1877) that this is used to deter predators. The tiny islet of Serpent Island has only one type of mammal, bats, and the birds of the islet are all diurnal (active by day), therefore they rarely come into contact with the tarantula. This may have led to the lack of the stridulatory organ.


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