A new genus of Oecobiinae (Araneae: Oecobiidae) from Iran and Central Asia

ABSTRACT A new genus, Turanobius gen. n. (Araneae: Oecobiidae: Oecobiinae), is described from Iran and Central Asia, comprising the following four species: T. ferdowsii (Mirshamsi, Zamani and Marusik, 2017) comb. n. (♂; Iran, Kazakhstan), T. hissaricus sp. n. (♂; Tajikistan), T. leptonychus sp. n. (♂♀; Tajikistan), and T. tadzhikus (Andreeva and Tyshchenko, 1969) comb. n. (♂♀; Tajikistan); both new combinations are ex. Oecobius Lucas, 1846. Known distribution records of all four species are mapped. Additionally, a discussion is presented on the taxonomy of Oecobius and the potential revalidation of several genera currently considered synonymous with it. http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:82D1AB7B-551C-4F78-B344-01A26075505C


Introduction
The spider family Oecobiidae Blackwall, 1862 is currently represented by 125 extant species in six genera and three subfamilies: Oecobius Lucas, 1846, Paroecobius Lamoral, 1981and Platoecobius Chamberlin and Ivie, 1935 constitute the cribellate subfamily Oecobiinae Blackwall, 1862;Urocteana Roewer, 1961 andUroecobius Kullmann andZimmermann, 1976 comprise the ecribellate subfamily Uroecobiinae Kullmann and Zimmermann, 1976;and Uroctea Dufour, 1820 is the sole representative of the ecribellate subfamily Urocteinae Thorell, 1869 (Jocqué and Dippenaar-Schoeman 2006;WSC 2023).Members of the family can be found almost globally (although they are not present in the north Holarctic), and many of them are commonly found in and around human dwellings; a few species have managed to establish populations in areas outside of their natural ranges as a result of human-mediated introduction (eg Shear 1970;Henrard et al. 2014;Nakayama et al. 2016).However, Oecobiidae remains poorly studied in many regions, including Central Asia, from where only five species have been reported so far: Oecobius ferdowsii Mirshamsi, Zamani andMarusik, 2017, O. nadiae (Spassky, 1936), O. przewalskyi Hu andLi, 1987, O. tadzhikus Andreeva andTyshchenko, 1969 and Uroctea grossa Roewer, CONTACT Alireza Zamani zamani.alireza5@gmail.com1960 (Marusik et al. 2015;Fomichev 2022).In their redescription of O. tadzhikusa species known reliably only from Tajikistan - Marusik et al. (2015) expressed doubt regarding the generic placement of this species, as it possesses several unique features that are not recorded in other species of Oecobius, and suggested that it should most likely be classified in a separate genus.The discovery of O. ferdowsiia closely related species described from Iranprovided additional support for this hypothesis (Zamani et al. 2017).
Recently, we had the opportunity to examine a series of Iranian and Central Asian oecobiids (including two new species) that possess a similar conformation of the copulatory organs to those of O. ferdowsii and O. tadzhikus.In our opinion, the characters of these four species are sufficiently different from those of O. cellariorum (Dugès, 1836)the type species of Oecobiusthat designation of a new genus is necessary.In this paper, this new Oecobiinae genus and its two new species are described, new combinations are proposed for the two previously known species, and the distribution records of all four species are mapped.Additionally, the taxonomy of Oecobius and the boundaries of its subgroups are briefly discussed.

Material and methods
Specimens were photographed using a Canon EOS 7D camera attached to an Olympus SZX16 stereomicroscope at the Zoological Museum of the University of Turku, and an Olympus DP74 camera attached to an Olympus SZX16 stereomicroscope at the Altai State University.Digital images were montaged using CombineZP and edited using CorelDraw graphic design software.Scanning electron microscopy images were obtained using a Hitachi TM-1000 scanning microscope at the Institute of Systematics and Ecology of Animals, Novosibirsk, Russia.Lengths of leg segments were measured on the dorsal side and are listed as: total length (femur, patella, tibia, metatarsus, tarsus Diagnosis.The males of the new genus differ from those of Oecobius sensu stricto by having two anterior loops and one prolateral loop of spermophor (vs one anteroprolateral and no prolateral loop), and bifurcate radix (vs non-bifurcate).The females of the new genus differ from those of Oecobius sensu stricto by having a kind of scape, under which the copulatory openings are located (vs no scape).
Description.Total length 2.18-2.88 in males, 2.15-3.08 in females.Male palp: bulb longer than wide; spermophor forms two semiround loops in the anterior part: pro-(Pl) and retrolateral (Rl), and one deep posteroprolateral (Pp); radix (Ra) with bifurcate tip; terminal apophysis (Ta) large and broad; basoprolateral part of tegulum with extension (Te) bearing extra loop and anteroprolateral part of radix with extension (Re) directed over tegular extension.Epigyne: epigynal plate slightly wider than long, weakly sclerotised; anterior half with rounded curved wrinkles; posterior part with kind of scape (Sc), well sclerotised, with copulatory openings located under it; insemination ducts (Id) long, almost parallel, well visible through integument; receptacles composed of three parts: oval chamber (Or), wide tubular part (Tr) and weakly sclerotised sac part (Sr); fertilisation chamber (Fc) transverse, longer than wide, with thinning in median part, foot-like in posterior view.
Distribution.North-eastern Iran, south-western and southern Kazakhstan, south-western and western Tajikistan; most likely also present in Turkmenistan (see 'Comments' under T. tadzhikus) (Figures 35,36).
Distribution.Confidently known only from the south-western part of Khatlon Region in south-western Tajikistan (Andreeva and Tyshchenko 1969;Andreeva 1975Andreeva , 1976;; present material) (Figures 35,36).In our opinion, the records of this species from Turkmenistan by Mikhailov and Fet (1994) are misidentifications and may belong to T. ferdowsii comb.n. (see also Marusik et al. 2015;Fomichev 2022).The record from Gandzhina (Tajikistan) by Andreeva (1976) is based on juvenile specimens and is therefore also doubtful; it is possible that these specimens belong to T. leptonychus sp.n., which has been collected from a nearby locality (Figure 36).
Comments.Zamani and Marusik (2023) found that the females described and listed as belonging to this species by Zamani et al. (2017) were mismatched.These specimens were described as a separate species, Oecobius melanocephalus Zamani and Marusik, 2023.Following this, the specimen illustrated in fig.3A of Zamani and Bosselaers (2020) belongs to O. melanocephalus.

Distribution. Known from Razavi Khorasan Province in north-eastern Iran and
Mangystau and Turkistan regions in south-western and southern Kazakhstan (Zamani et al. 2017;Fomichev 2022;present study).It is possible that the doubtful records of T. tadzhikus from Turkmenistan (Mikhailov and Fet 1994) belong to this species (Figure 35).Etymology.The specific epithet is a combination of the Greek terms lepto-(meaning 'thin') and -onychus (meaning 'clawed'), referring to the shape of the extension of terminal apophysis of the male palp.Diagnosis.The male of this species differs from the congeners by having thin and sharply pointed radical arms which are equal in length (see Figures 9,15,17,19).
Etymology.The specific epithet refers to the type locality of the new species in the Hissar mountain range.
Diagnosis.The male of the new species differs from those of the congeners by the arms of radix wide and sharply pointed, with the mesal one longer than the prolateral one (vs arms thin, or blunt, or equal in size, or mesal one shorter; see Figures 9,15,17,19).

Discussion
In this paper, a new genus of Oecobiidae comprising four species (including two newly described ones) was described.The range of the genus spans from north-eastern Iran to south-western Kazakhstan in the north and extends to south-western Tajikistan in the east.
Given the limited geographical distribution of most of the species treated in this paper, we believe that the records of T. tadzhikus from Turkmenistan (Mikhailov and Fet 1994) are likely due to misidentifications.It is more plausible that these records either pertain to T. ferdowsii or represent an entirely new species.Furthermore, the probability of discovering additional species or records of this genus in Uzbekistan and northern Afghanistan is quite high.
Oecobius currently comprises a large number of species that, despite being rather uniform in general appearance, can clearly be classified within several groups based on the conformation of their copulatory organs.The genus currently has seven generic synonyms, one of which (Omanus Thorell, 1869) is not mentioned in the World Spider Catalog (WSC 2023).Two of these synonyms, Phanerecobius Kishida, 1943 andTiroecobius Kishida, 1947, are generic nomina nuda (Ono 2009;Santos et al. 2009).Amongst the remaining five genera, the synonymy of Ambika Lehtinen, 1967 is well justified, as its type species, O. putus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1876, has a similar conformation of the copulatory organs to those of O. cellariorum, the type species of Oecobius (Shear 1970).
The synonymy of three remaining genera should be reinvestigated.Shear and Benoit (1974) synonymised Maitreja Lehtinen, 1967, primarily on the basis of the probable synonymy of its type species, O. marathaus Tikader, 1962, with O. cellariorum.This was a reasonable assumption, as at the time of the publication of Shear and Benoit (1974) the copulatory organs of O. marathaus were known only from a very schematic drawing of the epigyne in the original description by Tikader (1962).Since then, however, this species has been well illustrated in nine publications (WSC 2023).It is now evident that this species clearly displays a different conformation of the copulatory organs from those of O. cellariorum, and can be considered within the same group as O. amboseli Shear and Benoit, 1974and perhaps O. affinis O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872and O. cambridgei Wunderlich, 1995.The synonymy of Thalamia Hentz, 1850 (type Thalamia parietalis Hentz, 1850 = Oecobius navus Blackwall, 1859) by Shear (1970) is also problematic: not only does O. navus have a different conformation of the copulatory organs than that of O. cellariorum, it can clearly be considered to fall within a large group of similar species, including those endemic to the Canary Islands (Wunderlich 1987(Wunderlich , 1992(Wunderlich , 1995(Wunderlich , 2011)).Omanus (type O. navus Blackwall, 1859) is another generic synonym of Oecobius, and the type of Omanoidae Thorell, 1869, a synonym of Oecobiidae (Thorell 1869; Lehtinen 1967).The synonymy of neither the genus nor the family is mentioned in WSC (2023).Should Thalamia be revalidated, Omanus would unquestionably fall into its junior synonymy.
The synonymy of Tarapaca Lehtinen, 1967(type Oecobius nieborowskii Kulczyński, 1909) should also be reinvestigated, as its type species is distributed outside of the natural range of Oecobius sensu stricto.
In our opinion, the natural range of Oecobius sensu stricto includes Africa, Mediterranean Basin, Caucasus, and the Middle East to India.Considering the similarities in the conformation of their copulatory organs, the following species can tentatively be considered as members of Oecobius sensu stricto: O. albipunctatus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872; O. alhoutyae Wunderlich, 1995;O. cellariorum;O. fahimii Zamani and Marusik, 2018;O. ilamensis Zamani, Mirshamsi and Marusik, 2017;O. melanocephalus;O. pasargadae Zamani and Marusik, 2023;O. pasteuri Berland and Millot, 1940;O. putus;O. rhodiensis Kritscher, 1966;O. teliger O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872;O. templi O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1876;O. trimaculatus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872;O. zagros Zamani and Marusik, 2023.We posit that the remaining species presently considered in Oecobius may be more appropriately classified within other genera.This paper represents the initial phase of a comprehensive effort aimed at refining the classification of Oecobiinae.The proper delineation of these putative groups will be defined through a comprehensive taxonomic revision of the generic classification in this subfamily, a process currently underway.