ExFmem wrote: ↑Sun May 03, 2020 7:21 pm
I only have one more to post
2018 KTP Sept/oct
It resembles this one of Vida’s, somewhat. Unfortunately it’s labeled Unidentified sp.
Also one she has as
Hyllus sp., and
Icius insolidus have similarities.
Bye my little jumping spider buddies

. Until we meet again
Now we do this highlight
Pignus sp. female
The pattern on the adomen resembles this P. simoni
And in the Ndumo paper there are some parts of the description matching (note: so far only males treated)
Pignus pongola:
medium-sized spider. Carapace oval, dark
brown, with broad white streaks composed of light hairs along lateral margins; lighter
spot in foveal area;
reddish scales cover anterior part of eye field and form small patches
in front of posterior lateral eyes; some
brown bristles on eye field;
clypeus very low,
with some white hairs; below anterior lateral eyes, on ‘cheeks’, two parallel thin lines.
Endites and labium brown with yellow tips; sternum orange; chelicerae very large,
longer than in congeners, with long fang; promargin with two teeth, retromargin with
single large tooth placed close to base of fang (Fig. 148); chelicerae dark brown with
metallic lustre. Abdomen oval, brownish grey with irregular lighter band medially;
sparse long bristles on abdominal dorsum; venter dark, with four lines composed of
light dots; spinnerets light brown.
Legs brown, but coxae orange; femora darker than
remaining segments;
leg hairs dense, dark brown, among them some whitish ones.
Pedipalps small, brownish, clothed in long hairs; tibial apophysis narrow and long,
tegulum with large semicircular lobe at base of embolus, embolus long
This photo from 2013 labelled as P. simoni female
The two-striped cheek is the give away for the Pignus, let's make it a
Pignus sp.
https://bioone.org/journals/african-inv ... .0105.full
https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... a/download
Pignus pongola female