Nine new trapdoor spider species have been discovered in the Great Karoo by researchers at the University of Pretoria’s (UP) Department of Zoology and Entomology, and the Agricultural Research Council.
This brings the count of members of the Stasimopus genus, which is endemic to Southern Africa, to 56 distinct species.
News about the discoveries was announced in the journal Zootaxa.
“A distinguishing feature of trapdoor spiders is the way in which they cover their underground burrows with a trapdoor-like lid made of soil, silk and plants,” explains lead author Dr Shannon Brandt, a recent PhD graduate from UP.
“These burrows can be up to 30 centimetres deep. Depending on the species, some burrows are wide enough for a R5 coin to fit in, while a smallish orange could easily be dropped into others.”
Once sexually mature, males leave their burrows to mate. Females and immature males generally remain within the burrows, from which they pounce within a millisecond on passing prey such as grasshoppers, beetles and even small frogs, and inject them with venom (which is not harmful to humans).
The exemplars used to describe the new species were collected across the Great Karoo during 2018 and 2019.
Fieldworkers focused on drainage lines, as these are favoured by trapdoor spiders. Survey work took place at 79 sites on farms in the Northern Cape, Western Cape and the Eastern Cape, around towns such as Beaufort West, Richmond, Murraysburg, Jansenville and Willowmore.
All the samples are being kept in the National Collection of Arachnida at the Agricultural Research Council in Pretoria.
Thanks to subsequent genetic and taxonomic work by Brandt, the tally of trapdoor spider species known to be found in the Great Karoo is now 23 species. Experts believe it is possible to find more new species in the arid region.
The survey work was supported through the Karoo BioGap project, which was led by the South African National Biodiversity Institute in the late 2010s and funded through the National Research Foundation. It saw researchers from a host of South African research institutes, including UP, pool their efforts to survey and research the plants and animals of the Great Karoo region.
The aim was to better understand the interconnected ecosystems and sensitive habitats of this notoriously under-surveyed arid region. The endeavour has not only led to the description of various new species of trapdoor spiders, but of scorpions, aloes and freshwater fish new to science too.
“Through projects like the Karoo BioGap Project, we are able to truly start understanding South African biodiversity,” says Robin Lyle of the Agricultural Research Council, who led spider research during the project.
“It’s important to know as much about the region’s biodiversity as possible, given the potential that shale gas fracking, mining, farming and general land-use changes could have on the environment. This foundation biodiversity data could eventually help to understand the impact of climate change within the region.”
In recognition of the impetus that Karoo BioGap gave to the study of spiders, the researchers involved in the Zootaxa paper named one of the new species Stasimopus Karooensis, specimens of which they collected in the Eastern Cape part of the Karoo, around the towns of Jansenville and Pearson.
Another new species was named Stasimopus venterstadensis – The only known specimens of the species were collected in 2018 near Venterstad in sandy soil among buffalo grass and Karoo shrubs.
A male sample of Stasimopus ignis was serendipitously collected from under a doormat at Toonbothasfontein, a farm near Richmond, where the survey team slept during one of their collection trips. A female specimen was found near Hanover, also in the Northern Cape.
“‘Ignis’ refers to the Latin word for fire or flame,” Brandt explains. “The word alludes to the increased frequency of fire in the Nama Karoo. Such events were historically rare, but are likely increasing because of climate change. It also refers to the fact that the female’s body is much redder than that of most other species.”
Brandt’s interest in trapdoor spiders began during her time as an honours student at UP. She received a PhD degree in Zoology at UP in 2023, and has since taken up a postdoctoral position in Bordeaux in France at Inrea, a public research institution that focuses on agriculture, food and the environment. She has published four papers on the trapdoor spiders of the Great Karoo, including one in Evolutionary Biology, in which she sets outguidel ines on how to use the relative size and position (called the average ocular pattern) of trapdoor spiders’ eyes to distinguish between Karoo species.
She named Stasimopus dylani after her husband, Dylan, in recognition of his support and encouragement during the course of her postgraduate studies. The species was collected in sandy soils around Murraysburg, Jansenville and Willowmore, and is thought to be widespread across the Western Cape and Eastern Cape parts of the Karoo.
Stasimopus theaei is named after Lyle’s eight-year-old daughter, Thea, while Stasimopus finni was named after Finn Pirk, the 3-year-old son of co-author Professor Catherine Sole of UP’s Department of Zoology and Entomology. Prof Sole, who was also Brandt’s PhD supervisor, says her son loves “all creepy crawlies”.
Examples of both species were first collected around Somerset East, in an area dominated by low shrubs and aloes.
Pretoria News