taxonID	type	description	language	source
C3791883639F5C83CC2C1FC030A99B63.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The specific name refers to the Latin longus (" long "), which describes both male pedipalp and female spermatheca, and palpus (" palm of the hand " or " feeler ").	en	Chomphuphuang, Narin, Smith, Deborah, Wongvilas, Sitthipong, Varat Sivayyapram,, Songsangchote, Chaowalit, Warrit, Natapot (2017): New species of Southeast Asian Dwarf Tarantula from Thailand: Phlogiellus Pocock, 1897 (Theraphosidae, Selenocosmiinae). ZooKeys 684: 57-73, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558
C3791883639F5C83CC2C1FC030A99B63.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Phlogiellus longipalpus sp. n. was included in the Yamia group of Phlogiellus based on the following morphological characters: male embolus with single retrolateral keel (Fig. 19), anterior eye row slightly procurved, ALE larger than PLE (Fig. 6), clypeus narrow or absent, third claw present on tarsus IV (Haupt & Schmidt 2004; Zhu & Tso 2005). P. longipalpus sp. n. differs from all other Phlogiellus species except P. aper, P. brevipes, P. mutus, P. bundokalbo, P. watasei, and P. moniqueverdezae in lacking a maxillary lyra (Fig. 7). P. longipalpus differs from the latter six species in possessing a long embolus that is more or less 3 times longer than palpal bulb length (Figs 19, 21 - 23; Suppl. material 1, Figs A 1 - A 8) and in the shape of the female spermatheca, which is long with an apical bend (Figs 20, 24; Suppl. material 1, Figs B 1 - B 8). It differs from P. brevipes in possessing 5 spines on the posterior metatarsi (only 2 known in P. brevipes). It differs from P. aper in possessing divided scopulae on tarsus IV (Fig. 18, 28) (Nunn et al., 2016).	en	Chomphuphuang, Narin, Smith, Deborah, Wongvilas, Sitthipong, Varat Sivayyapram,, Songsangchote, Chaowalit, Warrit, Natapot (2017): New species of Southeast Asian Dwarf Tarantula from Thailand: Phlogiellus Pocock, 1897 (Theraphosidae, Selenocosmiinae). ZooKeys 684: 57-73, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558
C3791883639F5C83CC2C1FC030A99B63.taxon	description	Description - Male. Holotype ♂ CUMZ-C 2 - NA 1: Color (in life, Fig. 2): dark brown, carapace black. Total length (including chelicerae) 20.88; cephalothorax 8.38 long, 6.63 wide, 2.0 high (caput); fovea 1.52 wide, procurved, deep; cephalothorax black, with cover of short, whitish brown hairs dorsally, golden yellow to yellowish brown hairs on lateral margins (Fig. 4). Clypeus 0.24; ocular tubercle 0.96 long, 1.47 wide. Anterior eyes with long hairs in front of AME and mid-posterior PME area. Anterior eye row slightly procurved and posterior row slightly recurved; eyes whitish, ALE oval in shape and larger than the round AME (Fig. 6); eye lengths / widths: AME 0.30 / 0.28; ALE 0.39 / 0.27; PLE 0.24 / 0.18; PME 0.21 / 0.12; eye interdistances: AME-AME 0.21; AME-ALE 0.12; AME-PME 0.11; ALE-ALE 0.77; ALE-PME 0.21; PME-PME 0.69; PME-PLE 0.06; PLE-PLE 0.96; and ALE-PLE 0.20. Chelicerae dark, with row of 9 promarginal teeth with rows of orange-red setae (Fig. 9), a series of strikers (> 60), in> 4 horizontal rows (unordered). Strongest / longest strikers on lowest rows. Each striker is needle-form (Fig. 8), lacking filiform ends. Maxillae reddish brown, 2.95 long, 1.55 wide with 115 cuspules, covered with orange-red setae on prolateral surface; maxillary lyra absent (Fig. 7). Labium blackish-brown on the basal half, reddish brown elsewhere; 0.93 long, 1.50 wide, with 202 cuspules (Fig. 13). Sternum dark-brown, covered with 2 types of hairs: strong dark and soft white (Fig. 10); 4.45 long, 3.65 wide with 3 pairs of ovoid sigillae present near lateral margins opposite coxa I, II and III. Sigilla: anterior pair obscured close to sternal margin; median pair 0.27 long, 0.15 wide 0.33 from sternal margin; posterior pair 0.42 long, 0.18 wide 0.60 from sternal margin. Abdomen 9.88 long, 6.13 wide, brownish yellow and hirsute dorsally, dark gray and thickly hirsute laterally and ventrally (Fig. 12). Legs: Pat, Tib, Met and Tar dark brown, prolateral and retrolateral surface of femora dark, thickly covered with long and short grayish white hairs (Fig. 16), coxae and trochanter dark brown dorsally, lighter brown ventrally. Met IV with 5 distal spines. Length of legs, palpal segments and RF shown in Table 1. Scopulae on metatarsi and tarsi I through IV may be undivided, divided longitudinally by several rows of long, straight spiniform setae or absent. Fig. 28 illustrates diagrammatically the state of the scopulae on metatarsi and tarsi of legs I-IV for P. longipalpus and other Phlogiellus species. In addition, we noted whether the extension of the scopulae was complete (running nearly the full length of the tarsus or metatarsus) or reduced in length (e. g., extension 3 / 4 the length of the leg segment). Scopula extension on Met I, complete; Met II, complete; Met III, complete; Met IV, 3 / 4 and denser at distal end than proximal end. Scopula extension on Tar I, complete; Tar II, complete; Tar III, complete; Tar IV, complete but denser at the distal end, and with a small, nearly hairless oval (" bald spot ") at the proximal end. Tar II, III and IV with dense tufts of scopular hair at distal end (Fig. 15). Male tibia I spur absent. Spines: Met I and II: absent; Met III: 8 spines, Met IV: 6. Tar I-III with 2 claws, Tar IV with third claw (Fig. 14); claws covered by dense hair, dorsally with 2 rows of club-shaped setae. Spinnerets white-yellow, covered with dark longer and thinner hairs; PMS 1.16 long, 0.36 wide; PLS 4.92 long basal to apical (2.02, + 1.34, + 1.56), wide (0.64 + 0.72 + 0.41) (Fig. 12). Pedipalps dark gray reddish brown, covered with longer and thinner hairs on tibia; tibia swollen, cymbium with two lobes of light brown shaggy scopulae, bulb and embolus 3.09 long dark reddish brown (Fig. 19), palpal bulb ellipsoid and partly concave, 0.91 long, 0.51 wide; embolus extremely long, thin, curved like a partly twisted horn with sharp tip, with single retrolateral keel (Figs 21 - 23).	en	Chomphuphuang, Narin, Smith, Deborah, Wongvilas, Sitthipong, Varat Sivayyapram,, Songsangchote, Chaowalit, Warrit, Natapot (2017): New species of Southeast Asian Dwarf Tarantula from Thailand: Phlogiellus Pocock, 1897 (Theraphosidae, Selenocosmiinae). ZooKeys 684: 57-73, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558
C3791883639F5C83CC2C1FC030A99B63.taxon	description	Description - Female. Paratype ♀ CUMZ-C 4 - NA 4: Color (in life, Fig. 3): dark brown, carapace brown. Total length (including chelicerae) 17.51; cephalothorax 6.56 long, 4.25 wide 2.12 high (caput); fovea 0.87 wide, procurved, deep; cephalothorax brown, covered with short whitish brown hairs dorsally, golden yellow to yellowish brown hairs on lateral margins (Fig. 5); clypeus 0.15 high; ocular tubercle 0.72 long, 1.14 wide. Anterior eyes with long hairs in front of AME and mid-posterior PME area; anterior eye row slightly procurved and posterior row slightly recurved. Eyes whitish, ALEs oval in shape, larger than the round AMEs. Eye length / width: AME, 0.30 / 0.15; ALE, 0.21 / 0.22; PLE, 0.27 / 0.15; PME, 0.20 / 0.13; Inter-eye distances: AME-AME, 0.14; AME-ALE, 0.11; AME-PME, 0.09; ALE-ALE, 0.57; ALE-PME, 0.16; PME-PME, 0.48; PME-PLE, 0.05; PLE-PLE, 0.66; and ALE-PLE, 0.11. Chelicerae dark orange with row of 10 promarginal teeth, cheliceral face with stridulatory ridges and rows of orange-red setae, a series of strikers (> 60), in> 4 horizontal rows (unordered). Strongest / longest strikers on lowest rows. Each striker needleform, lacking filiform ends (Fig. 8). Maxillae reddish brown, 2.34 long, 1.24 wide with 152 cuspules, prolateral surface of maxilla covered with orange-red setae, and maxillary, and maxillae lyra absent. Labium reddish brown, 0.88 long, 1.28 wide with 271 cuspules. Sternum brownish, covered with 2 types of hair: strong dark and soft white (Fig. 11); sternum 2.9 long, 2.64 wide, with 3 pairs ovoid sigillae present near lateral margins opposite coxa I, II and III. Sigillae: anterior pair obscured close to sternal margin; median pair 0.24 long, 0.15 wide, 0.12 from sternal margin; posterior pair 0.30 long, 0.17 wide, 0.39 from sternal margin. Abdomen 9.50 long, 6.20 wide, gray-yellow and hirsute dorsally, brownish gray and thickly hirsute laterally and ventrally. Legs brownish, thickly covered with grayish white short and long hairs (Fig. 17), coxae and trochantera brown. Met IV with 5 distal spines. Length of legs, palpal segments shown in Table 3. Leg formula (length) IV, I, II, III. Scopulae: Met I, II, III, undivided; Met IV, divided. Tar I, II, undivided; Tar III, IV, divided by several rows of long spines (Fig. 18). Met I, II, III, complete; Met IV, extension 3 / 4, denser at distal end than at proximal end. Scopula extension on Tar I, II, III, IV complete; Tar IV scopula denser at the distal end and with a small, nearly hairless oval (" bald spot ") at the proximal end (see Fig. 18). Hairs of distal scopula on Tar II, III and IV more evenly distributed than in the male, not forming tufts of hair (compare Figs 15, 18). Spines: Met I and II, absent; Met III, 7 spines; Met IV, 6 spines. Tar I-III with 2 claws, Tar IV with third claw, 2 dorsal rows of club-shaped setae. Spinnerets white-yellow, covered with long, thin dark hairs; PMS 0.87 long, 0.48 wide; PLS 3.48 length of segments (from basal to apical) (1.38 + 0.87 + 1.23), width of segments (basal to apical) 0.63 + 0.54 + 0.45. Genitalia: epigastric fold 1.86. Spermathecae (Figs 20, 24): paired, each 0.3 mm wide at base and the pair fused at the base, 1.05 (left) and 1.11 (right) mm long, 0.42 (left) - 0.54 (right) wide, and apically bent; sclerotization heaviest apically, gradually decreasing basally. Variation	en	Chomphuphuang, Narin, Smith, Deborah, Wongvilas, Sitthipong, Varat Sivayyapram,, Songsangchote, Chaowalit, Warrit, Natapot (2017): New species of Southeast Asian Dwarf Tarantula from Thailand: Phlogiellus Pocock, 1897 (Theraphosidae, Selenocosmiinae). ZooKeys 684: 57-73, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558
C3791883639F5C83CC2C1FC030A99B63.taxon	distribution	Distribution and natural history. Specimens were collected near villages in Lampang, Lamphun and Kampangpet provinces at approximately 200 - 500 meters in elevation. The habitat was disturbed by human activity and organic agriculture, including cultivation of mango, coconut, and bamboo (Fig. 25). Some specimens were collected from houses in the rainy season and others in shaded forest habitats; they appear to choose moist habitats. Some nests were built in colonies of termites or ants, which are used as prey (Figs 26 - 27). The nest consists of a shallow (1 - 2 cm deep) subterranean system of silken retreat tubes under stones or logs. One part of their web appeared to be used for accumulated prey scraps. Specimens from Saraburi province were collected in forest under rock and timber.	en	Chomphuphuang, Narin, Smith, Deborah, Wongvilas, Sitthipong, Varat Sivayyapram,, Songsangchote, Chaowalit, Warrit, Natapot (2017): New species of Southeast Asian Dwarf Tarantula from Thailand: Phlogiellus Pocock, 1897 (Theraphosidae, Selenocosmiinae). ZooKeys 684: 57-73, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558
C3791883639F5C83CC2C1FC030A99B63.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Thailand (Central and Northern).	en	Chomphuphuang, Narin, Smith, Deborah, Wongvilas, Sitthipong, Varat Sivayyapram,, Songsangchote, Chaowalit, Warrit, Natapot (2017): New species of Southeast Asian Dwarf Tarantula from Thailand: Phlogiellus Pocock, 1897 (Theraphosidae, Selenocosmiinae). ZooKeys 684: 57-73, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.684.12558
