taxonID	type	description	language	source
D26F87D82965FFD17D680039FF17FCAA.taxon	materials_examined	Type species: S. bigal Maddison, 2006	en	Galvis, William (2020): The first described female of the South American jumping spider genus Sumakuru Maddison, 2016 (Araneae: Salticidae: Lyssomaninae). Peckhamia 209 (1): 1-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7169447
D26F87D82965FFD17D680039FF17FCAA.taxon	diagnosis	Amended diagnosis. Within the Lyssomaninae, female Sumakuru can be easily identified by their combination of long copulatory ducts and very long glandular ducts on a single pair of rounded spermathecae. In addition, Sumakuru females present a bulging epigynal plate, rounded posteriorly. Both males and females of the genus are very small in comparison with most of the remaining species in the subfamily.	en	Galvis, William (2020): The first described female of the South American jumping spider genus Sumakuru Maddison, 2016 (Araneae: Salticidae: Lyssomaninae). Peckhamia 209 (1): 1-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7169447
D26F87D82965FFD37D660168FA28FCC0.taxon	description	Figures 1 a-d	en	Galvis, William (2020): The first described female of the South American jumping spider genus Sumakuru Maddison, 2016 (Araneae: Salticidae: Lyssomaninae). Peckhamia 209 (1): 1-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7169447
D26F87D82965FFD37D660168FA28FCC0.taxon	materials_examined	Material examined. 1 ♂ from Colombia, NarinEo, Barbacoas, Altaquer, RÍ 4 o NDambÍ 4 Natural Reserve, 1.28455 ° N, 78.08840 ° W, 1262 m; 1 ♀, same locality, 6 Jun 2017, W. Galvis, ICN-Ar 9688. Note. For diagnosis of the male of this species, see Galvis (2017). In general, Sumukuru species are smaller than those of any other lyssomanine genus. Females of the other species in this genus are not known.	en	Galvis, William (2020): The first described female of the South American jumping spider genus Sumakuru Maddison, 2016 (Araneae: Salticidae: Lyssomaninae). Peckhamia 209 (1): 1-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7169447
D26F87D82965FFD37D660168FA28FCC0.taxon	description	Description. Female (ICN-Ar 9688, Figures 1 a-d). Total length: 2.56. Carapace length: 1.00, width: 0.84. Carapace high, elongate and white (Figures 1 a, d). OC: 0.64, with abundant yellow hairs. Width of eye rows, first: 0.61; second: 0.56; third: 0.22; fourth: 0.45. Diameter AME: 0.31; ALE: 0.18; PME: 0.04; PLE: 0.13. Clypeus low (0.14 height). Chelicera length: 0.46, white, vertical, with three retromarginal and three promarginal teeth. Sternum length: 0.66; width: 0.53, white. Labium length: 0.08; width: 0.12, whitish. Legs all white, with distal and retrolateral dark marks on femur I, and tibia I-IV, in addition with dark distal tips on metatarsus I-IV. Legs I II IV III. Leg macrosetae: Femur I d 1 di, p 1 di; III p 1 di. Patella I-IV d 1 di. Tibia I-II v 2 - 0 - 2 - 2. Metatarsus I-II v 2 - 2 - 2. Abdomen cylindrical and white, without any pattern (Figure 1 d), 1.56 long, 0.92 wide. Epigyne (Figures 1 b-c): epigynal plate small, weakly sclerotized, with a posterior rounded border; two very small copulatory openings, without sclerotization, medially and anteriorly located; copulatory ducts long and weakly sclerotized, with membranous anterior part; spermathecae rounded, with a long, posterior glandular duct.	en	Galvis, William (2020): The first described female of the South American jumping spider genus Sumakuru Maddison, 2016 (Araneae: Salticidae: Lyssomaninae). Peckhamia 209 (1): 1-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7169447
D26F87D82965FFD37D660168FA28FCC0.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Known only from its type locality in Southwestern Colombia (Galvis, 2017). The RÍ 4 o NDambÍ 4 Natural Reserve is located in a secondary and highly-conserved Chocoan rainforest within the Choco 4 - Darie 4 n province, Pacific Dominion (Brazilian subregion) of the Neotropical region (Morrone, 2014). Notes on Microhabitat. The male of S. felca was caught in a Malaise trap together with the holotype male of Lyssomanes perafani Galvis, 2017 (Galvis, 2017). The female S. felca was collected manually at night, in the middle of a light rain, being active, on the upper surface of a leaf of the false bird-of-paradise plant (Heliconiaceae). It can be extremely fast and very difficult to see because it has the same coloration as the surface of the leaf, and its small size. Given these characteristics at first sight this appeared to be a juvenile of the genus Lyssomanes. The plant where the female was collected was located next to a horse path, little frequented, inside the forest, which is extremely humid and rainy. Despite the great effort of collection (about eight hours / day for five days), carried out together with other four people in the same location and surroundings, only this single female was collected. This suggests that the abundance of the species in this ecosystem is low, or the species possesses unknown ecological habits that do not allow a greater collection of specimens.	en	Galvis, William (2020): The first described female of the South American jumping spider genus Sumakuru Maddison, 2016 (Araneae: Salticidae: Lyssomaninae). Peckhamia 209 (1): 1-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7169447
