identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
251387D7FFA73F47FF6FFD18FE9AF872.text	251387D7FFA73F47FF6FFD18FE9AF872.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge 1882	<div><p>Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882</p><p>Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882 (Type species by monotypy: Mago intentus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882).</p><p>Etymology. Despite O. Pickard-Cambridge (1882) having established the combination Mago intenta for the type species, which suggests he deliberately considered the genus to be feminine in gender, the name Mago appears in classic literature being related only to men. In fact, “ Mago ” was a common name used for men in Ancient Carthage, having been given to notorious Carthaginian people, such as a king and the man known as the “father of agriculture”, among others (Perseus Digital Library). Simon (1900) considered the genus to be masculine in gender, and described, for instance, M. vicanus and M. pexus (masculine epithets). Simon’s gender correction was later followed by more recent researchers, such as Mello-Leitão (1940, 1943, 1945, 1947), Caporiacco (1954), Galiano (1963, 1968), Patello &amp; Ruiz (2014) and Costa &amp; Ruiz (2017).</p><p>Diagnosis. Mago is easily identified as an amycine for having pluridentate chelicera and the 3 rd leg much longer than the 4 th (Figs 21–22, 26–27), difference proportionally larger than in most amycines (compare to Figs 42–43, 47–48, for instance). Among amycines, Mago gathers small, dark, ground dwelling species with compact carapaces (thoracic region short, causing an abrupt slope; see Figs 2, 16–17). The male palp has the patella longer than the tibia (Figs 8–9, 29) and the femur with several dorsal spines (Figs 9, 29), besides expanded male endite tips (Figs 4–5, 30–31). The epigyne resembles those of species within other amycine genera, such as Noegus and Hypaeus, with an atrium on the epigynal plate and elongate digitiform glandular ducts on the copulation duct (Fig. 33), but those genera do not include dark, compact species with such peculiar carapace.</p><p>Common characters. Small jumping spiders (about 3.5 mm) with compact dark bodies (Figs 10–13). Male clypeus with strong whitish/yellowish moustache (Fig. 12). Chelicera pluridentate, small and vertical in both sexes, with mastidion in males (Figs 3–4, 14–16). Male palp with slightly curved femur (Figs 9, 29); a curved RTA pointing dorsally and rounded RvTA (Figs 6–9, 28–29); reduced tegulum with large “amycoid loop” in spermophore (Ruiz &amp; Maddison 2015); embolus generally curling around tegulum, varying in length, from short (arch of about 180°, Fig. 28) to long (&gt;540°, Fig. 6), with tip resting in cymbial groove. Generalized leg spination for both sexes (based on M. brimodes sp. nov.): femur I d1-1-1, II d1-1-1, p1di, III d1-1-1, p0 (or p2di), IV d1-1-0; patella I, II 0, III, IV 0 (or r1); tibia I v2-2 -2 (median pair may be asymmetrical), II v1 r-2-2, p1 (or 0-1), III p1 (or 0-1), r1-1, v1 rdi, IV p0, r1-1, v0; metatarsus I, II v2-2, III p1-2, r1-2, v1 r-1r (or v1 r-2), IV p0-1, r0-1 (or 1-1d), v1 p-1r. Abdomen small and rounded in both sexes. Epigyne with an anterior small atrium (Fig. 33), with simple ducts leading to spermathecae, with digitiform glands in the middle portion of copulatory ducts (Figs 33–34).</p><p>Distribution. Known from Ecuador and, possibly, Brazil (the specific locality in the Amazon for the type species is unknown).</p><p>List of species: Mago intentus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882 (type species) and Mago brimodes Ruiz &amp; Maddison sp. nov.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/251387D7FFA73F47FF6FFD18FE9AF872	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S.;Maddison, Wayne P.;Galiano, Maria Elena	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S., Maddison, Wayne P., Galiano, Maria Elena (2019): A revision of the concept of Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882, and proposal of a new genus (Araneae: Salticidae: Amycini). Zootaxa 4658 (1): 124-140, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4658.1.5
251387D7FFA03F43FF6FFF5BFC4DFE17.text	251387D7FFA03F43FF6FFF5BFC4DFE17.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mago intentus O. Pickard-Cambridge 1882	<div><p>Mago intentus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882</p><p>Figs 1–9</p><p>Mago intenta O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882: 439, pl. 31, fig. 14 (male holotype from uncertain locality in the Amazon, Traill leg., deposited in Oxford University Museum, examined, described and illustrated by MEG).</p><p>Mago intentus: Galiano 1968 (340); World Spider Catalog 2019.</p><p>Reconstructed etymology. Latin adjective (= intent, determinate, alert).</p><p>Diagnosis. The male of Mago intentus differs from that of M. brimodes sp. nov. by having a longer embolus (Fig. 6; compare with Fig. 28). Female is unknown.</p><p>Redescription. Male (holotype). Total length: 3.37. Carapace 1.77 long, 1.47 wide and 1.12 high, reddish brown, with brown cephalic region, covered with abundant brown setae. Anterior border with a series of reddish setae. Behind these, on each side, a small band of grayish setae. Ocular quadrangle 0.89 long. Cephalic region almost plane. Anterior eye row 1.30 wide, posterior 1.42 wide. Distance between PME and ALE: 0.20; between PME and PLE: 0.22. Diameter of AME: 0.50. Clypeus 0.20 high, with marginal beard of yellowish white hairs. Fovea slightly behind posterior border of PLE, at a depression (Fig. 1). Anterior half of thoracic region at the same level of cephalic region, then with an abrupt decline, becoming almost vertical (Fig. 2), with a narrow marginal stripe of yellowish setae, interrupted in the middle. Sternum reddish brown, convex, 0.60 long, 0.56 wide (Fig. 4). Labium reddish brown, 0.35 long, 0.30 wide. Endite reddish brown, strongly convex, angled on external tips (Figs 4–5), but with no apophysis or bumps. Chelicera reddish brown, vertical, straight; promargin with five separate teeth; retromargin with five small teeth; no teeth in the groove; fang with small dorsal carina; anterior face plane, with small mastidion (Figs 3–4); external borders with poorly conspicuous transverse striae. Palp robust, with swollen patella (Figs 8–9). Palpal femur 0.76 long, 0.22 wide; patella 0.43 long, 0.22 wide; tibia 0.18 long, 0.20 wide; cymbium 0.50 long. Palpal femur with a series of seven dorsal spines. Dorsal tip of femur and dorsal patella with abundant yellow hairs. Palpal tibia with RTA and RvTA (Fig. 7); Bulb with long embolus (Fig. 6). Legs with internal bump on coxae, more prominent on I (Fig. 4). Trochanters also with ventral bump. Leg I robust. Patellae are narrow at their base and dilated in the middle. Leg III longer and more robust than IV. Tibiae III and IV distally dilated. Tarsi slightly dilated. Leg spination: femur I, II d1-1-1, p1di, III d1-1-1, p0-1-2, IV d1-1-1; patella I 0, II p1, III, IV r1; tibia I v2-2 -2, II v1 r-2-2, p1, III p1-1, r1-1, v1 rdi, IV p1, r1-1, v1 rdi; metatarsus I, II v2-2, III p1-2, r1-2, v1 r-1r, IV p1di, r1-2, v1 p-2. Leg I with abundant ventral setae, not forming fringe. Leg I reddish brown, with yellow metatarsus and tarsus; II–IV yellow, with dark articulations. Abdomen small and cordiform, dorsally yellow with three or four grayish chevrons, and with a pattern of red and white setae (Fig. 1); ventrally yellow.</p><p>Female. Unknown.</p><p>Distribution. Known only from uncertain type locality in the Amazon.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/251387D7FFA03F43FF6FFF5BFC4DFE17	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S.;Maddison, Wayne P.;Galiano, Maria Elena	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S., Maddison, Wayne P., Galiano, Maria Elena (2019): A revision of the concept of Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882, and proposal of a new genus (Araneae: Salticidae: Amycini). Zootaxa 4658 (1): 124-140, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4658.1.5
251387D7FFA33F4CFF6FFA7FFCC4FE74.text	251387D7FFA33F4CFF6FFA7FFCC4FE74.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Mago brimodes Ruiz & Maddison & Galiano 2019	<div><p>Mago brimodes Ruiz &amp; Maddison sp. nov.</p><p>Figs 10–34</p><p>Types. Male holotype from Manakin Trail, Reserva Canandé, Esmeraldas, Ecuador (0.5270–0.5265°N, 79.2092– 79.2089°W), 310 m, 19 Aug. 2011, Maddison, Piascik &amp; Vega (WPM#11-155), deposited in QCAZ. Female paratype with same data, except for <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.2073&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.2076" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.2073/lat 79.2076)">Quail Trail</a> (0.5253–0.5252°N, 79.2076–79.2073°W), 320 m (WPM#11-130), deposited in QCAZ .</p><p>Additional material examined. ECUADOR. Esmeraldas: Reserva Canandé: 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Tanager Trail</a> (0.5222– 0.5221°N, 79.1965–79.1969°W), 580 m (WPM#11-143) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Macaw Trail</a> (0.5179–0.5175°N, 79.1936– 79.1935°W), 590 m (WPM#11-161) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Quail Trail</a> (0.5246°N, 79.2053°W), 320 m (WPM#11-147) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Quail Trail</a> (0.5254–0.5252°N, 79.2080–79.2076°W), 300 m (WPM#11-129) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Quail Trail</a> (0.5253–0.5252°N, 79.2076–79.2073°W), 320 m (WPM#11-130) ; 3♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Manakin Trail</a> (0.5270–0.5265°N, 79.2092–79.2089°W), 310 m (WPM#11-155) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Manakin Trail</a> (0.5263–0.5252°N, 79.2105–79.2099°W), 320 m (WPM#11-152) ; 2♂, Mana- kin <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Trail</a> (0.5273–0.5269°N, 79.2069–79.2066°W), 290 m (WPM#11-156) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Manakin Trail</a> (0.5274–0.5270°N, 79.2089–79.2088°W), 300 m (WPM#11-154) ; 2♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Manakin Trail</a> (0.5279–0.5274°N, 79.2088–79.2036°W), 300 m (WPM#11-153) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Tanager Trail</a> (0.5223–0.5220°N, 79.1958–79.1954°W), 580 m (WPM#11-145) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Quail Trail</a> (0.5235°N, 79.2038–79.2035°W), 400 m (WPM#11-186) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Chocó Tapaculo Trail</a> (0.5218–0.5215°N, 79.2125–79.2124°W), 400 m (WPM#139) ; 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Quail Trail</a> (0.5255–0.5253°N, 79.2073–79.2069°W), 330 m (WPM#11-131) , 1♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Macaw Trail</a> (0.5187–0.5184°N, 79.1942–79.1939°W), 580 m (WPM#11-163) ; 2♂, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">Quail Trail</a> (0.5234–0.5223°N, 79.2033–79.2030°W), 430 m (WPM#11-185) ; 1♂, Quail Trail, DNA voucher d443 (WPM#11-148). <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.1969&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=79.1965" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.1969/lat 79.1965)">All</a> specimens collected by Maddison, Piascik &amp; Vega, 17–23 Aug. 2011 and deposited in UBC- SEM</p><p>.</p><p>Etymology. An adjective from the Greek ( brimodes = stern or indignant), due to the thick eyebrow, and their habit of holding the legs tight against the body, as if a person frowning and with arms crossed.</p><p>Diagnosis. Male differs from that of M. intentus by having a shorter embolus (Fig. 28; compare to Fig. 6). Female is the only one known in the genus (Figs 33–34).</p><p>Description. Male (holotype). Total length: 3.60. Carapace 2.30 long, 1.65 wide, 1.35 high, dark brown, with dense black eyebrow and a pair of lines of white scales around cephalic region (Figs 10–11, 14, 16). Ocular quadrangle 1.20 long. Anterior eye row 1.60 wide, posterior 1.40 wide. Clypeus 0.20 high, with dense, narrow stripe of white setae along border (Figs 12, 14). AME 0.50 in diameter. Chelicera dark brown, small, vertical, with a small mastidion on the face, near the fang articulation (Figs 14, 16); slightly excavated between mastidion and teeth; five separate small teeth on promargin and six teeth on a common base on retromargin; fang with a retrolateral flap form- ing a spoon-like structure (Fig. 15). Palp light brown, with curved femur bearing five dorsal spines, long patella and short embolus (Figs 18, 28–29). Endite light brown, tip curved outwards, with a ventral distal protuberance (Figs 30–31). Labium and sternum dark brown, sternum convex. Legs 1324 (Figs 19–22). Total length of leg I: 4.95 (1.55 + 2.20 + 1.20); II: 3.80 (1.25 + 1.50 + 1.05); III: 4.35 (1.65 + 1.60 + 1.10); IV: 3.50 (1.15 + 1.20 + 1.15). Leg I–II dark brown, fading towards the yellow tarsi; III–IV with dark brown femora, but proximally clear; remaining articles yellow, stained of dark brown on joints. Abdomen dark brown, with poorly defined, narrow stripe of white setae on the anterior border; dorsally with lighter chevrons on posterior half (Figs 10–11, 16); ventrally dark, with four longitudinal light lines. Spinnerets light brown.</p><p>Female (paratype). Total length: 3.40. Carapace 1.87 long, 1.37 wide, 1.00 high. Color pattern as in male (Fig. 13). No eyebrow. Ocular quadrangle 1.00 long. Anterior eye row 1.35 wide, posterior 1.25 wide. Clypeus 0.10 high, with no modified setae (Fig. 17). AME 0.45 in diameter. Chelicera with five separate small teeth on promargin and four teeth on a common base on retromargin. Palp short (Fig. 23). Legs 3142 (Figs 24–27). Total length of leg I: 3.05 (0.95 + 1.25 + 0.85); II: 2.64 (0.88 + 1.00 + 0.76); III: 3.36 (1.26 + 1.21 + 0.89); IV: 2.77 (0.92 + 0.92 + 0.93). Epigyne with short copulatory ducts (Figs 33–34).</p><p>Variation. Males with smaller palps also have smaller mastidia.</p><p>Distribution. Known only from the type locality (Ecuador).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/251387D7FFA33F4CFF6FFA7FFCC4FE74	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S.;Maddison, Wayne P.;Galiano, Maria Elena	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S., Maddison, Wayne P., Galiano, Maria Elena (2019): A revision of the concept of Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882, and proposal of a new genus (Araneae: Salticidae: Amycini). Zootaxa 4658 (1): 124-140, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4658.1.5
251387D7FFAC3F4EFF6FF88BFEFCF949.text	251387D7FFAC3F4EFF6FF88BFEFCF949.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Matinta Ruiz & Maddison & Galiano 2019	<div><p>Matinta Ruiz &amp; Maddison gen. nov.</p><p>Type species: Mago acutidens Simon, 1901 .</p><p>Etymology. The name, to be treated as a feminine Latin noun, refers to a Brazilian folklore figure known as Matinta Pereira, commonly feared in Northern Brazil (= Amazon) for being a witch worn in black who lives in the forest. The association is due to the meaning of the word “mago” in Iberian languages (= wizard), since species being transferred herein to Matinta were previously included in Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge.</p><p>Diagnosis. Amycine species included in Matinta generally have the male palp with a “tegulum” obliquely divided by a thin slit, with the two “tegular” halves articulated by a poorly developed hematodocha (Figs 35–36; see also Patello &amp; Ruiz 2014: figs 7–10). The embolus is usually short, wrapping less than 180° around the tegulum, with the tip resting in a cymbial groove. [In an alternative interpretation of the bulb, the tegulum would be reduced and represented only by the proximal half prior to the hematodocha; the distal “tegular” half would be, in fact, a modification of the embolar base; in this alternative, the embolus would be articulated with the reduced tegulum and rise at 2 o’clock in the left palp, reaching almost 360°.] The femur is straight (Fig. 39). Epigynal plate varies from having a common atrium (see Galiano 1968: fig. 59) to a pair of separate copulation openings (see Patello &amp; Ruiz 2014: fig. 32), but with no digitiform gland ducts. The legs (Figs 40–43, 45–48) are relatively shorter and thicker than in many other amycines, such as Noegus, Hypaeus, Amycus and Acragas . This gives them a more robust appearance than most other larger species of amycines (Figs 37–38). Besides having the “tegular” slit, species of Matinta differ from Mago in the 16SND1 gene region (see below), in having the 3 rd and 4 th legs coequal in length, the male palp patella and tibia coequal in length, and the larger and less compact body.</p><p>Note. The boundaries of amycine genera are still being revised. The diagnostic “tegular” slit is not obvious in Matinta procax (Simon, 1900) comb. nov., Matinta saperda (Simon, 1900) comb. nov. and in Matinta pardo (Costa &amp; Ruiz, 2017) comb. nov. However, these three species have the subtegulum exposed on the retrolateral side of the male palp, a feature also seen in Matinta apophysis (Costa &amp; Ruiz, 2017) comb. nov. (which has the “tegular” slit), but not in the remaining species of the genus. These are all kept in Matinta based on the overall similarity. Although under a new genus name, this is conservative in preserving the existing concept of the group. A cladistic analysis needs to be carried out to confirm the monophyly of the genus.</p><p>List of species. The type species Matinta acutidens (Simon, 1900) comb. nov. and closely related species (treated as the acutidens species-group) received recent redescriptions, diagnoses and updates on distribution records (Patello &amp; Ruiz 2014). The text below is only intended to establish new combinations and a list of the species included in the genus (for known sexes and details on nomenclatural acts, see World Spider Catalag (2019) and listed literature):</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/251387D7FFAC3F4EFF6FF88BFEFCF949	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S.;Maddison, Wayne P.;Galiano, Maria Elena	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S., Maddison, Wayne P., Galiano, Maria Elena (2019): A revision of the concept of Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882, and proposal of a new genus (Araneae: Salticidae: Amycini). Zootaxa 4658 (1): 124-140, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4658.1.5
251387D7FFA83F4BFF6FF8A6FBD8FEDB.text	251387D7FFA83F4BFF6FF8A6FBD8FEDB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Noegus dentichelis (Crane 1949) Ruiz & Maddison & Galiano 2019	<div><p>Noegus dentichelis (Crane, 1949) comb. nov.</p><p>Mago dentichelis Crane, 1949: 49, fig. 8; World Spider Catalog 2019. Note. Despite having an abdominal color pattern similar to that of the type species of Mago (see Crane 1949, fig. 8A), the resemblance is only superficial. The shape and position of the mastidion and, more importantly, the promarginal teeth (see Crane 1949, fig. 8C) support the transfer of this species to Noegus . Moreover, the thoracic region of the carapace does not have the typical abrupt decline of Mago (see Crane 1949, fig. 8B).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/251387D7FFA83F4BFF6FF8A6FBD8FEDB	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S.;Maddison, Wayne P.;Galiano, Maria Elena	Ruiz, Gustavo R. S., Maddison, Wayne P., Galiano, Maria Elena (2019): A revision of the concept of Mago O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882, and proposal of a new genus (Araneae: Salticidae: Amycini). Zootaxa 4658 (1): 124-140, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4658.1.5
