identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03C08793FE51D84C3E1DFC5A76A0FEBD.text	03C08793FE51D84C3E1DFC5A76A0FEBD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops Brescovit, Rheims 2012	<div><p>KEY TO SPECIES OF PREDATOROONOPS</p><p>1. Males.......................... 2</p><p>– Females (unknown in P. phillips)...... 18</p><p>2. Chelicerae with one or two frontal furrows...3</p><p>– Chelicerae without frontal furrow...... 13</p><p>3. Chelicerae with median furrow absent and distal dorsally curved apophysis (fig. 23)................................. P. vallarta</p><p>– Chelicerae with median furrow present.... 4</p><p>4. Chelicerae with subdistal furrow inconspicuous, presenting a group of setae (fig. 22)................................ P. dillon</p><p>– Chelicerae with well-developed subdistal furrow (figs. 13–21).................. 5</p><p>5. Chelicerae with distal dorsally curved apophysis (fig. 13)..................... 6</p><p>– Chelicerae without distal dorsally curved apophysis....................... 9</p><p>6. Chelicerae with distal dorsally curved apophysis long........................ 7</p><p>– Chelicerae with distal dorsally curved apophysis short (fig. 14)........... P. poncho</p><p>7. Chelicerae with long median furrow, occupying almost all anterior surface (fig. 16)... P. valverde</p><p>– Chelicerae with shorter median furrow occupying half of anterior surface (figs. 13, 15).... 8</p><p>8. Chelicerae with distal apophysis narrow, without apophysis on the basal condyle (fig. 13)............ P. schwarzeneggeri</p><p>– Chelicerae with distal apophysis wide, with apophysis on the basal condyle (fig. 15).............................. P. billy</p><p>9. Chelicerae with apophysis on basal condyle (figs. 18–21)..................... 10</p><p>– Chelicerae without apophysis on the basal condyle (fig.17)............... P. blain</p><p>10. Clypeus two times longer than diameter of the OMA; median furrow very small (fig. 20)............... P. rickhawkins</p><p>– Clypeus as long as diameter of OMA; median furrow conspicuous (fig. 18).......... 11</p><p>11. Chelicerae with distal apophysis elongated, very narrow and subdistal apophysis curved (fig. 19).................... P. anna</p><p>– Chelicerae with distal and subdistal apophysis short (figs. 18, 21)............... 12</p><p>12. Chelicerae with distal apophysis distally bifid, median furrow short (fig. 21).... P. dutch</p><p>– Chelicerae with distal apophysis area truncat- ed, median furrow triangular (fig. 18)........................... P. maceliot</p><p>13. Clypeus with distinct and robust needlelike setae (figs. 25, 29)................. 14</p><p>– Clypeus without robust needlelike setae (figs. 24, 26–28)................... 15</p><p>14. Subdistal apophysis curved dorsally (fig. 29)......................... P. olddemon</p><p>– Subdistal apophysis long, racket shaped at tip (fig. 25)................... P. yautja</p><p>15. Chelicerae with very large quadrate projection on the middle surface (fig. 28)............................. P. chicano</p><p>– Chelicerae without frontal projection... 16</p><p>16. Distal apophysis forming a slender sclerotized black branch with narrow tip (figs. 24, 335)..................... P. phillips</p><p>– Distal apophysis forming a slender sclerotized black branch with flattened tips (figs. 26– 27)............................ 17</p><p>17. Distal apophysis trifid on the distal area (figs. 27, 417–419)......... P. mctiernani</p><p>– Distal apophysis sinuous, sulcated at tip (figs. 26, 370–371).......... P. peterhalli</p><p>18. Anterior receptaculum larger than posterior receptaculum (figs. 64, 395).......... 19</p><p>– Anterior receptaculum smaller than or of similar size as posterior receptaculum (figs. 66, 68, 182).................. 20</p><p>19. Anterior receptaculum cordiform, apodema plate M-shaped (fig. 64)................................. P. schwarzeneggeri</p><p>– Anterior receptaculum subrectangular, apodema with coiled base (fig. 395).............................. P. peterhalli</p><p>20. Anterior and posterior receptaculum fused almost indistinguishable (figs. 397, 399)... 21</p><p>– Anterior and posterior receptaculum easily distinguishable (figs. 66, 177)......... 22</p><p>21. Receptaculum peanut shaped (fig. 399)............................ P. chicano</p><p>– Receptaculum rectangular (fig. 397).......................... P. mctiernani</p><p>22. Posterior receptaculum large, squared, with very short anterior receptaculum (figs. 278– 279)...................... P. dillon</p><p>– Posterior receptaculum not larger than the anterior receptaculum (figs. 68, 70, 282)... 23</p><p>23. Anterior receptaculum T-shaped distally (fig. 182)........................ 24</p><p>– Anterior receptaculum not T-shaped.... 26</p><p>24. Apodema process originating at the middle of the apodema plate (fig. 401)............................... P. olddemon</p><p>– Apodema process originating at the distal third of the apodema plate (figs. 182, 282)..... 25</p><p>25. Posterior receptaculum cordiform (fig. 182).................. P. rickhawkins</p><p>– Posterior receptaculum nose shaped (fig. 282)...................... P. yautja</p><p>26. Anterior receptaculum subtriangular (figs. 68, 70, 177).......................... 27</p><p>– Anterior receptaculum cylindrical (figs. 66, 179)........................... 29</p><p>27. Posterior receptaculum cylindrical, apodema plate flattened distally (figs. 68, 70)..... 28</p><p>– Posterior receptaculum globose, apodema plate coiled, slender in the distal area (fig. 177)................. P. maceliot</p><p>28. Apodema plate U-shaped, flattened, posterior receptaculum elongated distally (figs. 70– 71)..................... P. valverde</p><p>– Apodema plate narrow medially, posterior receptaculum U-shaped distally (figs. 68– 69)........................ P. billy</p><p>29. Apodema plate Z-shaped; posterior receptaculum large, rounded at tip (figs. 66–67)............................. P. poncho</p><p>– Apodema plate not Z-shaped, posterior receptaculum small, with variable tip (figs. 174, 179, 276)................ 30</p><p>30. Apodemaplate U-shaped in ventral view (figs. 174, 276, 280)................ 31</p><p>– Apodema plate long and crossed in the distal area in ventral view (fig. 179)..... P. anna</p><p>31. Posterior receptaculum with elongated distal area (figs. 174, 280)................ 32</p><p>– Posterior receptaculum not elongated in the distal area (fig. 276)........... P. dutch</p><p>32. Posterior receptaculum drop shaped; apodema plate with sinuous apodema process (figs. 280–281).............. P. vallarta</p><p>– Posterior receptaculum cylindrical, with elongated distal area, apodema plate with curved apodema process (figs. 174–176)... P. blain</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE51D84C3E1DFC5A76A0FEBD	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE56D84C3DF7F9D77600FD2D.text	03C08793FE56D84C3DF7F9D77600FD2D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops schwarzeneggeri Brescovit & Bonaldo & Santos & Ott & Rheims 2012	<div><p>The schwarzeneggeri Group</p><p>This group is characterized by the presence of a distinctive median furrow and a subdistal furrow on the prolateral surface and distal projections of the chelicerae (figs. 13– 22); and a long, sclerotized groove at the lateral anterior border of the carapace, with the cephalic area strongly elevated (figs. 39, 80). Eleven species are herein included: schwarzeneggeri (the type species), poncho, billy, valverde, blain, maceliot, anna, rickhawkins, dutch, dillon, and vallarta .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE56D84C3DF7F9D77600FD2D	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE56D84D3DA1FB657113F90C.text	03C08793FE56D84D3DA1FB657113F90C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops schwarzeneggeri Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops schwarzeneggeri Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott, new species Figures 13, 30–65; map 1</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Fazenda Santa Helena, Pinheiral, 22 ° 319120S, 43 ° 599480W, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Nov. 5–11, 1999, A.D. Brescovit et al.), deposited in IBSP 66880 (PBI_OON 10909) and IBSP 66878 (PBI_OON 10910), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a patronym in honor of the main actor in ‘‘Predator’’ movie, Arnold Schwarzenegger, who plays Major Alan ‘‘Dutch’’ Schaefer, the leader of a Special Forces elite team on a mission to rescue hostages from guerrilla territory in Central America.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops schwarzeneggeri resemble those of P. billy and P. valverde by the long and dorsally curved distal apophysis at the chelicerae (figs. 15–16) but can be distinguished from these species by the larger median furrow, very narrow subdistal furrow, absence of condylar apophysis (fig. 13). Females can be easily distinguished from all other species by the large cordiform anterior receptaculum, with M-shaped apodema plate with lateral apodema process (fig. 64) in the internal genitalia.</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10909): Total length 1.88. Carapace 0.85 long, 0.68 wide. Eyes: ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.10, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace pale orange, with brown stripe along margin of cephalic area (fig. 38), anterolateral corners with sclerotized triangular projection (fig. 39). Chelicerae brown. Sternum, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 13). Chelicerae anterior face with large triangular median furrow, subdistal narrow furrow, lateral subdistal apophysis, dorsally curved distal apophysis and subtriangular condyle apophysis (fig. 13). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.7 long. Leg spination: femur I v2-2-2; II d1-0-0; v2-2-2; tibia I v2-2- 2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III, IV d1-0-0; metatarsi: I–II v2-2-2. Male palp proximal segments yellow; cymbium yellow, bulb white, slender hyaline process with large base (fig. 43).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON 10910): Total length 2.10. Carapace 0.86 long, 0.77 wide. Eyes: ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace without pattern. Chelicerae, endites, and labium yellow. Abdomen dorsum white. Leg spination: femur I v2-1-2; II v2-2-0; III, IV d1-0-0; tibia I 2-2-2-2-2, II 2-2- 2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p1-1-0; r0-1-0; IV p1-1-0;</p><p>v0-0-2; r1-1-0; metatarsus I 2-2-2-2, II 2-2-2- 2, III d0-1-0; v0-0-2; IV p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1- 1. Internal genitalia with cordiform anterior receptaculum and cordiform posterior receptaculum (figs. 56, 64); M-shaped apodema plate with elongated apodema process (figs. 56–57, 64–65).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Pinheiral, 22 ° 319120S, 43 ° 599480W, Fazenda Santa Helena, 22 ° 349S, 44 ° 219W, Nov. 5–11, 1999 (IBSP 66862, PBI _OON 10975), 1♀; (IBSP 66864, PBI _OON 11006) , 18; (IBSP 66868–66869, PBI _OON 11004; 11119), 28; (IBSP 66869–66870, PBI _OON 11005; 11119), 18; (IBSP 66877, PBI _11009), 18; (IBSP 66881, PBI _OON 11002), 1♀; (IBSP 66884, PBI _OON 11008), 28 1♀; (IBSP 66886, PBI _OON 11120), 18; (IBSP 66890–66891, PBI 11003; 10974), 18 1♀; (IBSP 160842, PBI _OON 11007), 1♀; (IBSP 160843, PBI _OON 11106), 28; all collected by A.D. Brescovit.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality, in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (map 1)</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE56D84D3DA1FB657113F90C	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE5AD8423F63FD277625FAF1.text	03C08793FE5AD8423F63FD277625FAF1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops poncho Brescovit, Rheims 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops poncho Brescovit, Rheims,</p><p>and Ott, new species</p><p>Figures 14, 66–67, 72–102; map 4 TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Parque Nacional da Serra dos Órgãos, 22 ° 279S, 42 ° 599W, Teresópolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Jul. 18–22, 2001, Equipe Biota) deposited in IBSP 135880 (PBI_OON 11182). ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a nickname for Jorge ‘‘Poncho’’ Ramirez, played by Richard Chaves in the movie ‘‘Predator’’; Poncho is a Chicano who speaks fluent Spanish and shows a sarcastic wit.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops poncho resemble those of P. schwarzeneggeri, P. billy, and P. valverde by the presence of a curved distal apophysis in the chelicerae (figs. 13, 15–16). It can be distinguished from these species by the shorter distal apophysis and very large subdistal furrow (fig. 14). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species of the genus by the short distal cylindrical area of the anterior receptaculum and Z-shaped apodema plate with apodema process in the female epigynum (fig. 66).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON_11182): Total length 2.05. Carapace 0.95 long, 0.77 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.13, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace pale orange, without any pattern, anterolateral corners with sclerotized triangular projection (fig. 80). Sternum pale orange. Chelicerae brown, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 14). Chelicerae anterior face with small triangular median furrow, elongated subdistal furrow, stout lateral subdistal apophysis, short distal, dorsally curved apophysis, condylar projection absent (fig. 14). Abdomen dorsum pale white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.85 long. Leg spination: femur I v1-2-2; II d1-0-0; v0-2-2; III–IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-0; IV d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0- 1-2; r0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2- 2, III d0-0-1; v0-0-2; r1-1-0; IV d0-1-1; p0-1- 1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Male palp proximal segments pale orange; cymbium yellow, bulb white with truncate base (figs. 86, 89); slender hyaline process with large base (fig. 86).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_11182): Total length 2.35. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.75 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Abdomen dorsum white. Legs: femur I 0.73 long. Internal genitalia, when connected, with hat-shaped anterior receptaculum (figs. 66, 102) and globose posterior receptaculum (figs. 66–67), when separated, presents a conical tip (figs. 100–101); Z-shaped apodema plate with short apodema process (figs. 66–67, 100–101).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Teresópolis, Parque Nacional da Serra dos Órgãos, 22 ° 279S, 42 ° 599W Jul. 18–22, 2001, pitfall (Equipe Biota, IBSP 135874–135891, PBI_OON 11129, 11178– 11184, 11831–11839), 188 8♀.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (map 4).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE5AD8423F63FD277625FAF1	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE58D8453DB0FD7C7647FA61.text	03C08793FE58D8453DB0FD7C7647FA61.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops billy Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops billy Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott, new species</p><p>Figures 11–12, 15, 68–69, 103–125; map 1</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Floresta da Cicuta, 22 ° 249–22 ° 389S, 44 ° 099–44 ° 209W, Volta Redonda, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Jun. 11–18, 2001, Equipe Biota), deposited in IBSP 136097 (PBI_OON 11174).</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a nickname for Billy Sole, played by Sonny Landham. In ’’Predator,’’ Billy is a Native American tracker.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males de Predatoroonops billy resemble those of P. schwarzeneggeri and P. valverde by the presence of long, distal dorsally curved apophysis in the chelicerae (figs. 13, 16) but can be separated from them by the larger subdistal apophysis, subdistal furrow (fig. 15). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species of the genus by the subtriangular, wrinkled anterior receptaculum, distally rounded posterior receptaculum, apodema process enlarged at the extremities (fig. 68).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON_11174): Total length 1.75. Carapace 0.87 long, 0.70 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace yellow, with brown stripe along margin of cephalic area, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (fig. 106). Sternum yellow. Chelicerae, endites, and labium orange. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 15). Chelicerae anterior face with short triangular median furrow, elongated subdistal furrow, stout, sclerotized lateral subdistal apophysis, long, distally upcurved apophysis; condylar projection absent (fig. 15). Abdomen dorsum pale orange. Legs yellow, femur I 0.75 long. Leg spination: femur: I v1-2-2; II v0-2-2; III– IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-1-0; v0-1-2; r0-1-1; IV d0-1-0; p0- 1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-1-2; r0-1-1; IV p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Male palp proximal segments yellow; cymbium yellow; bulb white, long laminar hyaline process (figs. 109, 111).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_11174): Total length 2.08. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.75 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Chelicerae, endites, and labium pale orange. Abdomen dorsum orange. Leg: femur I 0.73. Leg spination: femur I v1-2-2; II v0-2-2; III– IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-0-1; r0-1-1; IV d0-1-0; p0-1- 1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2- 2-2-2, III v0-1-1; r0-1-1, IV p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0- 1-1. Internal genitalia with short; triangular anterior receptaculum and short and rounded posterior receptaculum (figs. 68–69, 122– 123); apodema plate curved, narrowed distally, with elongated apodema process, enlarged at extremities (figs. 68, 122–125).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Volta Redonda, Floresta da Cicuta, 22 ° 249–22 ° 389S, 44 ° 099–44 ° 209W, pitfall, Jun. 11–18, 2001 (Equipe Biota, IBSP 136071–136102, PBI _ OON 11150–11177), 188 16♀ ; Paraíba do Sul, Fazenda Maravilha, 22 ° 129S, 43 ° 169W, March 17–21, 2001, pitfall, (Equipe Biota, IBSP 136644, PBI _ OON 11149), 18 .</p><p>DISTRIBUTION. Known only from the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (map 1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE58D8453DB0FD7C7647FA61	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE5FD8473DCDFD9B7128FE26.text	03C08793FE5FD8473DCDFD9B7128FE26.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops valverde Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops valverde Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott, new species</p><p>Figures 8, 16, 70–71, 126–152; map 1</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Enseada das Palmas, Ilha Grande, 23 ° 89260S, 44 ° 149500W, Angra dos Reis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Feb. 2–12, 1997, M. Ramirez), deposited in IBSP 133531 (PBI_OON_11077).</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the South/Central American country Val Verde, a fictional country created for ‘‘Predator’’ by Hollywood filmmakers, to avoid getting into legal or diplomatic disputes.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops valverde resemble those of P. schwartzaneggeri and P. billy by the presence of a long, dorsally curved distal apophysis in the chelicerae (figs. 13, 15) but can be separated from these species by the longer subdistal furrow, short subdistal apophysis (figs. 16, 132). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the triangular anterior receptaculum, cylindrical posterior receptaculum with slender tip (figs. 70–71, 150–152).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON_11077): Total length 1.95. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.75 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace pale orange, without any pattern, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (fig. 134). Sternum, chelicerae, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 16). Chelicerae anterior face with long, recurved triangular median furrow, short subdistal narrow furrow, narrowed lateral subdistal apophysis, long dorsally curved distal apophysis and condylar projection absent (fig. 16). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.80. Leg spination: femur: I v2-2-1; II v2-2- 0; III d1-1-0, tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III v0-1-1; IV p1-0-0; v0-1-1; r1-1-0; metatarsi I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v1-2-2; IV p0-0-1; v0-1-2; r0-0-1. Male palp proximal segments white; cymbium yellow; bulb white; large slender hyaline process (fig. 137).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_11077): Total length 2.10. Carapace 0.95 long, 0.82 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Abdomen dorsum pale white. Legs: femur I 0.75. Leg spination: femur I v2-2-1; II v2-2-0; III d1-1-0, tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III–IV v0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2- 2-2, III v0-1-2; IV p1-1-0; v0-1-0; r1-1-0. Internal genitalia with triangular anterior receptaculum and posterior receptaculum with slender tip (figs. 70–71, 150–152); elongated apodema plate flattened, not enlarged laterally, with small and globose apodema process (figs. 70–71).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Angra dos Reis, Ilha Grande,</p><p>23 ° 89260S, 44 ° 149500W, Enseada das Palmas, Feb. 2–12, 1997 (MACN, PBI _OON_11079), 28 2♀; (IBSP 133527, PBI _OON 11201), 2♀; (IBSP 133533, PBI _OON 11203), 18; (IBSP 133530, PBI _OON 11076), 1♀; (IBSP 133528, PBI _OON 11202), 18; (IBSP 133529, PBI _OON 11075, 18 1♀), all collected by M. Ramirez.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (map 1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE5FD8473DCDFD9B7128FE26	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE5DD8783DD0FA5271CBFAE8.text	03C08793FE5DD8783DD0FA5271CBFAE8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops blain Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops blain Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott, new species</p><p>Figures 17, 153–176; map 2</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Parque da Cidade Joventino Silva, 12 ° 599570S 38 ° 289160W, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil (Aug. 22–Sept. 03, 2008; C. Queiróz and D. Mendes) deposited in IBSP 125541 (PBI _OON 11097) .</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the character Blain Cooper, played by Jesse Ventura, in the movie ‘‘Predator’’; he often chews tobacco and wears a battered old slouch hat.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops blain differ from those of the remaining species by the chelicerae with large, triangular subdistal furrow (figs. 17, 156), short lateral subdistal apophysis short and truncated; short, bifid distal projections (fig. 17). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the very long anterior receptaculum with globose tip, short with sinuous posterior receptaculum (figs. 174– 176).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10997): Total length 1.99. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.60 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace orange, without any pattern, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 155, 158). Sternum yellow-brown. Chelicerae, endites, and labium orange-brown. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 17). Chelicerae anterior face with small median furrow, subdistal narrow furrow large triangular, lateral subdistal apophysis short and truncated, short and bifid distal projections, condylar projection absent (fig. 17). Abdomen dorsum pale orange. Legs orange, femur I 0.80 long. Leg spination: femur I d1-0-0; v2- 2-1; II d1-0-0; v0-2-2; III d1-0-0; IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III p0-0-1; v0-1-2; r0-0-1; IV p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-1- 2; r0-0-1; IV d0-1-0; p0-0-1; v1-0-2; r0-0-1. Male palp proximal segments orange-brown; cymbium pale orange, bulb yellow, slender hyaline process narrow and twisted with laminar hyaline process (figs. 161–163).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_0011097): Total length 2.35. Carapace 0.95 long, 0.75 wide. ALE 0.12, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Abdomen dorsum orange. Legs: femur I 0.80 long. Leg spination: femur I v2-2-1; II v0-2-2; III d1-0-0; IV d1-1-0; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2- 2-2-2-2, III p1-1-0; v0-2-2; r1-1-0; IV p1-1-0; v1-0-2; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2- 2-2, III v0-1-1; r1-1-0; IV d0-1-0; p1-1-1; v1-0- 2; r1-1-1. Internal genitalia with very long anterior receptaculum with globose tip and short and sinuous posterior receptaculum (figs. 174–176); long and semicircular apodema plate with elongated and sinuous apodema process (figs. 175–176).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Bahia: Salvador, Parque da Cidade Joventino Silva, 12 ° 58960S, 38 ° 319W, Aug. 22–Sept. 03, 2008, pitfall (C. Queiróz and D. Mendes, IBSP 125537–125540, PBI _ OON 11091– 11092, 11094, 11096; IBSP 125542–125543, PBI _OON 11093, 11095), 78 1♀ ; Cachoeira, Comunidade de São Francisco de Paraguaçu, Reserva de Peninha, 13 ° 4590S, 40 ° 1290W, pitfall (M. Peres et al., IBSP 120280, PBI _ OON 10997), 18 .</p><p>DISTRIBUTION. Known only from the state of Bahia, Brazil (map 2).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE5DD8783DD0FA5271CBFAE8	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE62D87D3DA9FD1C7338FE26.text	03C08793FE62D87D3DA9FD1C7338FE26.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops maceliot Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops maceliot Brescovit, Rheims, and Ott, new species</p><p>Figures 18, 177–178, 184–202; map 4</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Parque Estadual de Ilhabela (23 ° 509530S 45 ° 209540W), Ilhabela, São Paulo, Brazil (Oct. 9–15, 2001, Equipe Biota), deposited in IBSP 57385 and 57382 (PBI_OON 10995– 10996), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the character Mac Eliot, played by Bill Duke in the movie ‘‘Predator’’; Mac is a close friend of Blain’s and served with him in Vietnam.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops maceliot resemble those of P. blain by the small median furrow and by the triangular subdistal furrow. It differs from this species by the much smaller subdistal furrow, subdistal and distal apophysis with distal area truncated apically (fig. 18), without bifid apophysis. Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the cordiform posterior receptaculum with a short distal projection, apodema plate with twisted tip (figs. 177–178).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10995): Total length 1.70. Carapace 0.85 long, 0.60 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.08, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace pale orange, with brown stripe along margin of cephalic area, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 186, 189). Sternum yellow. Chelicerae, endites, and labium pale orange. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 18). Chelicerae anterior face with short triangular median furrow, subdistal narrow furrow inconspicuous and triangular, subdistal and distal apophysis absent, distal area truncated, subtriangular condylar projection present (fig. 18). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.70 long. Leg spination: femora: I–II v2-2-1; III–IV d1-0- 0; tibiae I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-0-1; v0-2-2; r0-0-1; IV d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-2-2; IV p0-0-1; v0-1-2; r0-0-1. Male palp proximal segments yellow; cymbium yellow; bulb white, slender hyaline process with conspicuous base (fig. 192).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON 10996): Total length 2.08. Carapace 0.75 long, 0.55 wide. ALE 0.08, PLE 0.08, PME 0.10, ALE-ALE 0.06. Abdomen dorsum white. Legs: femur I 0.62 long. Leg spination: femora: I p0-1-1; v0-0-1; II p0-1-1; v2-2-1; III d1-1-0; IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-0-1; p0-1-1; v0-1-1; r0-0-1; IV d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v1-1-2; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v2-0- 1; r1-1-0; IV p0-1-1; v1-1-2; r0-0-1. Internal genitalia with compact anterior receptaculum and cordiform posterior receptaculum with a short distal projection; long and sinuous apodema plate with twisted tip and short and curved apodema process (figs. 177–178).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Rio de Janeiro, Parque Nacional da Tijuca, 22 ° 569170S 43 ° 139520. Vale da Piedade, Gávea, Jan. 18, 2005 (D.R. Pedroso, MNRJ 6176, PBI _OON 11854), 18 1♀ ; Gávea, Jan. 18, 2005 (O. Villareal, MNRJ 6202, PBI _OON 11852), 1♀ ; Morro do Archer, Jan. 19, 2005 (T.S. Moreira, MNRJ 6206, PBI _OON 11853), 1♀ ; Morro do Archer, Jan. 19, 2005 (D.R. Pedroso, MNRJ 6208, PBI _OON 11855), 1♀ .</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the states of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (map 4).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE62D87D3DA9FD1C7338FE26	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE67D87D3F88FA5271EDF9CC.text	03C08793FE67D87D3F88FA5271EDF9CC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops anna Brescovit, Rheims, and 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops anna Brescovit, Rheims, and</p><p>Bonaldo, new species</p><p>Figures 2, 5–7, 19, 179–181, 203–235; map 2</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Lafaiete Coutinho (13 ° 399210S, 40 ° 129460W), Bahia, Brazil, pitfall (Jun. 2006 – Jul. 2007, J. Romão), deposited in IBSP 92714, PBI_OON 10988 and IBSP 98848, PBI_OON 11103, respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the character Anna, played by Elpidia Carrilo in the movie ‘‘Predator’’; Anna is one of the guerrillas captured by Dutch’s troops and she survives the death of the Predator.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops anna differ from those of the remaining species by the narrow and elongated subdistal furrow and the short subdistal apophysis that is curved dorsally at its distal end (fig. 19). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the elongated, folded anterior receptaculum, with large base, apodema plate with extremities anteriorly crossed over each other (figs. 180–181).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10988): Total length 1.90. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.70 wide. ALE 0.12, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace pale orange, with brown stripe along margin of cephalic area, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 217, 220). Sternum yellow. Chelicerae, endites, and labium orangebrown. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 19). Chelicerae anterior face with short triangular median furrow, elongated subdistal narrow furrow (figs. 203–205), subdistal apophysis short, curving upward; elongated and very narrow distal apophysis (figs. 206–211) and condylar projection absent (fig. 19). Abdomen dorsum pale orange. Legs orange, femur I 0.80 long. Leg spination: femur: I d1-0-1; v0-1-1; II d1-0-0; III–IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-0; r0-1-0; IV d0-1-0; p0- 1-1; v0-1-1; r0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-0-2; r0-1-1; IV d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Male palp proximal segments yellow-brown; cymbium pale orange, bulb yellow, hyaline process slender, very narrow (figs. 212–214; 223–225).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON 11103): Total length 2.25. Carapace 0.93 long, 0.76 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace without any pattern. Abdomen dorsum orange. Legs: femur I 0.75 long. Leg spination: femur I d0- 1-1; v1-2-2; II d0-1-1; v0-2-2; III–IV d0-1-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-1-0; v0-1-1; IV d0-1-0; p1-0-0; v0-1-2; r1-0-0; metatarsus I v2-2- 2-2: II v2-2-2-2, III v0-1-1; r1-1-0; IV d1-1-0; p1-1- 0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0. Internal genitalia with elongated and curved anterior receptaculum, with large base, and short posterior receptaculum with process elongated anteriorly; apodema plate very long with extremities anteriorly crossed over each other, short apodema process (figs. 180–181).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Bahia: Lafaiete Coutinho, 13 ° 399210S, 40 ° 129460W, Jun. 2006 – Jul.2007, pitfall (J. Romão, IBSP 92713, PBI_OON 10990, 18; (IBSP 98869, PBI_OON 11104), 18; (IBSP 92715, PBI_OON10989), 1♀; Jequié (13 ° 509600S, 40 ° 049600W), Dec. 15–16, 2007 (F.GB. Souza; IBSP 98847, PBI_OON 11101), 1♀; (IBSP 98853, PBI_OON 11112), 1♀; (IBSP 98846, PBI_OON 11108), 2♀; (AMNH, ex IBSP 98867, PBI_OON 11102), 18; (AMNH, ex IBSP 98843, PBI_OON 11114), 1♀; (WAM, ex IBSP 98850, PBI_OON 11098), 18; (WAM, ex IBSP 98847, PBI_OON 11107), 1♀; (IBSP 98844, PBI_OON 11099), 18; (IBSP 98861, PBI_OON 11116), 18; (IBSP 98862, PBI_OON 11110), 18; (IBSP 98858, PBI_OON 11111), 18; (IBSP 98871, PBI_OON 11030), 18; (IBSP 98851, PBI_OON 11113), 18; (IBSP 98866, PBI_OON 11029), 18; (IBSP 98857, PBI_OON 11100), 18; (IBSP 98874, PBI_OON 11115), 18.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION. Known only from the state of Bahia, Brazil (map 2).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE67D87D3F88FA5271EDF9CC	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE67D87F3DECFE057008F90C.text	03C08793FE67D87F3DECFE057008F90C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops rickhawkins Brescovit, Rheims, and Bonaldo 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops rickhawkins Brescovit, Rheims, and Bonaldo, new species</p><p>Figures 20, 182–183, 236–256; map 3</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Parque Nacional do Caparaó, 41 ° 99W ; 20 ° 59S, Alto Caparaó, Minas Gerais, Brazil (May 01–07, 2002, Equipe Biota), deposited in IBSP 135871 and 135864 (PBI _OON 11840, 11842) respectively .</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the character Rick Hawkins, played by Shane Black in the movie ‘‘Predator’’; Rick is the team’s radio operator and technical expert, and the first victim of the Predator.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops rickhawkins differ from those of the remaining species by the high clypeus, two times longer than ALE (fig. 20), extremely small median furrow, very short subdistal projections (fig. 20). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the small cordiform posterior receptaculum, short, with stout apodema plate (fig. 182).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON_11840): Total length 1.95. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.77 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace pale orange, with brown stripe along margin of cephalic area, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 237, 240). Sternum pale orange. Chelicerae, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae, two times longer than ALE (fig. 20). Chelicerae anterior face with very small triangular median furrow, long subdistal narrow furrow, inconspicuous lateral subdistal apophysis, short upward-curving distal apophysis; subtriangular condylar projection present (fig. 20). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.75. Leg spination: femur I d1-0-0; v1-2-2; II d1-0-0; v0-2-2; III–IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-1-1, IV d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2- 2, III d0-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0, IV d0-1-0; p1-0-0; v0-1-2; r1-0-0. Male palp proximal segments yellow; cymbium yellow, bulb white, truncated apically, with stout slender hyaline process (figs. 243–245).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_11842): Total length 2.03. Carapace 0.96 long, 0.75 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace without any pattern. Abdomen dorsum pale white. Legs: 0.85 long. Leg spination: femur I v1-2-2; II v0-2-2; III–IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-1-0; v0-1-1; r0-1-1, IV d0-1-0; v0- 1-1; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-1-2; IV d0-0-1; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Internal genitalia with elongated anterior receptaculum with truncated tip and small cordiform posterior receptaculum; large and stout apodema plate with enlarged and curved apodema process (figs. 182–183, 256).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Minas Gerais: Alto Caparaó, Parque Nacional do Caparaó, 41 ° 99W, 20 ° 59S, May 01–07, 2002, pitfall (Equipe Biota, IBSP 135863, PBI _OON 11130), 18; (IBSP 135865, PBI _OON 11841) , 18; (IBSP 135869, PBI _OON 11131), 18; (IBSP 135870, PBI _OON 11843), 1♀; (IBSP 135867, PBI _OON 11844), 1♀.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil (map 3).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE67D87F3DECFE057008F90C	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE65D8753DDDFC9573AEF90D.text	03C08793FE65D8753DDDFC9573AEF90D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops dutch Brescovit, Rheims, and Bonaldo 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops dutch Brescovit, Rheims, and Bonaldo, new species</p><p>Figures 21, 257–277, 303–308; map 2</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Ipiaú (14 ° 79600S, 39 ° 439600W), Bahia, Brazil (Jan. 2007, C. Máximo) deposited in IBSP 123703 (PBI_OON 11021) and IBSP 160849 (PBI_OON 11020) respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the main character in the movie ‘‘Predator,’’ Major Alan ‘‘Dutch’’ Schaefer, played by Arnold Schwarzenegger.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops dutch differ from those of the remaining species by the very long, subdistal, narrow furrow, subdistal apophysis absent (fig. 21). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the larger, flattened, long apodema plate with apex close to the distal area of anterior receptaculum (fig. 276).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 11021): Total length 1.80. Carapace 0.75 long, 0.65 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace orange-brown, without any pattern, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 259, 261). Sternum yellow. Chelicerae, endites, and labium orange-brown. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 21). Chelicerae anterior face with very small triangular median furrow, elongated subdistal narrow furrow, subdistal apophysis absent, short and bifid upwardcurving distal apophysis and subtriangular condilar projection present (fig. 21). Abdomen dorsum pale orange. Legs orange-brown, femur I 0.75 long. Leg spination: femora I–II d1-0-0; v2-2- 2; III–IV d1-0-0; I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0- 1-0; p0-1-1; v0-2-2; r0-1-1; IV d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1- 2; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0- 2-2; r0-1-1; IV p0-1-1; v0-1-1; r0-1-1. Male palp proximal segments brown, cymbium yellow, bulb white, truncated dorsally and slender hyaline process short with very large base (figs. 264– 266).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON 10984): Total length 2.10. Carapace 0.70 long, 0.65 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE.ALE 0.07. Abdomen dorsum orange. Legs orange, femur I 0.70. Leg spination: femur: I v2-1-2; II v1-2-1; III d1-0-0; IV d1-0-1, tibia I v2-2- 2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III–IV d0-1-0; p0-1-1;</p><p>v0-1-2; r0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2- 2-2, III v0-0-1; r0-1-1; IV d1-0-1; p0-1-1; v0- 1-2; r0-1-1. Internal genitalia with slender, elongated anterior receptaculum folded at tip and cordiform posterior receptaculum; semicircular and flattened apodema plate with long and curved apodema process (figs. 273– 277).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Bahia: Ipiaú, 14 ° 79600S, 39 ° 439600W, Jan. 2007 (IBSP 118632–118635, PBI _OON 11199; 11069–11071), 38 1♀; (IBSP 160850–160852, PBI _ OON 11089–11090, 11200) , 3♀; (IBSP 123703–123706, PBI _ OON 10983–10984, 11020–11021) all collected by C. Máximo.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION. Known only from the state of Bahia, Brazil (map 2).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE65D8753DDDFC9573AEF90D	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE6FD8683DB5FE5176AEF9DD.text	03C08793FE6FD8683DB5FE5176AEF9DD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops dillon Brescovit, Rheims, and 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops dillon Brescovit, Rheims, and Bonaldo, new species</p><p>Figures 22, 278–279, 284–302; map 2</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Estação Ecológica de Murici, 09 ° 159S, 35 ° 510W, pitfall, Murici, Alagoas, Brazil (Sept. 13–20, 2003; Equipe Biota) deposited in IBSP 68121 (PBI_OON 10991) and (IBSP 68120 (PBI_10993), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the character George Dillon, a former teammate of Dutch and current CIA agent, played by Carl Weathers in the movie ‘‘Predator.’’</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops dillon differ from those of the remaining species by the very long subdistal apophysis, concave at tip, with large base and by the conical, short and curved distal apophysis (fig. 22). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the short anterior receptaculum, squared and massive posterior receptaculum and very long apodema plate (figs. 278–279).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10991): Total length 2.00. Carapace 1.0 long, 0.6 wide. ALE 0.12, PLE 0.10, PME 0.14, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace orange, without any pattern, anterolateral corners with sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 286–288). Sternum yellow. Chelicerae, endites, and labium pale orange. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 22). Chelicerae anterior face with median furrow short, subdistal furrow inconspicuous with median group of 3–4 setae, subdistal apophysis very long, concave at tip and with large base; distal apophysis short; conical and condylar projection absent (fig. 22). Abdomen dorsum pale orange. Legs yellow, femur I 0.9 long. Leg spination: femora: I–II v2-2-1, III–IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-0-1; v0-1-1; r0-0-1; IV d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-1-1; r0-1- 1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III d0-0- 1; v0-1-1; r0-0-1; IV d1-0-1; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Male palp proximal segments white; cymbium yellow, bulb white, with elongated distal area, slender hyaline process very large and short laminar hyaline process (figs. 291– 293).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON 10993): Total length 2.10. Carapace 1.0 long, 0.70 wide. ALE 0.12, PLE 0.12, PME 0.14, ALE-ALE 0.06. Female palp prolateral tibia with a prolateral, longitudinally oblique row of 3–4 very long setae (fig. 301). Abdomen dorsum orange. Legs: femur I 0.9 long. Leg spination: femora I–II v2-2-1; III d1-0-0; v0-0-1; IV d1-0-1; v0-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2- 2, III d0-1-0; p0-0-1; v0-1-2; r0-0-1; IV d0-1-0; p1-0-0; v0-1-2; r1-0-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III d0-0-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1; IV d0-0- 1; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Internal genitalia with short, folded anterior receptaculum and squared, solid posterior receptaculum that appears globose in posterior view; apodema plate very long, flattened at basis with slender and curved apodema process (figs. 278–279).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Alagoas: Murici, Estação Ecológica de Murici, 09 ° 159S, 35 ° 510W, Sept. 13–20, 2003, pitfall (Equipe Biota, IBSP 68119, PBI_OON 10992), 18.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality, in the state of Alagoas, Brazil. This is the northernmost record of the genus (map 2).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE6FD8683DB5FE5176AEF9DD	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE72D86A3DAEFE6F7625F90C.text	03C08793FE72D86A3DAEFE6F7625F90C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops vallarta Brescovit, Rheims, and Bonaldo 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops vallarta Brescovit, Rheims, and Bonaldo, new species</p><p>Figures 23, 280–281, 309–331; map 4</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Restinga da Marambaia (23 ° 029S– 23 ° 069S, 43 ° 459W–43 ° 549W), Rio de Janeiro, Rio de</p><p>Janeiro, Brazil, pitfall (2005–2007, E.F. Ramos), deposited in IBSP 90504 (PBI_OON 10923) and IBSP 90505 (PBI_OON 10924), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, one of the filming locations for the movie ‘‘Predator’’; the set there is now a tourist attraction.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops vallarta differ from those of the remaining species by the elongated subdistal furrow, the subdistal apophysis with a large base and a long and slender tip (fig. 23). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the small, drop-shaped posterior receptaculum and semicircular, flattened apodema plate (figs. 280–281, 330–331).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON00010923): Total length 1.90. Carapace 0.80 long, 0.65 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace pale orange, without any pattern, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (fig. 315). Sternum yellow. Chelicerae, endites, and labium pale orange. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae smooth (fig. 23). Chelicerae anterior face without median furrow, subdistal furrow short, long subdistal apophysis with large base, distal apophysis short, condylar projection absent (fig. 23). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs pale orange, femur I 0.65. Leg spination: femur I p0-0-3; r0-1-1, II d1-0-0; p0-0-2; r0-1-1, III d0-1-0, IV d1-0-1, tibia I v 2-2-2-2-2, II v 2-2-2-2-2, III p1-1-0; IV p1-1-0; r1-1-0; metatarsi I–II p0-0-1; v2-2-2, III r0-0- 1, IV p1-1-0; r1-1-0. Male palp proximal segments yellow; cymbium yellow, bulb white, truncated dorsally, with narrow hyaline process (figs. 318–320).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON00010924): Total length 2.20. Carapace 0.80 long, 0.65 wide. ALE 0.08, PLE 0.08, PME 0.10, ALE-ALE 0.06. Abdomen dorsum orange. Legs orange, femur I 0.70. Leg spination: femur I p0-0-3; r0-1-1; II p0-0-2; v0-1-0; IV d0-1-1; tibia I v 2-2-2-2-2, II v 2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; IV d0-1-0; v0-1-1; r1-0-0, metatarsus I p0-0-1; v2-2-2; II v2-2-2; IV d0-0-1; p0-0-1; v0-0-1. Internal genitalia with elongated, receptaculum folded anteriorly with globose tip; posterior receptaculum small, drop shaped; apodema plate semicircular, flattened, and with long and sinuous apodema process (figs. 280–281, 330–331).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Rio de Janeiro, Parque Nacional da Tijuca, 22 ° 559S– 23 ° 000S, 43 ° 119W–43 ° 199W, Jun. 16, 1994 (M. Ramirez and R. Baptista, IBSP 160844, PBI_OON 11198), 18 1♀; Restinga da Marambaia, 23 ° 029S– 23 ° 069S, 43 ° 459W– 43 ° 549W, pitfall, 2005–2007 (E.F. Ramos, IBSP 118628–118631, PBI_OON 11066–11068, 11197), 28 2♀; (IBSP 160845–160847, PBI_OON 10981–10982, 11193–11196), 38 3♀; (MACN, PBI_OON 10982; 10923), 18 1♀.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (map 4).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE72D86A3DAEFE6F7625F90C	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE71D86B3E0DFD887084F90C.text	03C08793FE71D86B3E0DFD887084F90C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops peterharlli Brescovit & Bonaldo & Santos & Ott & Rheims 2012	<div><p>The peterharlli Group</p><p>Species belonging to this group do not have the median and subdistal furrows in the chelicerae, which has only simple distal projections (figs. 24–29). The groove in the lateral anterior border of carapace is attenuated (figs. 372, 418) or absent (figs. 336–345). The group includes six species: phillips, yautja, peterhalli, mctiernani, chicano, and olddemon .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE71D86B3E0DFD887084F90C	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE71D8613DC3FD897084F90C.text	03C08793FE71D8613DC3FD897084F90C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops phillips Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops phillips Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos, new species</p><p>Figures 24, 332–342; map 3</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype from Reserva Biológica de Una, 15 ° 079–15 ° 159S, 39 ° 159– 39 ° 259W, Una, Bahia, Brazil, pitfall (Nov. 15–28, 2000, A.D. Brescovit) deposited in IBSP 46113 (PBI_OON 10994).</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name refers to the character General Homer Phillips, played by Robert G. Armstrong in the movie ‘‘Predator’’; General Phillips is the coordinator of the mission, who assigns Dutch’s team based upon its reputation.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops phillips differ from those of the remaining species by the long, slender and sinuous subdistal apophysis and flattened distal apophysis with very slender tip on chelicerae (fig. 24).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10944): Total length 1.35. Carapace 0.75 long, 0.55 wide. ALE 0.06, PLE 0.08, PME 0.08, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace white, with brown stripe along margin of pars cephalica, anterolateral corners without sclerotized projections (figs. 335– 336). Sternum, chelicerae, endites, and labium yellowish white. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 24). Chelicerae anterior face without median and subdistal furrow, subdistal apophysis long and slender, distal apophysis elongate and flattened with very slender tip; condylar projection absent (fig. 24). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs white, femur I missing. Leg spination: I missing, femur: II d0-1-0; III–IV d0-1-0; tibia II v2-2-2- 2-2, III–IV d1-1-0; p1-1-0; v2-2-0; r1-1-0; metatarsus II v2-2-2-2, III d1-1-0; v2-1-0; r1- 0-0; IV d1-1-0; p1-0-0; v2-1-0; r1-0-0. Male palp proximal segments and cymbium yellow, bulb white, with short and large laminar</p><p>hyaline process and enlarged hyaline process with short and slender tip (figs. 340–342).</p><p>FEMALE: Unknown.</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: None.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality, in the state of Bahia, Brazil (map 3).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE71D8613DC3FD897084F90C	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE7BD8643DD8FE7172C9FC3F.text	03C08793FE7BD8643DD8FE7172C9FC3F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops yautja Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops yautja Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos, new species</p><p>Figures 25, 282–283, 343–361; map 3</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from RPPN Serra do Caraça, 20 ° 059S, 43 ° 299W, Catas Altas, Minas Gerais, Brazil, pitfall (Apr. 24–May 01, 2002, Equipe Biota) deposited in IBSP 136650 (PBI_OON 11845) and IBSP 136349 (PBI_OON 11847), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a noun and refers to the fictional name by which Predators are known on their planet. The ‘‘yautja’’ live in a matriarchal clan-based society, with the strongest and most skilled of the group as the leader.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops yautja differ from those of the remaining species by the strong setae on the clypeus (fig. 25); subdistal apophysis long and slender, distal apophysis inconspicuous on chelicerae (fig. 25). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the anterior receptaculum triangular, sulcated medially, truncated at tip, with the posterior receptaculum oval, nose shaped (fig. 282).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON_11845): Total length 1.92. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.75 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace pale orange, without any pattern, anterolateral corners without slightly sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 343–344). Sternum, chelicerae, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with strong distinct needlelike setae (fig. 25). Chelicerae anterior face without median and subdistal furrow, subdistal apophysis long and slender, distal apophysis inconspicuous and condylar projection absent (fig. 25). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.73 long. Leg spination: femur: I d1-0-1; v1-2-2; II d1-0-1; v0-2-2; III–IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III–IV d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2- 2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0; IV d0- 1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0. Male palp proximal segments white; cymbium yellow; bulb white, with distal area elongated, laminar hyaline process short, curved, hyaline process short (figs. 350–352).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_11848): Total length 2.32. Carapace 0.85 long, 0.76 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Abdomen dorsum pale white. Legs: femur I 0.83 long. Leg spination: femur I d1-0-0; v1- 2-2; II d1-0-0; v0-2-2; III d0-1-1; IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-1; r1-1-0; IV d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0- 1-2; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; v0-1-2; r0-0-1; IV d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Internal genitalia with anterior receptaculum triangular, sulcated medially and truncated at tip; posterior receptaculum oval, nose shaped ventrally, globose posteriorly; apodema plate short and curved distally, with long transversal and sinuous apodema process (figs. 282–283).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Minas Gerais: Catas Altas, RPPN Serra do Caraça, 20 ° 059S, 43 ° 299W, pitfall, Apr. 24– May 01, 2002 (Equipe Biota; IBSP 136344– 136346, PBI _OON 11849; 11132; 11121), 38; (IBSP 136347–136348. PBI _OON 11845, 11848) , 18 1♀.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality, in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil (map 3).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE7BD8643DD8FE7172C9FC3F	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE7ED8653F56FC4873D2FB45.text	03C08793FE7ED8653F56FC4873D2FB45.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops peterhalli Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops peterhalli Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos, new species</p><p>Figures 3–4, 9, 26, 362–396; map 1</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Condomínio Trensurb, 23 ° 339S, 46 ° 559600W, Itapevi, São Paulo, Brazil (Nov. 01, 2000, V. Onofrio and D.M. Battesti) deposited in IBSP 124233 (PBI_OON 11206).</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a patronym in honor of the late Kevin Peter Hall (1955–1991), who played the Predator creature in the movie.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops peterhalli differ from those of the remaining species by the subdistal apophysis long and slender, with flattened and sulcated apex on the chelicerae (fig. 26). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the epigynum with globose posterior receptaculum, apodema plate coiled at base, with a short anterior projection (figs. 395–396).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON_0011206): Total length 1.80. Carapace 0.80 long, 0.55 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace pale orange, with brown stripe along the margin of pars cephalica, anterolateral corners with slightly sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 371–372). Sternum, chelicerae, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 26). Chelicerae anterior face without median and subdistal furrow, subdistal apophysis long, slender, and sinuous, distal apophysis short; condylar projection absent (fig. 26). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.65 long. Leg spination: femur: I–II v1-2-2; III– IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-0-1, IV d0-1-0; v0-1- 2; r0-1-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III d0-0-1; v1-0-2; r1-1-0, IV d0-0-1; p0-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0. Male palp proximal segments yellow; cymbium and bulb yellow, with distal area elongated, with laminar hyaline process and slender hyaline process short, twisted (figs. 364–365, 376–378).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_0011206): Total length 2.10. Carapace 0.85 long, 0.70 wide. ALE 0.12, PLE 0.12, PME 0.14, ALE.ALE 0.06. Carapace without any pattern. Abdomen dorsum pale white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.70. Leg spination: femur: I, II v1-2-2; III d0-1-1; IV d1-0-1; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2- 2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-0-2; r0-1-1, IV d0-1-0; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-0-1; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-1-2; r0-1-1, IV d0-1-1; p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-1-1. Internal genitalia with large anterior receptaculum and posterior receptaculum globose, with a short anterior projection; apodema plate long, slender, coiled at base, with small, rounded apodema process (figs. 387–390, 394–395).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: São Paulo: Itapevi, Condomínio Trensurb, 23 ° 339S, 46 ° 559600W, (IBSP 124235, PBI _OON 11205), 1♀; (AMNH, PBI 11608) , 18 1♀; (IBSP 160853, PBI _OON 11207), 18 2♀; (IBSP 160854, PBI _OON 11851), 2♀; all collected with pitfall traps in Dec. 2000 by V. Onofrio and D.M. Battesti; São Paulo, Campus IBSP, Horto Oswaldo Cruz, 46 ° 439W, 23 ° 339S (D.F. Candiani, IBSP 42172–42173, PBI _OON 10978, 10980), 28 ; São Paulo, Campus da USP, Mata do CUASO, 46 ° 439W, 23 ° 339S, Aug. 16–23, 1999 (IBSP 42183, PBI _OON 10979), 18; (IBSP 42188, PBI _OON 11214) , 18; (IBSP 42152, PBI _OON 11204), 18; (IBSP 42193, PBI _OON 11061), 18 2♀; (IBSP 42174, PBI _OON 11064), 18; (IBSP 42195, PBI _OON 11062), 18; (IBSP 59270, PBI _OON 11065), 18; (IBSP 66859, PBI _OON 11063), 18; all collected with pitfalls by D.F. Candiani; São Paulo, Parque Burle Marx, 23 ° 359S, 46 ° 399W, pitfall, Mar. 18–23, 2005 (A. Bagio, IBSP 59271, PBI _OON 11208), 1♀ ; São Paulo, Parque Estadual do Jaragua´, 23 ° 279 330S, 46 ° 469 020W (IBSP 136557–136563, PBI _ OON 11038–11143), 28 5♀; (IBSP 136565, PBI _OON 11145) , 18; (IBSP 136567; PBI _OON 11142), 1♀, all collected wit pitfalls by Equipe Biota; Santo Andre´, Reserva Biológica de Paranapiacaba, 23 ° 469000–23 ° 479100S, 46 ° 189200–46 ° 200400W, pitfall, May 17, 2007 (M. Uehara-Prado, IBSP 91423, PBI _OON 11209), 18 ; São José do Barreiro, Parque Nacional da Serra da Bocaina, 22 ° 38 S, 44 ° 349 W, pitfall, Apr.28–May 03, 2002 (Equipe Biota, IBSP 68550, PBI _OON 11210), 18 1♀ ; Salesópolis, Estação Ecológica de Boracéia, 23 ° 39908.30S, 45 ° 53948.90W, pitfalls, May 18–24, 2001, (IBSP 91410–91412, PBI _OON 11211, 11213, 11187; IBSP 91414, PBI _OON 11188; IBSP 9417, PBI _OON 11212; IBSP 136487–136500, PBI _ OON 11189–11192), 48 5♀, all collected by M. Uehara-Prado ; Caucaia do Alto, Reserva do Morro Grande, 23 ° 399–23 ° 489S, 47 ° 019–46 ° 559W, pitfall, Mar. 7–27, 2003 (IBSP 136568–136577, PBI _ OON 11133–11139, 11146–11148), 108, all collected by Equipe Biota.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the state of São Paulo, Brazil (map 1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE7ED8653F56FC4873D2FB45	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE7FD8663FA6FC87738CF90C.text	03C08793FE7FD8663FA6FC87738CF90C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops mctiernani Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops mctiernani Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos, new species</p><p>Figures 1, 10, 27, 397–398, 403–433; map 4</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Fazenda Santa Helena, 22 ° 349S, 44 ° 219W, Pinheiral, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Nov. 5–11, 1999, A.D. Brescovit et al.), deposited in IBSP 66861 (PBI_OON 10919) and IBSP 66875 (PBI_OON 10920), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a patronym in honor of John McTiernan, the director of the first movie in the ‘‘Predator’’ series.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops mctiernani differ from those of the remaining species by the subdistal apophysis short and distal apophysis with three branches on chelicerae (figs. 27, 403–405). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the epigynum with fused anterior and posterior receptacula, apodema process with curved extremities (figs. 397–398).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10919): Total length 1.69. Carapace 0.83 long, 0.64 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace yellow, without any pattern, anterolateral corners with sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 417–419). Sternum, chelicerae, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 27). Chelicerae anterior face without median and subdistal furrow, subdistal apophysis short, distal apophysis long with three branches; condylar projection absent (figs. 27, 403– 405). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.65 long. Leg spination: femur I v2- 2-2; II v0-2-2; III d1-0-1; IV d1-0-0; tibia I v2- 2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d1-0-0; v0-0-2, IV p1-0-1; v0-1-1, metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2- 2-2, III v0-0-2; IV p0-0-1; v0-0-2. Male palp proximal segments and cymbium yellow, bulb white, distal area elongated, with long, flattened laminar process, hyaline process slender, sinuous (figs. 411–413, 423–425).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON 10920): Total length 2.10. Carapace 0.85 long, 0.75 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE.ALE 0.08. Carapace pale orange. Chelicerae fang with rounded median process. Abdomen dorsum with gray pattern. Legs pale orange, femur I 0.74 long. Leg spination: femur: I–II v2-2-2; III d1-0-1; IV d1-0-0; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2- 2-2-2-2, III v0-0-2, IV p1-0-1; v0-1-1, metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-0-2; IV p1-0-1; v0-0-2. Internal genitalia with fused anterior and posterior receptacula; apodema plate semicircular and flattened, and with long apodema process, which is curved at tip (figs. 397–398).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Pinheiral, Fazenda Regional de Criação / Fazenda Santa Helena, 22 ° 349S, 44 ° 219W (Nov. 05–11, 1999, A.D. Brescovit et al. (IBSP 66879, PBI _OON 11014, 18; (IBSP 66888, PBI _OON 11012) , 18; (IBSP 66883, PBI _OON 11013), 18; (IBSP 66892, PBI _OON 11010), 18; (IBSP 66885, PBI _OON 11016), 18; (IBSP 66889, PBI _OON 11019), 1♀; (IBSP 66876, PBI _OON 10977), 1♀; (IBSP 66887, 66867, 66882, 66865, respectively PBI _ OON 11025–11028), 28 2♀, used for SEM); Fazenda Santa Helena, 22 ° 349S 44 ° 219W, Nov. 05–11, 1999 (A.D. Brescovit et al. (IBSP 66874, PBI _OON 11011), 18; (IBSP 66873, PBI _OON 11017) , 18; (IBSP 66871, PBI _OON 11018), 18; (IBSP 66866, PBI _OON 11015), 18; (IBSP 66863, PBI _OON 11022), 18, (IBSP 66860, PBI _OON 10976), 18; (IBSP 66872, PBI _OON 11117), 18, used for SEM. Teresópolis, Parque Nacional da Serra dos Orgãos, 22 ° 279S– 42 ° 599W, Aug. 23, 2001 (Equipe Biota, IBSP 135892–135895, PBI _ OON 11080–11083), 48 ; São Paulo: São Bernardo do Campo, Parque Estoril, 23 ° 419S, 46 ° 329W, Jun. 26–Jul. 02, 2007 (C.V. Janini, (IBSP 119570, 119685– 119687, 119689, PBI _ OON 11073–11074, 11085–11088), 58 2♀ ; São Paulo, campus da USP, Mata do CUASO, 46 ° 439W, 23 ° 339S, Nov. 16–23, 1999 (D.F. Candiani, IBSP 42187, PBI _OON 11072), 281♀ ; Santa Catarina: Blumenau, Parque Nascentes do Rio Garcia, 27 ° 019S–49 ° 099W, Jan. 21–28, 2003 (Equipe Biota, IBSP 136070, PBI _OON 11084), 1♀ .</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known from the states of Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, and Santa Catarina, Brazil (map 4).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE7FD8663FA6FC87738CF90C	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE7CD81B3DAEFC4D72EAFDE3.text	03C08793FE7CD81B3DAEFC4D72EAFDE3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops chicano Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops chicano Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos, new species</p><p>Figures 28, 399–400, 434–452; map 3</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Reserva Florestal da Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, 19 ° 069S–19 ° 189S, 39 ° 459W– 40 ° 199W, Linhares, Espírito Santo, Brazil (Jun. 1997, J. Raizer), deposited in IBSP 14877 (PBI_OON 10985) and IBSP 14858 (PBI_OON 10987), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a second nickname for the character Jorge ‘‘Poncho’’ Ramirez, played by Richard Chaves in the movie ‘‘Predator’’; Poncho is a Mexican-American who initially serves a translator for Anna.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops chicano differ from those of the remaining species by the very large and quadrate projection in the middle face of the chelicerae (fig. 28). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the remaining species by the peanut-shaped anterior and posterior receptacula, apodema process sinuous, pointed anteriorly (figs. 399–400, 452).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON 10985): Total length 1.05. Carapace 0.82 long, 0.65 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.08, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Carapace pale orange, with brown stripe</p><p>along margin of cephalic area, anterolateral corners with sclerotized triangular projections (figs. 437–438). Chelicerae brown. Sternum, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with very small needlelike setae (fig. 28). Chelicerae anterior face without median and subdistal furrow, with very large and quadrate apophysis in the middle of the face; distal apophysis absent, subdistal apophysis short, condylar projection absent (fig. 28). Abdomen dorsum pale white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.60. Leg spination: femur I v1-2-2, II v0-2-1, III–IV d1-0-0; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III d0-1-1; p0-0-1, IV d0-1-0; p1- 1-0; v1-0-1; r1-1-0, metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-0-1; r0-0-1, IV d0-0-2; p0-0-1; r0-0-1. Male palp proximal segments and cymbium yellow, bulb white, short laminar process, slender hyaline process (figs. 441– 442).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON 10987). Total length 1.05. Carapace 0.90 long, 0.60 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.08, PME 0.11, ALE-ALE 0.08. Abdomen dorsum pale orange, without color pattern. Legs: femur I 0.70. Leg spination: femur I–II v0-2-2; III d1-0-0; tibia I v2-2-2-2- 2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III p0-1-1; v0-1-2; r0-0-1; IV d0-1-0; p1-0-0; v1-0-0; r0-1-1; metatarsus I</p><p>v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-1-2; r0-0-1; IV d0-1- 1; p1-1-0; v0-1-1; r1-1-0. Internal genitalia peanut shaped, with fused anterior and posterior receptacula; apodema plate semicircular, slender with apodema process long, sinuous, pointed anteriorly (figs. 399–400, 452).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Espírito Santo: Linhares, Reserva Florestal da Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, 19 ° 069S– 19 ° 189S, 39 ° 459W–40 ° 199W, Jun. 01, 1997 (J. Raizer, IBSP 14866, PBI _OON 10986), 1♀ ; Jul. 01, 1998 (G. Machado and A.J. Santos, IBSP 27004, PBI _OON 11040), 1♀; Jun. 01, 1997 (J. Raizer, IBSP 14862, PBI _OON 11041), 1♀ .</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality, in the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil (map 3).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE7CD81B3DAEFC4D72EAFDE3	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
03C08793FE01D81B3F88FA177128FB61.text	03C08793FE01D81B3F88FA177128FB61.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Predatoroonops olddemon Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos 2012	<div><p>Predatoroonops olddemon Brescovit, Rheims, and Santos, new species</p><p>Figures 29, 401–402, 453–474; map 1</p><p>TYPES: Male holotype and female paratype from Fazenda Maravilha, 22 ° 129S– 43 ° 169W, Paraíba do Sul, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Aug. 16–18, 2001, Equipe Biota) deposited in IBSP 136643 (PBI_OON 11036) and IBSP 136645 (PBI_OON 11034), respectively.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY: The specific name is a popular name used by natives of the fictional nation of Val Verde for the Predators; during the hot summers these creatures attack people, who are later found skinned and hollowed.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS: Males of Predatoroonops olddemon differ from those of the remaining species by the simple, dorsally curved subdistal apophysis, curved, longer and slender distal apophysis in the chelicerae (fig. 29). Females can be easily distinguished from those of the other species by the epigynum with distal process mushroom shaped, with massive, rectangular posterior receptaculum (figs. 401–402).</p><p>MALE (PBI_OON_11036): Total length 1.70. Carapace 0.75 long, 0.55 wide. ALE 0.08, PLE 0.08, PME 0.10, ALE-ALE 0.06. Carapace yellow, without any pattern, anterolateral corners without extension or projections (figs. 454–455, 457). Sternum, chelicerae, endites, and labium yellow. Clypeus with distinct needlelike setae (fig. 29). Chelicerae anterior face without median and subdistal furrow, with upward-curving subdistal apophysis, distal apophysis curved, longer and slender, condylar projection absent (fig. 29). Abdomen dorsum white. Legs yellow, femur I 0.60. Leg spination: femora I–II d1-1-0; v0-2-2; III–IV d1-1-0; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2-2, III p1-1-0; v1-0-1; r1-1-0; IV p1-0-0; v1-0-0; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-0- 1; r0-0-1; IV p0-1-1; v0-0-2; r0-0-1. Male palp proximal segments white; cymbium yellow; bulb white, with distal area elongated, laminar with slender hyaline process narrow and short (figs. 460–463).</p><p>FEMALE (PBI_OON_11034): Total length 1.90. Carapace 0.80 long, 0.70 wide. ALE 0.10, PLE 0.10, PME 0.12, ALE-ALE 0.08. Abdomen dorsum pale white. Legs: femur I 0.71. Leg spination: femora I–II v0-2-2; III d1-0-1; IV d1-0-0; tibia I v2-2-2-2-2, II v2-2- 2-2-2, III d0-1-0; p1-0-0; v0-1-2; r1-0-0, IV d0-1-0; p1-1-0; v0-1-0; r1-1-0; metatarsus I v2-2-2-2, II v2-2-2-2, III v0-1-1; r1-1-1, IV p1-1-0; v0-1-2; r1-1-0. Internal genitalia with flattened anterior receptaculum with distal process mushroom like and massive rectangular posterior receptaculum; apodema plate with flattened, curved tip and long and curved medially disposed apodema process (figs. 401–402).</p><p>OTHER MATERIAL EXAMINED: BRAZIL: Rio de Janeiro: Paraíba do Sul, Fazenda Maravilha, 22 ° 129S–43 ° 169W, pitfall, Aug. 16–18, 2001 (Equipe Biota, IBSP 136646, PBI_OON 11035), 1♀.</p><p>DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality, in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (map 1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C08793FE01D81B3F88FA177128FB61	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.		Plazi	Brescovit, Antonio D.;Bonaldo, Alexandre B.;Santos, Adalberto J.;Ott, Ricardo;Rheims, Cristina A.	Brescovit, Antonio D., Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Santos, Adalberto J., Ott, Ricardo, Rheims, Cristina A. (2012): The Brazilian Goblin Spiders Of The New Genus Predatoroonops (Araneae: Oonopidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (370): 1-68, DOI: 10.1206/766.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/766.1
