Lasaeola

Lasaeola is a genus of comb-footed spiders that was first described by Eugène Louis Simon in 1881.[3] The type species was described under the name Pachydactylus pronus,[4] but was renamed Lasaeola prona when it was discovered that the name "Pachydactylus" was preoccupied.[3] Both this genus and Deliana were removed from the synonymy of Dipoena in 1988,[5] but many of these species require more study before their placement is certain.[1]

Lasaeola
Temporal range:
L. prona, adult female
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Theridiidae
Genus: Lasaeola
Simon, 1881[1]
Type species
Pachydactylus prona
(Menge, 1868)
Species

24, see text

Synonyms[1]

Species

As of September 2019 it contains twenty-four species and one subspecies, found in the Americas, Europe, and Asia:[1]

  • Lasaeola algarvensis Wunderlich, 2011Portugal
  • Lasaeola armona Wunderlich, 2015 – Portugal, Spain
  • Lasaeola atopa (Chamberlin, 1949) – USA
  • Lasaeola bequaerti (Chickering, 1948)Panama
  • Lasaeola canariensis (Wunderlich, 1987) – Canary Is.
  • Lasaeola convexa (Blackwall, 1870) – Mediterranean
  • Lasaeola coracina (C. L. Koch, 1837) – Western Europe to Ukraine
  • Lasaeola dbari Kovblyuk, Marusik & Omelko, 2012Georgia
  • Lasaeola donaldi (Chickering, 1943) – Panama, Venezuela
  • Lasaeola fastigata Zhang, Liu & Zhang, 2011China
  • Lasaeola flavitarsis (Wunderlich, 1992) – Canary Is.
  • Lasaeola grancanariensis (Wunderlich, 1987) – Canary Is.
  • Lasaeola lunata Zhang, Liu & Zhang, 2011 – China
  • Lasaeola minutissima Wunderlich, 2011 – Portugal, Spain
  • Lasaeola oceanica Simon, 1883Azores
  • Lasaeola okinawana (Yoshida & Ono, 2000) – China, Japan (Ryukyu Is.)
  • Lasaeola prona (Menge, 1868) (type) – North America, Europe, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to South Siberia), Kazakhstan, Iran, Japan
  • Lasaeola spinithorax (Keyserling, 1886)Peru
  • Lasaeola striata (Wunderlich, 1987) – Canary Is.
  • Lasaeola superba (Chickering, 1948)Mexico, Panama
  • Lasaeola testaceomarginata Simon, 1881 – Mediterranean
  • Lasaeola tristis (Hahn, 1833) – Europe, Turkey, Russia (Europe to South Siberia), Central Asia
  • Lasaeola yona (Yoshida & Ono, 2000) – Japan (Ryukyu Is.)
  • Lasaeola yoshidai (Ono, 1991) – China, Korea, Japan

In synonymy:

  • L. daltoni (Levi, 1953, T from Dipoena) = Lasaeola atopa (Chamberlin, 1949)
  • L. hamata (Tullgren, 1949, T from Dipoena) = Lasaeola prona (Menge, 1868)
  • L. tibiale (Hahn, 1831, T from Theridion sub nomen dubium) = Lasaeola tristis (Hahn, 1833)
  • L. trapezoidalis (Levy & Amitai, 1981, T from Dipoena) = Lasaeola convexa (Blackwall, 1870)

See also

References

  1. Gloor, Daniel; Nentwig, Wolfgang; Blick, Theo; Kropf, Christian (2019). "Gen. Lasaeola Simon, 1881". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
  2. Yoshida, H. (2002). "A revision of the Japanese genera and species of the subfamily Hadrotarsinae (Araneae: Theridiidae)". Acta Arachnologica. 51: 13. doi:10.2476/asjaa.51.7.
  3. Simon, E. (1881). Les arachnides de France. Tome cinquième, première partie. Roret, Paris. pp. 1–180.
  4. Menge, A. (1868). "Preussische Spinnen. II. Abtheilung". Schriften der Naturforschenden Gesellschaft in Danzig. 2: 177.
  5. Wunderlich, J. (1988). Die fossilen Spinnen im Dominikanischen Bernstein. p. 148.

Data related to Lasaeola at Wikispecies


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