Phrurolithus

Phrurolithus is a genus of araneomorph spiders first described by C. L. Koch in 1839.[2] First placed with the Liocranidae, it was moved to the Corinnidae in 2002,[3] then to the Phrurolithidae in 2014.[4]

Phrurolithus
Temporal range:
Phrurolithus sp.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Phrurolithidae
Genus: Phrurolithus
C. L. Koch, 1839[1]
Type species
P. festivus
(C. L. Koch, 1835)
Species

57, see text

Species

As of December 2021 it contains fifty-seven species:[1]

  • P. absurdus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. adjacens Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
  • P. aemulatus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. alatus Ivie & Barrows, 1935 – USA
  • P. apacheus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. apertus Gertsch, 1935 – USA
  • P. approximatus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
  • P. azarkinae Zamani & Marusik, 2020 – Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iran
  • P. banksi Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. callidus Gertsch, 1935 – USA
  • P. camawhitae Gertsch, 1935 – USA
  • P. catalinius Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. claripes (Dönitz & Strand, 1906) – China, Russia (Sakhalin), Taiwan, Japan
  • P. coahuilanus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
  • P. concisus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. connectus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. corsicus (Simon, 1878) – Spain, France (Corsica), Italy (Sardinia) to Romania
  • P. debilis Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
  • P. diversus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
  • P. dolius Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935 – USA
  • P. duncani (Chamberlin, 1925) – USA
  • P. emertoni Gertsch, 1935 – USA
  • P. festivus (C. L. Koch, 1835) (type) – Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Far East), Kazakhstan, Iran, China, Korea, Japan. Introduced to Canada
  • P. flavipes O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872 – Lebanon, Israel
  • P. florentinus Caporiacco, 1923 – Italy
  • P. goodnighti Muma, 1945 – USA
  • P. hamdeokensis Seo, 1988 – Russia (South Siberia, Far East), Korea
  • P. kastoni Schenkel, 1950 – USA
  • P. kentuckyensis Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1930 – USA
  • P. labialis Paik, 1991 – Korea, Japan
  • P. lasiolepis Fu, Chen & Zhang, 2016 – China
  • P. leviculus Gertsch, 1936 – USA
  • P. lindemanni Marusik, Omelko & Koponen, 2020 – Russia (Far East)
  • P. luppovae Spassky, 1941 – Tajikistan
  • P. minimus C. L. Koch, 1839 – Europe
  • P. nemoralis Bryant, 1940 – Cuba
  • P. nigrinus (Simon, 1878) – Central and southern Europe
  • P. nipponicus Kishida, 1914 – Japan
  • P. oabus Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935 – USA
  • P. paludivagus Bishop & Crosby, 1926 – USA
  • P. parcus (Hentz, 1847) – USA
  • P. pennatoides Seo, 2018 – Korea
  • P. pinturus Ivie & Barrows, 1935 – USA
  • P. pipensis Muma, 1945 – USA
  • P. pullatus Kulczyński, 1897 – Central to Eastern Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Iran, Kazakhstan, Central Asia
  • P. pygmaeus Thorell, 1875 – Ukraine, Russia (Europe)
  • P. schwarzi Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. shimenensis Yin, Peng, Gong & Kim, 1997 – China
  • P. similis Banks, 1895 – USA
  • P. singulus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
  • P. sinicus Zhu & Mei, 1982 – Russia (South Siberia, Far East), China, Korea, Japan
  • P. sordidus Savelyeva, 1972 – Kazakhstan
  • P. spinosus Bryant, 1948 – Hispaniola
  • P. szilyi Herman, 1879 – Portugal, Spain, Central to south-eastern Europe
  • P. tamaulipanus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
  • P. tepejicanus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
  • P. thracia Komnenov & Chatzaki, 2016 – Greece, Turkey

References

  1. "Gen. Phrurolithus C. L. Koch, 1839". World Spider Catalog Version 22.5. Natural History Museum Bern. 2021. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  2. Koch, C. L. (1839). Die Arachniden.
  3. Bosselaers, J.; Jocqué, R. (2002). "Studies in Corinnidae: cladistic analysis of 38 corinnid and liocranid genera, and transfer of Phrurolithinae". Zoologica Scripta. 31 (3): 241–270. doi:10.1046/j.1463-6409.2002.00080.x. S2CID 83947168.
  4. Ramírez, M. J. (2014). "The morphology and phylogeny of dionychan spiders (Araneae: Araneomorphae)". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 390: 343. doi:10.1206/821.1. hdl:11336/18066. S2CID 86146467.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.