Aelurillus is a genus of spiders in the family Salticidae (jumping spiders).
Distribution
Species of the genus Aelurillus occur in the Palaearctic and Africa, with a few species known from India (A. improvisus, A. minimontanus) and Sri Lanka (A. kronestedti, A. quadrimaculatus). Aelurillus subfestivus is found in Japan.
Description
Species of the genus Aelurillus are typically about 7 mm long in females, and up to five mm in males. They are stout, squat-shaped and rather furry, with females often uniformly mottled sandy brown, while males are often black, sometimes with a pattern and with light, annulated legs.
Habits
Spiders in this genus mainly catch and feed on ants (myrmecophagy).
A Southeast Asian species of the genus Aelurillus has been observed to jump around 30-40 times its body length straight onto the back of a large gnaphosid spider and kill it.
They like hot, dry, stony places or small bare open areas with dead twigs or similar amongst low vegetation.
Species
, this genus includes 72 species and two subspecies:
- Aelurillus aeruginosus <small>(Simon, 1871)</small> â Mediterranean
- Aelurillus afghanus <small>Azarkina, 2006</small> â Afghanistan, Pakistan
- Aelurillus alboclypeus <small>Azarkina & Komnenov, 2015</small> â Turkey
- Aelurillus ambiguus <small>(, 1966)</small> â Libya
- Aelurillus andreevae <small>Nenilin, 1984</small> â Turkmenistan, Tajikistan
- Aelurillus angularis <small>PrószyÃ
Âski, 2000</small> â Israel
- Aelurillus ater <small>(Kroneberg, 1875)</small> â Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan
- Aelurillus balearus <small>Azarkina, 2006</small> â Canary Islands, Spain (Balearic Is.)
- Aelurillus basseleti <small>(Lucas, 1846)</small> â Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia
- Aelurillus blandus <small>(Simon, 1871)</small> â Portugal, Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Morocco
- Aelurillus bokerinus <small>PrószyÃ
Âski, 2003</small> â Israel
- Aelurillus bosmansi <small>Azarkina, 2006</small> â Spain
- Aelurillus brutus <small>WesoÃ
Âowska, 1996</small> â Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan
- Aelurillus catherinae <small>PrószyÃ
Âski, 2000</small> â Egypt
- Aelurillus catus <small>Simon, 1886</small> â Senegal
- Aelurillus cognatus <small>(O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872)</small> â Lebanon
- Aelurillus concolor <small>KulczyÃ
Âski, 1901</small> â Greece, North Macedonia, Turkey, Caucasus, Kazakhstan, Iran, Central Asia
- Aelurillus conveniens <small>(O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872)</small> â Egypt, Israel, Syria
- Aelurillus cretensis <small>Azarkina, 2002</small> â Greece (Crete)
- Aelurillus cristatopalpus <small>Simon, 1902</small> â South Africa
- Aelurillus cypriotus <small>Azarkina, 2006</small> â Cyprus
- Aelurillus deltshevi <small>Azarkina & Komnenov, 2015</small> â North Macedonia, Bulgaria, Azerbaijan
- Aelurillus desertus <small>(WesoÃ
Âowska & van Harten, 2010)</small> â United Arab Emirates
- Aelurillus dubatolovi <small>Azarkina, 2003</small> â Kazakhstan, Central Asia
- Aelurillus faragallai <small>PrószyÃ
Âski, 1993</small> â Saudi Arabia, Yemen
- Aelurillus galinae <small>WesoÃ
Âowska & van Harten, 2010</small> â United Arab Emirates
- Aelurillus gershomi <small>PrószyÃ
Âski, 2000</small> â Israel, Jordan
- Aelurillus guecki <small>Metzner, 1999</small> â Greece, Turkey
- Aelurillus helvenacius <small>, 1993</small> â Mongolia
- Aelurillus hirtipes <small>Denis, 1960</small> â North Africa
- Aelurillus improvisus <small>Azarkina, 2002</small> â India
- Aelurillus jerusalemicus <small>PrószyÃ
Âski, 2000</small> â Israel
- Aelurillus khorasanicus <small>Azarkina & Mirshamsi, 2014</small> â Iran
- Aelurillus kochi <small>Roewer, 1951</small> â Greece, Israel, Syria, United Arab Emirates
- Aelurillus kopetdaghi <small>WesoÃ
Âowska, 1996</small> â Turkmenistan
- Aelurillus kronestedti <small>Azarkina, 2004</small> â India, Sri Lanka
- Aelurillus laniger <small>Logunov & Marusik, 2000</small> â North Macedonia, Kazakhstan
- Aelurillus latebricola <small>Spassky, 1941</small> â Tajikistan
- Aelurillus leipoldae <small>(Metzner, 1999)</small> â Greece (Crete)
- Aelurillus logunovi <small>Azarkina, 2004</small> â Afghanistan, Pakistan
- Aelurillus lopadusae <small>Cantarella, 1983</small> â Italy, Algeria
- Aelurillus lucasi <small>Roewer, 1951</small> â Canary Islands, Salvages
- Aelurillus luctuosus <small>(Lucas, 1846)</small> â Mediterranean to Turkmenistan
- Aelurillus lutosus <small>(Tystshenko, 1965)</small> â Russia (Europe, Caucasus), Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
- Aelurillus m-nigrum <small>KulczyÃ
Âski, 1891</small> â South-eastern Europe, Russia (Europe to Central Asia), Caucasus, Iran, Kazakhstan, Central Asia, China
- Aelurillus madagascariensis <small>Azarkina, 2009</small> â Madagascar
- Aelurillus marusiki <small>Azarkina, 2002</small> â Iran
- Aelurillus minimontanus <small>Azarkina, 2002</small> â India
- Aelurillus minutus <small>Azarkina, 2002</small> â Syria, Eritrea
- Aelurillus mirabilis <small>WesoÃ
Âowska, 2006</small> â Namibia
- Aelurillus monardi <small>(Lucas, 1846)</small> â Mediterranean
- Aelurillus murphyorum <small>Azarkina, 2022</small> â Kenya
- Aelurillus nabataeus <small>PrószyÃ
Âski, 2003</small> â Israel, Jordan
- Aelurillus nenilini <small>Azarkina, 2002</small> â Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan
- Aelurillus numidicus <small>(Lucas, 1846)</small> â Algeria
- Aelurillus plumipes <small>(Thorell, 1875)</small> â Algeria, Tunisia
- Aelurillus politiventris <small>(O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872)</small> â Greece to Israel
- Aelurillus quadrimaculatus <small>Simon, 1889</small> â India, Sri Lanka
- Aelurillus quercussuber <small>Wunderlich, 2023</small> â Portugal
- Aelurillus rugatus <small>( & , 1895)</small> â Tanzania
- Aelurillus russellsmithi <small>Azarkina, 2009</small> â Ivory Coast, Ghana
- Aelurillus schembrii <small>Cantarella, 1982</small> â Italy (mainland, Sicily), Malta
- Aelurillus simplex <small>(Herman, 1879)</small> â Hungary
- Aelurillus spinicrus <small>(Simon, 1871)</small> â Morocco
- Aelurillus steinmetzi <small>Metzner, 1999</small> â Croatia, Greece
- Aelurillus subaffinis <small>Caporiacco, 1947</small> â Eritrea
- Aelurillus subfestivus <small>Saito, 1934</small> â Japan
- Aelurillus thailandicus <small>Azarkina, 2019</small> â Thailand
- Aelurillus tumidulus <small>WesoÃ
Âowska & Tomasiewicz, 2008</small> â Ethiopia
- Aelurillus unitibialis <small>Azarkina, 2002</small> â Iran
- Aelurillus v-insignitus <small>(Clerck, 1757)</small> â Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Far East), Kazakhstan, Central Asia, China (type species)
- A. v. morulus <small>(Simon, 1937)</small> â France
- A. v. obsoletus <small>KulczyÃ
Âski, 1891</small> â Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania
- Aelurillus westi <small>Azarkina & Zamani, 2019</small> â Iran
References
- Murphy, Frances & Murphy, John (2000): An Introduction to the Spiders of South East Asia. Malaysian Nature Society, Kuala Lumpur.
Further reading
- Li, D., Jackson, R.R. & Harland, D.P (1999). Prey-capture techniques and prey preferences of Aelurillus aeruginosus, A. cognatus and A. kochi, ant-eating jumping spiders (Araneae: Salticidae) from Israel. Isr. J. Zool 45: 341-.
- Azarkina, G.N. (2004): Two new species of the genus Aelurillus Simon, 1884 from Pakistan and Sri Lanka (Araneae: Salticidae). Bulletin of the British Arachnological Society 13(2): 49-52
- SzÃ
±ts, T. & Azarkina, G. (2002): Redescription of Aelurillus subaffinis Caporiacco, 1947 (Araneae: Salticidae). Annales Historico-Naturales Musei Nationalis Hungarici 94: 209-216. PDF
External links