my-server
← Wiki

Corinna (spider)

Corinna is a genus of corinnid sac spiders first described by Carl Ludwig Koch in 1841. They are found in Mexico and south to Brazil, and with selected species found in Africa.

Species

it contains eighty-five species:

  • C. aberrans <small>Franganillo, 1926</small> — Cuba
  • C. aechmea <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. aenea <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Brazil
  • C. alticeps <small>(Keyserling, 1891)</small> — Brazil
  • C. andina <small>(Simon, 1898)</small> — Ecuador
  • C. annulipes <small>(Taczanowski, 1874)</small> — Brazil, French Guiana, Peru
  • C. anomala <small>Schmidt, 1971</small> — Ecuador
  • C. areolata <small>Thorell, 1899</small> — Cameroon
  • C. balacobaco <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. bicincta <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Brazil
  • C. bonneti <small>Caporiacco, 1947</small> — Guyana
  • C. botucatensis <small>(Keyserling, 1891)</small> — Brazil
  • C. bristoweana <small>Mello-Leitão, 1926</small> — Brazil
  • C. brunneipeltula <small>Strand, 1911</small> — New Guinea
  • C. buccosa <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Brazil (Amazonas)
  • C. bulbosa <small>F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1899</small> — Mexico to Panama
  • C. bulbula <small>F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1899</small> — Panama
  • C. caatinga <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. capito <small>(Lucas, 1857)</small> — Brazil
  • C. chickeringi <small>(Caporiacco, 1955)</small> — Venezuela
  • C. colombo <small>Bonaldo, 2000</small> — Brazil, Argentina
  • C. corvina <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Paraguay
  • C. cribrata <small>(Simon, 1886)</small> — Tanzania (Zanzibar)
  • C. cruenta <small>(Bertkau, 1880)</small> — Brazil
  • C. demersa <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. ducke <small>Bonaldo, 2000</small> — Brazil
  • C. eresiformis <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Brazil (Amazonas)
  • C. escalvada <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. ferox <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Brazil, Peru
  • C. galeata <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Brazil
  • C. granadensis <small>(L. Koch, 1866)</small> — Colombia
  • C. grandis <small>(Simon, 1898)</small> — Brazil, Guyana
  • C. haemorrhoa <small>(Bertkau, 1880)</small> — Brazil
  • C. hyalina <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. ignota <small>Mello-Leitão, 1922</small> — Brazil
  • C. inermis <small>(Bertkau, 1880)</small> — Brazil
  • C. javuyae <small>Petrunkevitch, 1930</small> — Puerto Rico
  • C. jecatatu <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. kochi <small>(Simon, 1898)</small> — Colombia
  • C. kuryi <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. loiolai <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. longitarsis <small>Strand, 1906</small> — São Tomé and Príncipe
  • C. loricata <small>(Bertkau, 1880)</small> — Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Argentina
  • C. macra <small>(L. Koch, 1866)</small> — Colombia
  • C. major <small>Berland, 1922</small> — Kenya
  • C. mandibulata <small>Strand, 1906</small> — Ethiopia
  • C. maracas <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. mexicana <small>(Banks, 1898)</small> — Mexico
  • C. modesta <small>Banks, 1909</small> — Costa Rica
  • C. mourai <small>Bonaldo, 2000</small> — Brazil
  • C. napaea <small>Simon, 1898</small> — St. Vincent
  • C. nitens <small>(Keyserling, 1891)</small> — Peru, Bolivia, Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Argentina
  • C. nossibeensis <small>Strand, 1907</small> — Madagascar
  • C. octodentata <small>Franganillo, 1946</small> — Cuba
  • C. olivacea <small>Strand, 1906</small> — Ethiopia
  • C. parva <small>(Keyserling, 1891)</small> — Brazil
  • C. parvula <small>Bryant, 1940</small> — Cuba, Hispaniola
  • C. peninsulana <small>Banks, 1898</small> — Mexico
  • C. perida <small>Chickering, 1972</small> — Panama
  • C. phalerata <small>Simon, 1896</small> — Brazil
  • C. pictipes <small>Banks, 1909</small> — Costa Rica
  • C. plumipes <small>(Bertkau, 1880)</small> — Brazil
  • C. propera <small>(Dyal, 1935)</small> — Pakistan
  • C. pulchella <small>(Bryant, 1948)</small> — Dominican Rep.
  • C. punicea <small>Simon, 1898</small> — St. Vincent
  • C. recurva <small>Bonaldo, 2000</small> — Brazil
  • C. regii <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. rubripes <small>C. L. Koch, 1841</small> — Brazil, Guyana
  • C. sanguinea <small>Strand, 1906</small> — Ethiopia
  • Corinna s. inquirenda <small>Strand, 1906</small> — Ethiopia
  • C. selysi <small>(Bertkau, 1880)</small> — Brazil
  • C. spinifera <small>(Keyserling, 1887)</small> — Nicaragua
  • C. tatei <small>Gertsch, 1942</small> — Venezuela
  • C. telecoteco <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. testacea <small>(Banks, 1898)</small> — Mexico
  • C. toussainti <small>Bryant, 1948</small> — Hispaniola
  • C. tranquilla <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. travassosi <small>Mello-Leitão, 1939</small> — Brazil
  • C. urbanae <small>Soares & Camargo, 1948</small> — Brazil
  • C. variegata <small>F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1899</small> — Guatemala, Guyana
  • C. venezuelica <small>(Caporiacco, 1955)</small> — Venezuela
  • C. vesperata <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. vilanovae <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. zecarioca <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil
  • C. ziriguidum <small>Rodrigues & Bonaldo, 2014</small> — Brazil

References