Dictyna is a genus of cribellate araneomorph spiders in the family Dictynidae, and was first described by Carl Jakob Sundevall in 1833.
Species
it contains 118 species:
- D. abundans <small>Chamberlin & Ivie, 1941</small> â USA
- D. agressa <small>Ivie, 1947</small> â USA
- D. alaskae <small>Chamberlin & Ivie, 1947</small> â North America, Northern Europe, Russia (Europe to Far East)
- D. albicoma <small>Simon, 1893</small> â Venezuela
- D. albida <small>O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1885</small> â India, Pakistan, China (Yarkand)
- D. albopilosa <small>Franganillo, 1936</small> â Cuba
- D. albovittata <small>Keyserling, 1881</small> â Peru
- D. alyceae <small>Chickering, 1950</small> â Panama
- D. andesiana <small>Berland, 1913</small> â Ecuador
- D. annexa <small>Gertsch & Mulaik, 1936</small> â USA, Mexico
- D. apacheca <small>Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935</small> â USA
- D. armata <small>Thorell, 1875</small> â Ukraine, Georgia?
- D. arundinacea <small>(Linnaeus, 1758)</small> (type) â North America, Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Far East), Iran, Central Asia, China, Korea, Japan
- D. bellans <small>Chamberlin, 1919</small> â USA, Mexico
- Dictyna b. hatchi <small>Jones, 1948</small> â USA
- D. bispinosa <small>Simon, 1906</small> â Myanmar
- D. bostoniensis <small>Emerton, 1888</small> â USA, Canada
- D. brevitarsa <small>Emerton, 1915</small> â USA, Canada
- D. cafayate <small>Mello-Leitão, 1941</small> â Argentina
- D. calcarata <small>Banks, 1904</small> â USA, Mexico. Introduced to Hawaii
- D. cambridgei <small>Gertsch & Ivie, 1936</small> â Mexico
- D. cavata <small>Jones, 1947</small> â USA, Cuba
- D. cebolla <small>Ivie, 1947</small> â USA
- D. chandrai <small>Tikader, 1966</small> â India
- D. cholla <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1942</small> â USA, Mexico
- D. colona <small>Simon, 1906</small> â New Caledonia
- D. coloradensis <small>Chamberlin, 1919</small> â USA
- D. columbiana <small>Becker, 1886</small> â Venezuela
- D. cronebergi <small>Simon, 1889</small> â Turkmenistan
- D. crosbyi <small>Gertsch & Mulaik, 1940</small> â USA
- D. dahurica <small>Danilov, 2000</small> â Russia (South Siberia)
- D. dauna <small>Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1958</small> â USA, Bahama Is.
- D. denisi <small>(Lehtinen, 1967)</small> â Niger
- D. donaldi <small>Chickering, 1950</small> â Panama
- D. dunini <small>Danilov, 2000</small> â Russia (Urals to Far East)
- D. ectrapela <small>(Keyserling, 1886)</small> â Peru
- D. felis <small>Bösenberg & Strand, 1906</small> â Russia (Far East), China, Korea, Japan
- D. fluminensis <small>Mello-Leitão, 1924</small> â Brazil
- D. foliacea <small>(Hentz, 1850)</small> â USA, Canada
- D. foliicola <small>Bösenberg & Strand, 1906</small> â Russia (Far East), China, Korea, Japan
- D. formidolosa <small>Gertsch & Ivie, 1936</small> â USA, Canada
- D. fuerteventurensis <small>Schmidt, 1976</small> â Canary Is.
- D. gloria <small>Chamberlin & Ivie, 1944</small> â USA
- D. guerrerensis <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1937</small> â Mexico
- D. guineensis <small>Denis, 1955</small> â Guinea
- D. hamifera <small>Thorell, 1872</small> â Greenland, Finland, Russia (Siberia)
- Dictyna h. simulans <small>KulczyÃ
Âski, 1916</small> â Russia (West Siberia)
- D. idahoana <small>Chamberlin & Ivie, 1933</small> â USA
- D. ignobilis <small>KulczyÃ
Âski, 1895</small> â Moldova, Armenia
- D. incredula <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1937</small> â Mexico
- D. jacalana <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1937</small> â Mexico
- D. juno <small>Ivie, 1947</small> â USA
- D. kosiorowiczi <small>Simon, 1873</small> â Western Mediterranean
- D. laeviceps <small>Simon, 1911</small> â Algeria
- D. lecta <small>Chickering, 1952</small> â Panama
- D. linzhiensis <small>Hu, 2001</small> â China
- D. livida <small>(Mello-Leitão, 1941)</small> â Argentina
- D. longispina <small>Emerton, 1888</small> â USA
- D. major <small>Menge, 1869</small> â North America, Europe, Russia (Europe to Far East), Tajikistan, China
- D. marilina <small>Chamberlin, 1948</small> â USA
- D. meditata <small>Gertsch, 1936</small> â Mexico to Panama, Cuba
- D. miniata <small>Banks, 1898</small> â Mexico
- D. minuta <small>Emerton, 1888</small> â USA, Canada
- D. moctezuma <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1942</small> â Mexico
- D. mora <small>Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1958</small> â USA
- D. namulinensis <small>Hu, 2001</small> â China
- D. navajoa <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1942</small> â Mexico
- D. nebraska <small>Gertsch, 1946</small> â USA
- D. obydovi <small>Marusik & Koponen, 1998</small> â Russia (South Siberia)
- D. ottoi <small>Marusik & Koponen, 2017</small> â Azerbaijan, Georgia?, Iran?
- D. palmgreni <small>Marusik & Fritzén, 2011</small> â Finland, Russia (Europe to northeastern Siberia)
- D. paramajor <small>Danilov, 2000</small> â Russia (South Siberia)
- D. peon <small>Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1958</small> â USA, Mexico
- D. personata <small>Gertsch & Mulaik, 1936</small> â USA, Mexico
- D. pictella <small>Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1958</small> â USA
- D. procerula <small>Bösenberg & Strand, 1906</small> â Japan
- D. puebla <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1937</small> â Mexico
- D. pusilla <small>Thorell, 1856</small> â Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Far East), Central Asia
- D. quadrispinosa <small>Emerton, 1919</small> â USA
- D. ranchograndei <small>Caporiacco, 1955</small> â Venezuela
- D. saepei <small>Chamberlin & Ivie, 1941</small> â USA
- D. saltona <small>Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1958</small> â USA
- D. sancta <small>Gertsch, 1946</small> â USA, Canada
- D. schmidti <small>KulczyÃ
Âski, 1926</small> â Russia (West Siberia to Far East)
- D. secuta <small>Chamberlin, 1924</small> â USA, Mexico
- D. sierra <small>Chamberlin, 1948</small> â USA
- D. similis <small>Keyserling, 1878</small> â Uruguay
- D. simoni <small>Petrunkevitch, 1911</small> â Venezuela
- D. sinaloa <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1942</small> â Mexico
- D. siniloanensis <small>Barrion & Litsinger, 1995</small> â Philippines
- D. sinuata <small>Esyunin & Sozontov, 2016</small> â Ukraine, Russia (Europe)
- D. sonora <small>Gertsch & Davis, 1942</small> â Mexico
- D. sotnik <small>Danilov, 1994</small> â Russia (South Siberia)
- D. subpinicola <small>Ivie, 1947</small> â USA
- D. sylvania <small>Chamberlin & Ivie, 1944</small> â USA
- D. szaboi <small>Chyzer, 1891</small> â Austria, Hungary, Czech Rep., Slovakia, Russia (Europe), Kazakhstan
- D. tarda <small>Schmidt, 1971</small> â Ecuador
- D. terrestris <small>Emerton, 1911</small> â USA
- D. togata <small>Simon, 1904</small> â Chile
- D. tridentata <small>Bishop & Ruderman, 1946</small> â USA
- D. tristis <small>Spassky, 1952</small> â Tajikistan
- D. trivirgata <small>Mello-Leitão, 1943</small> â Chile
- D. tucsona <small>Chamberlin, 1948</small> â USA, Mexico
- D. tullgreni <small>Caporiacco, 1949</small> â Kenya
- D. turbida <small>Simon, 1905</small> â India, Sri Lanka
- D. tyshchenkoi <small>Marusik, 1988</small> â Russia (Urals to Far East)
- Dictyna t. wrangeliana <small>Marusik, 1988</small> â Russia (Wrangel Is.)
- D. ubsunurica <small>Marusik & Koponen, 1998</small> â Russia (South Siberia)
- D. umai <small>Tikader, 1966</small> â India
- D. uncinata <small>Thorell, 1856</small> â Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Far East), Central Asia, China, Japan
- D. uvs <small>Marusik & Koponen, 1998</small> â Russia (South Siberia)
- D. vittata <small>Keyserling, 1883</small> â Peru
- D. volucripes <small>Keyserling, 1881</small> â North America
- Dictyna v. volucripoides <small>Ivie, 1947</small> â USA
- D. vultuosa <small>Keyserling, 1881</small> â Peru
- D. xizangensis <small>Hu & Li, 1987</small> â China
- D. yongshun <small>Yin, Bao & Kim, 2001</small> â China
- D. zhangmuensis <small>Hu, 2001</small> â China
References
External links