my-server
← Wiki

Phrurolithus

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

Species

it contains fifty-seven species:

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

References

External links