Dendryphantes is a genus of jumping spiders that was first described by Carl Ludwig Koch in 1837.[2]
Dendryphantes | |
---|---|
Dendryphantes rudis on oak leaf in western Saxony | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Salticidae |
Subfamily: | Salticinae |
Genus: | Dendryphantes C. L. Koch, 1837[1] |
Type species | |
D. hastatus (Clerck, 1757)
| |
Species | |
69, see text |
Species
editAs of June 2019[update] it contains sixty-nine species, found in Africa, Asia, South America, the Caribbean, Europe, North America, and on Saint Helena:[1]
- D. acutus Wesolowska & Haddad, 2014 – Lesotho, South Africa
- D. aethiopicus Wesolowska & Tomasiewicz, 2008 – Ethiopia
- D. amphibolus Chamberlin, 1916 – Peru
- D. andinus Chamberlin, 1916 – Peru
- D. arboretus Wesolowska & Cumming, 2008 – Zimbabwe
- D. barguzinensis Danilov, 1997 – Russia (southern Siberia)
- D. barrosmachadoi Caporiacco, 1955 – Venezuela
- D. biankii Prószyński, 1979 – Russia (central and southern Siberia, Russian Far East), Mongolia, China
- D. bisquinquepunctatus Taczanowski, 1878 – Peru
- D. calus Chamberlin, 1916 – Peru
- D. caporiaccoi Roewer, 1951 – Karakorum
- D. centromaculatus Taczanowski, 1878 – Peru
- D. chuldensis Prószyński, 1982 – Mongolia
- D. comatus Karsch, 1880 – Syria
- D. czekanowskii Prószyński, 1979 – Russia (Urals to Russian Far East), Japan
- D. darchan Logunov, 1993 – Mongolia
- D. duodecempunctatus Mello-Leitão, 1943 – Argentina
- D. elgonensis Wesolowska & Dawidowicz, 2014 – Kenya
- D. fulvipes (Mello-Leitão, 1943) – Chile
- D. fulviventris (Lucas, 1846) – Algeria
- D. fusconotatus (Grube, 1861) – Russia (Urals to Russian Far East), Mongolia, China
- D. hararensis Wesolowska & Cumming, 2008 – Zimbabwe, South Africa
- D. hastatus (Clerck, 1757) (type) – Europe, Russia (European Russia to central and southern Siberia), Kazakhstan, China
- D. hewitti Lessert, 1925 – Kenya, Tanzania
- D. holmi Wesolowska & Dawidowicz, 2014 – Kenya
- D. honestus (C. L. Koch, 1846) – Brazil
- D. legibilis (Nicolet, 1849) – Chile
- D. lepidus (Peckham & Peckham, 1901) – Brazil
- D. limpopo Wesolowska & Haddad, 2013 – South Africa
- D. linzhiensis Hu, 2001 – China
- D. luridus Wesolowska & Dawidowicz, 2014 – Kenya
- D. madrynensis Mello-Leitão, 1940 – Argentina
- D. matumi Haddad & Wesolowska, 2013 – South Africa
- D. mendicus (C. L. Koch, 1846) – Caribbean
- D. minutus Wesolowska & Dawidowicz, 2014 – Kenya
- D. modestus (Mello-Leitão, 1941) – Argentina
- D. mordax (C. L. Koch, 1846) – Chile, Argentina, Uruguay
- D. neethlingi Haddad & Wesolowska, 2013 – South Africa
- D. nicator Wesolowska & van Harten, 1994 – Yemen
- D. nigromaculatus (Keyserling, 1885) – USA
- D. niveornatus Mello-Leitão, 1936 – Chile
- D. nobilis (C. L. Koch, 1846) – South America
- D. ovchinnikovi Logunov & Marusik, 1994 – Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
- D. patagonicus Simon, 1905 – Argentina
- D. potanini Logunov, 1993 – China
- D. praeposterus Denis, 1958 – Afghanistan
- D. pseudochuldensis Peng, Xie & Kim, 1994 – China
- D. pugnax (C. L. Koch, 1846) – Mexico
- D. purcelli Peckham & Peckham, 1903 – St. Helena, South Africa, Lesotho
- D. quaesitus Wesolowska & van Harten, 1994 – Yemen
- D. rafalskii Wesolowska, 2000 – Zimbabwe, South Africa
- D. ravidus (Simon, 1868) – Lithuania, Belarus?
- D. reimoseri Roewer, 1951 – Brazil
- D. rudis (Sundevall, 1833) – Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (European Russia to Russian Far East), Kazakhstan
- D. sacci Simon, 1886 – Bolivia
- D. sanguineus Wesolowska, 2011 – Zimbabwe
- D. schultzei Simon, 1910 – Namibia, South Africa
- D. secretus Wesolowska, 1995 – Kazakhstan
- D. sedulus (Blackwall, 1865) – Cape Verde Is.
- D. seriatus Taczanowski, 1878 – Peru
- D. serratus Wesolowska & Dawidowicz, 2014 – Kenya
- D. sexguttatus (Mello-Leitão, 1945) – Argentina
- D. silvestris Wesolowska & Haddad, 2013 – South Africa
- D. strenuus (C. L. Koch, 1846) – Mexico
- D. subtilis Wesolowska & Dawidowicz, 2014 – Kenya
- D. tuvinensis Logunov, 1991 – Russia (southern Siberia), Kazakhstan, Mongolia
- D. villarrica Richardson, 2010 – Chile
- D. yadongensis Hu, 2001 – China
- D. zygoballoides Chamberlin, 1924 – Mexico
References
edit- ^ a b "Gen. Dendryphantes C. L. Koch, 1837". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-07-07.
- ^ Koch, C. L. (1837). Übersicht des Arachnidensystems. pp. 1–39. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.39561.
External links
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