Oedothorax
Oedothorax is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by A. Förster & Philipp Bertkau in 1883.[2]
Oedothorax | |
---|---|
O. apicatus, male | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Linyphiidae |
Genus: | Oedothorax Bertkau, 1883[1] |
Type species | |
O. gibbosus (Blackwall, 1841) | |
Species | |
77, see text |
Species
As of May 2019 it contains seventy-seven species and one subspecies, found in Europe, the United States, Canada, Asia, Argentina, Africa, and the Americas:[1]
- O. agrestis (Blackwall, 1853) – Europe
- Oedothorax a. longipes (Simon, 1884) – Switzerland
- O. alascensis (Banks, 1900) – USA (Alaska)
- O. angelus Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. annulatus Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. apicatus (Blackwall, 1850) – Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia to Central Asia, China
- O. assuetus Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. banksi Strand, 1906 – USA (Alaska)
- O. biantu Zhao & Li, 2014 – China
- O. bifoveatus Tanasevitch, 2017 – Malaysia (Borneo), Indonesia (Java)
- O. brevipalpus (Banks, 1901) – USA
- O. caporiaccoi Roewer, 1942 – Karakorum
- O. cascadeus Chamberlin, 1949 – USA
- O. clypeellum Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. collinus Ma & Zhu, 1991 – China
- O. convector Tanasevitch, 2014 – Thailand
- O. cornutus Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. coronatus Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. cunur Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. dismodicoides Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. elongatus Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. esyunini Zhang, Zhang & Yu, 2003 – China
- O. falcifer Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. falciferoides Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. fuegianus (Simon, 1902) – Argentina
- O. fuscus (Blackwall, 1834) – Azores, Europe, North Africa
- O. gibbifer (Kulczyński, 1882) – Europe, Russia
- O. gibbosus (Blackwall, 1841) (type) – Europe, Turkey
- O. globiceps Thaler, 1987 – Kashmir
- O. hirsutus Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. holmi Wunderlich, 1978 – East Africa
- O. howardi Petrunkevitch, 1925 – USA
- O. hulongensis Zhu & Wen, 1980 – Russia, China, Korea
- O. insulanus Paik, 1980 – Korea
- O. japonicus Kishida, 1910 – Japan
- O. khasi Tanasevitch, 2017 – India
- O. kodaikanal Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. latitibialis Bosmans, 1988 – Cameroon
- O. legrandi Jocqué, 1985 – Comoros
- O. limatus Crosby, 1905 – USA
- O. lineatus Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. longiductus Bosmans, 1988 – Cameroon
- O. lopchu Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. lucidus Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. macrophthalmus Locket & Russell-Smith, 1980 – Nigeria, Ivory Coast
- O. malearmatus Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. maximus (Emerton, 1882) – USA
- O. meghalaya Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. meridionalis Tanasevitch, 1987 – Iran, Central Asia
- O. modestus Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. mongolensis (Heimer, 1987) – Russia, Mongolia
- O. monoceros Miller, 1970 – Angola
- O. montifer (Emerton, 1882) – USA
- O. muscicola Bosmans, 1988 – Cameroon
- O. myanmar Tanasevitch, 2017 – Myanmar
- O. nazareti Scharff, 1989 – Ethiopia
- O. nigromaculatus (Gao, Fei & Xing, 1996) – China
- O. paludigena Simon, 1926 – France, Corsica, Sardinia, Italy, Greece
- O. paracymbialis Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. paralegrandi Tanasevitch, 2016 – India (Himalaya)
- O. pilosus Wunderlich, 1978 – Ethiopia
- O. retusus (Westring, 1851) – Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia to Kazakhstan, China
- O. rusticus Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. savigniformis Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. seminolus Ivie & Barrows, 1935 – USA
- O. sexmaculatus Saito & Ono, 2001 – Japan
- O. sexoculatus Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. sexoculorum Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. simplicithorax Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. stylus Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. tholusus Tanasevitch, 1998 – Nepal
- O. tingitanus (Simon, 1884) – Spain, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia
- O. trilineatus Saito, 1934 – Japan
- O. trilobatus (Banks, 1896) – USA, Canada, Russia
- O. uncus Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
- O. unicolor Wunderlich, 1974 – Nepal
- O. usitatus Jocqué & Scharff, 1986 – Tanzania
- O. villosus Tanasevitch, 2015 – India
See also
References
- "Gen. Oedothorax Bertkau, 1883". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-06-16.
- Förster, A.; Bertkau, P. (1883). "Beiträge zur Kenntniss der Spinnenfauna der Rheinprovinz". Verhandlungen des Naturhistorischen Vereins der Preussischen Rheinlande und Westfalens. 40: 205–278.
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