From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genus of spiders
Phrurolithus is a
genus of
araneomorph spiders first described by
C. L. Koch in 1839.
[2] First placed with the
Liocranidae , it was moved to the
Corinnidae in 2002,
[3] then to the
Phrurolithidae in 2014.
[4]
Species
As of December 2021
[update] it contains fifty-seven species:
[1]
P. absurdus
Gertsch , 1941 – USA
P. adjacens Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
P. aemulatus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. alatus
Ivie & Barrows, 1935 – USA
P. apacheus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. apertus Gertsch, 1935 – USA
P. approximatus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
P. azarkinae Zamani & Marusik, 2020 – Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iran
P. banksi Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. callidus Gertsch, 1935 – USA
P. camawhitae Gertsch, 1935 – USA
P. catalinius Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. claripes (Dönitz &
Strand , 1906) – China, Russia (Sakhalin), Taiwan, Japan
P. coahuilanus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
P. concisus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. connectus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. corsicus (
Simon , 1878) – Spain, France (Corsica), Italy (Sardinia) to Romania
P. debilis Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
P. diversus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
P. dolius
Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935 – USA
P. duncani (Chamberlin, 1925) – USA
P. emertoni Gertsch, 1935 – USA
P. festivus (C. L. Koch, 1835) (
type ) – Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Far East), Kazakhstan, Iran, China, Korea, Japan. Introduced to Canada
P. flavipes
O. Pickard-Cambridge , 1872 – Lebanon, Israel
P. florentinus
Caporiacco , 1923 – Italy
P. goodnighti Muma, 1945 – USA
P. hamdeokensis Seo, 1988 – Russia (South Siberia, Far East), Korea
P. kastoni Schenkel, 1950 – USA
P. kentuckyensis Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1930 – USA
P. labialis Paik, 1991 – Korea, Japan
P. lasiolepis Fu, Chen & Zhang, 2016 – China
P. leviculus Gertsch, 1936 – USA
P. lindemanni Marusik, Omelko & Koponen, 2020 – Russia (Far East)
P. luppovae Spassky, 1941 – Tajikistan
P. minimus C. L. Koch, 1839 – Europe
P. nemoralis Bryant, 1940 – Cuba
P. nigrinus (Simon, 1878) – Central and southern Europe
P. nipponicus
Kishida , 1914 – Japan
P. oabus Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935 – USA
P. paludivagus Bishop & Crosby, 1926 – USA
P. parcus (
Hentz , 1847) – USA
P. pennatoides Seo, 2018 – Korea
P. pinturus Ivie & Barrows, 1935 – USA
P. pipensis Muma, 1945 – USA
P. pullatus
Kulczyński , 1897 – Central to Eastern Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Iran, Kazakhstan, Central Asia
P. pygmaeus
Thorell , 1875 – Ukraine, Russia (Europe)
P. schwarzi Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. shimenensis Yin, Peng, Gong & Kim, 1997 – China
P. similis
Banks , 1895 – USA
P. singulus Gertsch, 1941 – USA
P. sinicus Zhu & Mei, 1982 – Russia (South Siberia, Far East), China, Korea, Japan
P. sordidus Savelyeva, 1972 – Kazakhstan
P. spinosus Bryant, 1948 – Hispaniola
P. szilyi Herman, 1879 – Portugal, Spain, Central to south-eastern Europe
P. tamaulipanus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
P. tepejicanus Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
P. thracia Komnenov & Chatzaki, 2016 – Greece, Turkey
References
External links