Artenliste Spinnentiere Kreta 2009
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Arachnida: Araneae) from Dobruja (Romania and Bulgaria) Liviu Aurel Moscaliuc
Travaux du Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle © 31 août «Grigore Antipa» Vol. LV (1) pp. 9–15 2012 DOI: 10.2478/v10191-012-0001-2 NEW FAUNISTIC RECORDS OF SPIDERS (ARACHNIDA: ARANEAE) FROM DOBRUJA (ROMANIA AND BULGARIA) LIVIU AUREL MOSCALIUC Abstract. A number of spider species were collected in 2011 and 2012 in various microhabitats in and around the village Letea (the Danube Delta, Romania) and on the Bulgarian Dobruja Black Sea coast. The results are the start of a proposed longer survey of the spider fauna in the area. The genus Spermophora Hentz, 1841 (with the species senoculata), Xysticus laetus Thorell, 1875 and Trochosa hispanica Simon, 1870 are mentioned in the Romanian fauna for the first time. Floronia bucculenta (Clerck, 1757) is at the first record for the Bulgarian fauna. Diagnostic drawings and photographs are presented. Résumé. En 2011 et 2012, on recueille des espèces d’araignées dans des microhabitats différents autour du village de Letea (le delta du Danube) et le long de la côte de la Mer Noire dans la Dobroudja bulgare. Les résultats sont le début d’une enquête proposée de la faune d’araignée dans la région. Le genre Spermophora Hentz, 1841 (avec l’espèce senoculata), Xysticus laetus Thorell, 1875 et Trochosa hispanica Simon, 1870 sont mentionnés pour la première fois dans la faune de Roumanie. Floronia bucculenta (Clerck, 1757) est au premier enregistrement pour la faune bulgare. Aussi on présente les dessins de diagnose et des photographies. Key words: Spermophora senoculata, Xysticus laetus, Trochosa hispanica, Floronia bucculenta, first record, spiders, fauna, Romania, Bulgaria. INTRODUCTION The results of this paper come from the author’s regular field work. -
16 3 173 175 Fomichev.PM6
Arthropoda Selecta 16 (3): 173175 © ARTHROPODA SELECTA, 2007 New data on the spider fauna (Aranei) of the southern part of the Kherson Region, Ukraine Íîâûå äàííûå ïî àðàíåîôàóíå (Aranei) þãà Õåðñîíñêîé îáëàñòè Óêðàèíû A.A. Fomichev À.A. Ôîìè÷åâ Gurievskaya street 29, apt. 56, Novosibirsk 630102 Russia óë. Ãóðüåâñêàÿ 29, êâ. 56, ã. Íîâîñèáèðñê 630102 Ðîññèÿ KEY WORDS: fauna, spiders, Ukraine. ÊËÞ×ÅÂÛÅ ÑËÎÂÀ: ôàóíà, ïàóêè, Óêðàèíà. ABSTRACT. A list of 94 spider species is provid- field guide by M. Roberts [1995]. The species marked ed for the southern part of the Kherson Region, Ukraine. with ? refer to provisional identifications. The repre- Three species, Dasumia amoena, Macaroeris flavico- sentatives of Linyphiidae, not abundant in this collec- mis and Nurscia albosignata, are recorded from the tion, remain undetermined and therefore are not includ- Russian Plain for the first time. ed in the following list. The list of species is arranged according to Mikhailov [1997]. All spiders are kept in ÐÅÇÞÌÅ. Ñïèñîê 94 âèäîâ ïàóêîâ ïðèâîäèòñÿ the collection of the Siberian Zoological Museum RAS, äëÿ þãà Õåðñîíñêîé îáëàñòè, Óêðàèíà. Òðè âèäà, Novosibirsk, Russia (curator, Dr G.N. Azarkina). Dasumia amoena, Macaroeris flavicomis è Nurscia albo- signata, âïåðâûå óêàçàíà äëÿ Ðóññêîé Ïëàòôîðìû. A list of species Introduction Excluding the Linyphiidae, a total of 94 spider species has been collected and identified. According to The araneofauna of the southern part of the Kher- the list given below, the most collected spider families son Region of Ukraine, known as Cis-Chernomoria are Salticidae (16.1% of the collected and identified lowland, has been examined in the vicinities of Novaya species), Araneidae (11.4%), and Lycosidae (10.5 %), Kakhovka town [1] (46.8°N, 33.6°E), Khorly village followed by Theridiidae (9,5%), Philodromidae (7.6%), [2] (46.1°N, 33.5°E) and Askania-Nova [3] (46.4°N, Thomisidae (7.6%), and Gnaphosidae (4.8%). -
Abundance and Community Composition of Arboreal Spiders: the Relative Importance of Habitat Structure
AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Juraj Halaj for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology presented on May 6, 1996. Title: Abundance and Community Composition of Arboreal Spiders: The Relative Importance of Habitat Structure. Prey Availability and Competition. Abstract approved: Redacted for Privacy _ John D. Lattin, Darrell W. Ross This work examined the importance of structural complexity of habitat, availability of prey, and competition with ants as factors influencing the abundance and community composition of arboreal spiders in western Oregon. In 1993, I compared the spider communities of several host-tree species which have different branch structure. I also assessed the importance of several habitat variables as predictors of spider abundance and diversity on and among individual tree species. The greatest abundance and species richness of spiders per 1-m-long branch tips were found on structurally more complex tree species, including Douglas-fir, Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirbel) Franco and noble fir, Abies procera Rehder. Spider densities, species richness and diversity positively correlated with the amount of foliage, branch twigs and prey densities on individual tree species. The amount of branch twigs alone explained almost 70% of the variation in the total spider abundance across five tree species. In 1994, I experimentally tested the importance of needle density and branching complexity of Douglas-fir branches on the abundance and community structure of spiders and their potential prey organisms. This was accomplished by either removing needles, by thinning branches or by tying branches. Tying branches resulted in a significant increase in the abundance of spiders and their prey. Densities of spiders and their prey were reduced by removal of needles and thinning. -
Arachnids from the Greenhouses of the Botanical Garden of the PJ Šafárik University in Košice, Slovakia (Arachnida: Araneae, Opiliones, Palpigradi, Pseudoscorpiones)
© Arachnologische Gesellschaft e.V. Frankfurt/Main; http://arages.de/ Arachnologische Mitteilungen / Arachnology Letters 53: 19-28 Karlsruhe, April 2017 Arachnids from the greenhouses of the Botanical Garden of the PJ Šafárik University in Košice, Slovakia (Arachnida: Araneae, Opiliones, Palpigradi, Pseudoscorpiones) Anna Šestáková, Martin Suvák, Katarína Krajčovičová, Andrea Kaňuchová & Jana Christophoryová doi: 10.5431/aramit5304 Abstract. This is the first detailed contribution on the arachnid fauna from heated greenhouses in the Botanical Garden of the P.J. Šafárik University in Košice (Slovakia). Over ten years 62 spider taxa in 21 families were found. Two spiders, Mermessus trilobatus (Emerton, 1882) and Hasarius adansoni (Audouin, 1826), were recorded in Slovakia for the first time. Another interesting record was the cellar spider Hoplopholcus sp. and a new locality for the exotic spiders Coleosoma floridanum Banks, 1900 and Triaeris stenaspis Simon, 1891 was discovered. Additionally, a short survey of other arachnids (except Acari) was done. A single specimen of a provisionally identifiable palpigrade species (cf. Eukoenenia florenciae), one harvestmen species, Opilio canestrinii (Thorell, 1876), and four pseudoscorpion species were recorded. The rare pseudoscorpion species Chthonius ressli Beier, 1956 was collected for the second time in Slovakia. Keywords: alien species, artificial ecosystems, faunistics, introduced species, new record Zusammenfassung. Spinnentiere aus Warmhäusern des Botanischen Gartens der PJ Šafárik Universität in Košice, Slowakei (Arachnida: Araneae, Opiliones, Palpigradi, Pseudoscorpiones). Hiermit wird der erste umfangreiche Beitrag zur Spinnentierfauna des Botanischen Gartens der P.J. Šafárik Universität in Košice (Slowakei) präsentiert. Während zehn Jahren wurden 62 Spinnentaxa aus 21 Familien nachgewiesen. Zwei Spinnenarten, Mermessus trilobatus (Emerton, 1882) und Hasarius adansoni (Audouin, 1826), werden erst- mals für die Slowakei gemeldet. -
Araneae: Dysderidae)
Biodiversity Data Journal 3: e4419 doi: 10.3897/BDJ.3.e4419 Taxonomic Paper A new species of Harpactea Bristowe, 1939 from Turkey (Araneae: Dysderidae) Recep Sulhi Özkütük‡, Mert Elverici §,|, Yuri M. Marusik¶, Kadir Boğaç Kunt‡ ‡ Anadolu University, Science Faculty, Biology Department, Eskişehir, Turkey § Middle East Technical University, Biology Department, Ankara, Turkey | Erzincan University, Science and Arts Faculty, Biology Department, Erzincan, Turkey ¶ IBPN RAS, Magadan, Russia Corresponding author: Recep Sulhi Özkütük ([email protected]), Kadir Boğaç Kunt ([email protected]) Academic editor: Jason Bond Received: 27 Dec 2014 | Accepted: 06 Sep 2015 | Published: 07 Sep 2015 Citation: Özkütük R, Elverici M, Marusik Y, Kunt K (2015) A new species of Harpactea Bristowe, 1939 from Turkey (Araneae: Dysderidae). Biodiversity Data Journal 3: e4419. doi: 10.3897/BDJ.3.e4419 ZooBank: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DE2CC6E0-FA8F-4C26-8D03-55ED686D5E96 Abstract A new species of Harpactea Bristowe, 1939, H. alanyana sp. n. is described from southern Turkey. The new species appears closely related to H. osellai Brignoli, 1978. Detailed description and illustrations of the new and related species are provided. The relationships of the two species are discussed. Keywords Alanya, Antalya, Mediterranean, spider, woodlouse hunters Introduction Harpactea Bristowe, 1939 is large genus of dysderid spiders that includes 172 species distributed in the Mediterranean region from the Iberian Peninsula to Turkmenistan (World Spider Catalog 2014). In spite of this wide distribution range and high species richness, © Özkütük R et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. -
Check-List of Polish Spiders (Araneae, Except Salticidae) File:///D:/Internet/Polen/Polen Spinnenliste 2004.Htm
Check-list of Polish spiders (Araneae, except Salticidae) file:///D:/Internet/Polen/Polen Spinnenliste 2004.htm Check-list of Polish spiders (Araneae, except Salticidae) 1. November, 2004 by Wojciech STARĘGA Instytut Biologii, Katedra Zoologii, Akademia Podlaska, Siedlce [email protected] The present list is a compilation and continuation of the earlier check-lists of Polish spiders (PRÓSZYŃSKI & STARĘGA 1971, 1997, 2003, STARĘGA 1983, PROSZYNSKI & STAREGA 2002]. It will be currently updated, according to the progress of cognition of the country's spider fauna. I give also a list of the most important faunistic and other publications after 1971 which add any species new to the Polish fauna (or cross out some of them). The nomenclatural changes were regarded as far as possible to unify the names used in Polish arachnological literature with those in foreign check-lists and catalogues (e.g. PLATEN & al. 1995, commented by BLICK 1998), NENTWIG et. at. 2003, TANASEVITCH 2004, and first of all, with the latest version (5.0) of the "Spider Catalog" by PLATNICK (2004). The species, which occurrence in Poland is certain, have serial numbers, some exceptions which need confirmation or re-examination are marked with "X" sign instead of a number; doubtful species were not listed, though named in earlier papers (pre-1971). Species described from Poland (or with Polish localities mentioned in their original descriptions) are marked with „☼” sign. Species not "officially" known (i.e. published) from Poland but whose occurrence is already confirmed have remark „(fide ... [the name of its finder])". Some nomenclatorical remarks are given in square brackets. The species protected by law are marked with an asterisk (*), threatened ones - with symbols (in italics) used in the newest "Red list of threatened species in Poland" (STARĘGA & al. -
R Graphics Output
OG24 Kukulcania hibernalis xxoxxo OG6 Ariadna fidicina oxxxxx 75 100 OG25 Segestria bavarica xooxxo 98 OG3 Rhode scutiventris oxoxxx 74 OG10 Harpactea hombergi oxoxxx 99 OG36 Harpactocrates radulifer oooxxx 52 94 OG20 Dysdera erythrina−fervida oxoxxx 68 OG19 Dysderocrates silvestris oxooxx OG2 Oecobius sp oxxxxx OG27 Hyptiotes gertschi oxxxxx 100 46 OG13 Uroctea durandi ooxxxx 51 OG12 Uloborus glomosus xoxxxx 35 OG26 Agelenopsis aperta oxxxxx 95 OG37 Callobius sp oxxxxx OG30 Linyphia triangularis_A xxoxxx 56 74 OG29 Pimoa breuili oxxxoo 97 OG32 Pimoa sp oxxxxx 100 OG11 Leucauge venusta_B oxxxxx 94 OG31 Tetragnatha versicolor_A xooxxo 55 OG8 Nephila clavipes_A oxxoxx 100 OG18 Herennia multipuncta xxxxxx 94 OG33 Zygiella x−notata xxxxxx 51 OG7 Araneus diadematus oxxxxx 100 OG34 Argiope argentata oxxxxx OG17 Loxosceles laeta oxoxxo 100 OG21 Sicarius terrosus oxoxxo CH47 Artema nephilit Isr35 oxxoxo S312 Artema bunkpurugu Gha140 oxxoxo 100 91 BB01 Artema atlanta G080 xxooxo 100 JA119 Artema atlanta G101 oxooxo 97 S332 Artema transcaspica Mar60 xxxoxo 100 S326 Artema doriai Isr40 oxxoxo 97 S497 Artema Om14 Om33 xxxxxo 94 S235 Artema sp.C SMF423 oxooxo 100 S287 Artema sp.C Siyam1 oxxoxo 71 S443 Ibotyporanga Br16−149 Br16−303 xxxxxx 100 JA123 Ibotyporanga naideae G117 oxoxxo 11 JA45 Pholcophora americana G089 oxoxxo 100 JA46 Pholcophora americana G092 oxooxo 100 S298 Pholcophora? Car544 Car544 xxoxxo 95 S323 Gen. Cu12−325 Cu12−325 oxxooo 97 100 S011 Papiamenta MRAC639 MRAC640 xoxooo JA83 Gen.n. Ven01 Ven01 oooxxo 100 S328 Kambiwa neotropica Br15−267 oooxxo 98 S358 Kambiwa MACN273 MACN265 xxxxxx 96 S061 Nerudia Mich20 Mich20 oooxoo 78 S059 Gertschiola macrostyla Mich11 xoxxoo 100 63 S434 Gertschiola macrostyla MACN272 xxxxxx S329 Gen.n. -
Research Article ISSN 2336-9744 (Online) | ISSN 2337-0173 (Print) the Journal Is Available on Line At
Research Article ISSN 2336-9744 (online) | ISSN 2337-0173 (print) The journal is available on line at www.biotaxa.org/em New faunistic data on the cave-dwelling spiders in the Balkan Peninsula (Araneae) MARIA V. NAUMOVA1, STOYAN P. LAZAROV2, BOYAN P. PETROV2, CHRISTO D. DELTSHEV2 1Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 1, Tsar Osvoboditel Blvd., 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria, E-mail: [email protected] 2National Museum of Natural History, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 1, Tsar Osvoboditel Blvd., 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria, E-mail: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Corresponding author: Christo Deltshev Received 15 October 2016 │ Accepted 7 November 2016 │ Published online 9 November 2016. Abstract The contribution summarizes previously unpublished data and adds records of newly collected cave-dwelling spiders from the Balkan Peninsula. New data on the distribution of 91 species from 16 families, found in 157 (27 newly established) underground sites (caves and artificial galleries) are reported due to 337 original records. Twelve species are new to the spider fauna of the caves of the Balkan Peninsula. The species Histopona palaeolithica (Brignoli, 1971) and Hoplopholcus longipes (Spassky, 1934) are reported for the first time for the territory of Balkan Peninsula, Centromerus cavernarum (L. Koch, 1872), Diplocephalus foraminifer (O.P.-Cambridge, 1875) and Lepthyphantes notabilis Kulczyński, 1887 are new for the fauna of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cataleptoneta detriticola Deltshev & Li, 2013 is new for the fauna of Greece, Asthenargus bracianus Miller, 1938 and Centromerus europaeus (Simon, 1911) are new for the fauna of Montenegro and Syedra gracilis (Menge, 1869) is new for the fauna of Turkey. -
A Survey of East Mediterranean Dasumia (Araneae, Dysderidae) with Description of New Species
A peer-reviewed open-access journal ZooKeys 137: 89–101 (2011) A survey of East Mediterranean Dasumia... 89 doi: 10.3897/zookeys.137.1783 RESEARCH ARTICLE www.zookeys.org Launched to accelerate biodiversity research A survey of East Mediterranean Dasumia (Araneae, Dysderidae) with description of new species Kadir Boğaç Kunt1,†, Recep Sulhi Özkütük2,‡, Mert Elverici3,§ 1 Poligon Sitesi 71/27-B TR-06810 Dodurga, Çayyolu, Ankara, Turkey 2 Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Anadolu University, TR- 26470 Eskişehir, Turkey 3 Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Middle East Technical University, TR-06531 Ankara, Turkey † urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:13EEAB4A-F696-41D7-A323-2333410BF5D7 ‡ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:7A21C546-989F-417F-BCC3-8D682CCF2B62 § urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:E5590C56-F430-41D5-AD6A-2ADE157AB439 Corresponding author: Kadir Boğaç Kunt ([email protected]) Academic editor: D. Logunov | Received 7 June 2011 | Accepted 20 September 2011 | Published 14 October 2011 urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FFC99CA2-3A91-49D6-BA4B-510E24541650 Citation: Kunt KB (2011) A survey of East Mediterranean Dasumia (Araneae, Dysderidae) with description of new species. ZooKeys 137: 89–101. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.137.1783 Abstract Dasumia gasparoi sp. n. is described based on specimens of both sexes. The new species is compared with the similar D. crassipalpis (Simon, 1882), described from Syria; and with D. mariandyna Brignoli, 1979, the only previously known species of the genus recorded from Turkey. Furthermore, we point out that, due to some contradictions to the original description of the genus, D. mariandyna may necessarily belong to another genus. Detailed morphological descriptions, diagnosis and figures of the copulatory organs of the new species are presented. -
Targeting a Portion of Central European Spider Diversity for Permanent Preservation
Biodiversity Data Journal 1: e980 doi: 10.3897/BDJ.1.e980 Taxonomic paper Targeting a portion of central European spider diversity for permanent preservation Klemen Čandek†, Matjaž Gregorič†, Rok Kostanjšek‡§, Holger Frick , Christian Kropf|, Matjaž Kuntner†,¶ † Institute of Biology, Scientific Research Centre, Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana, Slovenia ‡ Department of Biology, Biotechnical faculty, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia § National Collection of Natural History, Office of Environment, Vaduz, Liechtenstein | Department of Invertebrates, Natural History Museum, Bern, Switzerland ¶ National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, United States of America Corresponding author: Klemen Čandek ([email protected]) Academic editor: Jeremy Miller Received: 02 Aug 2013 | Accepted: 29 Aug 2013 | Published: 16 Sep 2013 Citation: Čandek K, Gregorič M, Kostanjšek R, Frick H, Kropf C, Kuntner M (2013) Targeting a portion of central European spider diversity for permanent preservation. Biodiversity Data Journal 1: e980. doi: 10.3897/ BDJ.1.e980 Abstract Given the limited success of past and current conservation efforts, an alternative approach is to preserve tissues and genomes of targeted organisms in cryobanks to make them accessible for future generations. Our pilot preservation project aimed to obtain, expertly identify, and permanently preserve a quarter of the known spider species diversity shared between Slovenia and Switzerland, estimated at 275 species. We here report on the faunistic part of this project, which resulted in 324 species (227 in Slovenia, 143 in Switzerland) for which identification was reasonably established. This material is now preserved in cryobanks, is being processed for DNA barcoding, and is available for genomic studies. Keywords Conservation, DNA barcoding, cryobank, biorepository, faunistics © Čandek K et al. -
Synanthropic Spiders, Including the Global Invasive Noble False Widow
www.nature.com/scientificreports OPEN Synanthropic spiders, including the global invasive noble false widow Steatoda nobilis, are reservoirs for medically important and antibiotic resistant bacteria John P. Dunbar1,5*, Neyaz A. Khan2,5, Cathy L. Abberton3, Pearce Brosnan3, Jennifer Murphy3, Sam Afoullouss4, Vincent O’Flaherty2,3, Michel M. Dugon1 & Aoife Boyd2 The false widow spider Steatoda nobilis is associated with bites which develop bacterial infections that are sometimes unresponsive to antibiotics. These could be secondary infections derived from opportunistic bacteria on the skin or infections directly vectored by the spider. In this study, we investigated whether it is plausible for S. nobilis and other synanthropic European spiders to vector bacteria during a bite, by seeking to identify bacteria with pathogenic potential on the spiders. 11 genera of bacteria were identifed through 16S rRNA sequencing from the body surfaces and chelicerae of S. nobilis, and two native spiders: Amaurobius similis and Eratigena atrica. Out of 22 bacterial species isolated from S. nobilis, 12 were related to human pathogenicity among which Staphylococcus epidermidis, Kluyvera intermedia, Rothia mucilaginosa and Pseudomonas putida are recognized as class 2 pathogens. The isolates varied in their antibiotic susceptibility: Pseudomonas putida, Staphylococcus capitis and Staphylococcus edaphicus showed the highest extent of resistance, to three antibiotics in total. On the other hand, all bacteria recovered from S. nobilis were susceptible to ciprofoxacin. Our study demonstrates that S. nobilis does carry opportunistic pathogenic bacteria on its body surfaces and chelicerae. Therefore, some post-bite infections could be the result of vector- borne bacterial zoonoses that may be antibiotic resistant. Bacterial infections represent a major threat to human health. -
Scottish Spiders - Oonopspulcher 15Mm
Scottish Spiders BeesIntroduction and wasps to spider families There are approximately 670 species of spider in 38 different families in the UK. This guide introduces 17 families of spiders, providing an example of a species or genus to look for in each. Please Note: The vast majority of spiders in the UK need examination under a microscope of mature adults to confirm species. Immature specimens may be identified to family or to genus level and often only by an expert. This guide has been designed to introduce several families with information on key features in each and is not an identification guide. Woodlouse spiders (Family Dysderidae) 4 species in 2 genera Rather elongate looking spiders with no clear markings or Woodlouse spider (female) pattern on their cylindrical abdomen. They have six eyes that are clustered together in a circular formation. Often found under stones, logs, tree bark and other debris. Typical body length in family ranges from 6-15mm. Species to look out for - Woodlouse spider (Dysdera crocata) A distinctive species with a red cephalothorax and legs and forward projecting chelicerae. This species feeds on woodlice and can be found under stones and debris in warm (and sometimes) slightly damp situations. Generally nocturnal - look for them in gardens and on walls where they may be found sheltering in silken retreats. This species is common in England but less so in Scotland, being absent from the very north. Look out for Harpactea hombergi which although similar in Male: 9—10mm Female: 11—15mm appearance has a narrower cephalothorax and with less Falk © Steven prominent chelicerae.