Hahnia (spider)
Appearance
Hahnia | |
---|---|
H. helveola | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Hahniidae |
Genus: | Hahnia C. L. Koch, 1841[1] |
Type species | |
H. pusilla C. L. Koch, 1841
| |
Species | |
102, see text | |
Synonyms[1] | |
Hahnia is a genus of dwarf sheet spiders that was first described by C. L. Koch in 1841.[6]
Species
[edit]As of May 2019[update] it contains 102 species:[1]
- H. abrahami (Hewitt, 1915) – South Africa
- H. alini Tikader, 1964 – Nepal
- H. arizonica Chamberlin & Ivie, 1942 – USA
- H. banksi Fage, 1938 – Costa Rica, Panama
- H. barbara Denis, 1937 – Algeria
- H. barbata Bosmans, 1992 – Indonesia (Sulawesi)
- H. benoiti Bosmans & Thijs, 1980 – Kenya
- H. biapophysis Huang & Zhang, 2017 – China
- H. breviducta Bosmans & Thijs, 1980 – Kenya
- H. caeca (Georgescu & Sarbu, 1992) – Romania
- H. caelebs Brignoli, 1978 – Bhutan
- H. cameroonensis Bosmans, 1987 – Cameroon
- H. cervicornata Wang & Zhang, 1986 – China
- H. chaoyangensis Zhu & Zhu, 1983 – China
- H. cinerea Emerton, 1890 – North America
- H. clathrata Simon, 1898 – South Africa
- H. corticicola Bösenberg & Strand, 1906 – Russia (East Siberia, Far East), China, Korea, Taiwan, Japan
- H. crozetensis Hickman, 1939 – Crozet Is.
- H. dewittei Bosmans, 1986 – Congo
- H. dongi Huang & Zhang, 2017 – China
- H. eburneensis Jocqué & Bosmans, 1982 – Ivory Coast
- H. eidmanni (Roewer, 1942) – Equatorial Guinea (Bioko)
- H. falcata Wang, 1989 – China
- H. flaviceps Emerton, 1913 – USA
- H. gigantea Bosmans, 1986 – Central Africa
- H. glacialis Sørensen, 1898 – Russia (East Siberia, Far East), North America
- H. harmae Brignoli, 1977 – Tunisia
- H. hauseri Brignoli, 1978 – Spain (Balearic Is.)
- H. helveola Simon, 1875 – Europe, Turkey
- H. heterophthalma Simon, 1905 – Argentina
- H. himalayaensis Hu & Zhang, 1990 – China, Vietnam
- H. implexa Seo, 2017 – Korea
- H. inflata Benoit, 1978 – Kenya
- H. innupta Brignoli, 1978 – Bhutan
- H. insulana Schenkel, 1938 – Madeira
- H. jocquei Bosmans, 1982 – Malawi
- H. laodiana Song, 1990 – China
- H. larseni Marusik, 2017 – South Africa
- H. laticeps Simon, 1898 – South Africa
- H. lehtineni Brignoli, 1978 – Bhutan
- H. leopoldi Bosmans, 1982 – Cameroon
- H. linderi Wunderlich, 1992 – Canary Is.
- H. lobata Bosmans, 1981 – South Africa
- H. maginii Brignoli, 1977 – Italy
- H. major Benoit, 1978 – Kenya
- H. manengoubensis Bosmans, 1987 – Cameroon
- H. martialis Bösenberg & Strand, 1906 – Japan
- H. mauensis Bosmans, 1986 – Kenya
- H. michaelseni Simon, 1902 – Chile, Argentina, Falkland Is.
- H. molossidis Brignoli, 1979 – Greece
- H. montana Seo, 2017 – Korea
- H. mridulae Tikader, 1970 – India
- H. musica Brignoli, 1978 – Bhutan, China
- H. naguaboi (Lehtinen, 1967) – Puerto Rico
- H. nava (Blackwall, 1841) – Europe, Russia (Europe to Far East), Turkey, Israel, Caucasus, Iran, Korea, Japan
- H. nigricans Benoit, 1978 – Kenya
- H. nobilis Opell & Beatty, 1976 – Mexico
- H. obliquitibialis Bosmans, 1982 – Malawi
- H. okefinokensis Chamberlin & Ivie, 1934 – USA
- H. ononidum Simon, 1875 – USA, Canada, Europe, Turkey, Russia (Europe to Far East), Kazakhstan
- H. oreophila Simon, 1898 – Sri Lanka
- H. ovata Song & Zheng, 1982 – China
- H. petrobia Simon, 1875 – Spain, France, Italy, Germany
- H. pinicola Arita, 1978 – Japan
- H. pusilla C. L. Koch, 1841 (type) – Europe, Russia (Europe to South Siberia)
- H. pusio Simon, 1898 – Sri Lanka
- H. pyriformis Yin & Wang, 1984 – China
- H. quadriseta Galán-Sánchez & Álvarez-Padilla, 2017 – Mexico
- H. rimaformis Zhang, Li & Pham, 2013 – Vietnam
- H. rossii Brignoli, 1977 – Italy
- H. saccata Zhang, Li & Zheng, 2011 – China
- H. sanjuanensis Exline, 1938 – USA, Mexico
- H. schubotzi Strand, 1913 – Central, East Africa
- H. senaria Zhang, Li & Zheng, 2011 – China
- H. sexoculata Ponomarev, 2009 – Russia (Caucasus)
- H. sibirica Marusik, Hippa & Koponen, 1996 – Russia (Europe to Far East), China
- H. simoni Mello-Leitão, 1919 – Brazil
- H. sirimoni Benoit, 1978 – Kenya
- H. spasskyi Denis, 1958 – Afghanistan
- H. spinata Benoit, 1978 – Kenya
- H. subcorticicola Liu, Huang & Zhang, 2015 – China
- H. submaginii Zhang, Li & Zheng, 2011 – China
- H. subsaccata Huang & Zhang, 2017 – China
- H. tabulicola Simon, 1898 – Africa
- H. tanikawai Suguro, 2015 – Japan
- H. tatei (Gertsch, 1934) – Venezuela
- H. thorntoni Brignoli, 1982 – China, Hong Kong, Laos, Japan
- H. thymorum Emerit & Ledoux, 2014 – France
- H. tikaderi Brignoli, 1978 – Bhutan
- H. tortuosa Song & Kim, 1991 – China
- H. tuybaana Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 – Philippines
- H. ulyxis Brignoli, 1974 – Greece
- H. upembaensis Bosmans, 1986 – Congo
- H. vangoethemi Benoit, 1978 – Kenya
- H. vanwaerebeki Bosmans, 1987 – Cameroon
- H. veracruzana Gertsch & Davis, 1940 – Mexico
- H. wangi Huang & Zhang, 2017 – China
- H. weiningensis Huang, Chen & Zhang, 2018 – China
- H. yakouensis Chen, Yan & Yin, 2009 – China
- H. zhejiangensis Song & Zheng, 1982 – China, Taiwan, Vietnam
- H. zhui Zhang & Chen, 2015 – China
- H. zodarioides (Simon, 1898) – South Africa
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Gen. Hahnia C. L. Koch, 1841". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-06-07.
- ^ Bosmans, R. (1980). "Studies on African Hahniidae. I. The taxonomic status of Hahniops Roewer 1942, with redescription of its type species (Arachnida: Araneae)". Senckenbergiana Biologica. 61: 94.
- ^ a b Opell, B. D.; Beatty, J. A. (1976). "The Nearctic Hahniidae (Arachnida: Araneae)". Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology. 147: 420.
- ^ Bosmans, R. (1992). "Spiders of the family Hahniidae from Sulawesi, Indonesia with remarks on synonymy and zoogeography (Arachnida: Araneae: Hahniidae)". Belgian Journal of Zoology. 122: 90.
- ^ Lehtinen, P. T. (1967). "Classification of the cribellate spiders and some allied families, with notes on the evolution of the suborder Araneomorpha". Annales Zoologici Fennici. 4: 250.
- ^ Koch, C. L. (1841). Die Arachniden.