Allocosa

Allocosa is a spider genus of the wolf spider family, Lycosidae. The 130 or more recognized species are spread worldwide.[1]

Allocosa
male Allocosa brasiliensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Lycosidae
Genus: Allocosa
Banks, 1900[1]
Type species
Lycosa funerea
Hentz, 1844[1]
Diversity
133 species

Species

As of March 2017, the World Spider Catalog accepted the following species:[1]

  • Allocosa abmingani (Hickman, 1944) – South Australia
  • Allocosa absoluta (Gertsch, 1934) – USA, Mexico
  • Allocosa adolphifriederici (Strand, 1913) – Central, East Africa, Zanzibar
  • Allocosa albiconspersa Roewer, 1959 – Rwanda
  • Allocosa albonotata (Schmidt, 1895) – Russia
  • Allocosa algoensis (Pocock, 1900) – South Africa
  • Allocosa alticeps (Mello-Leitão, 1944) – Argentina
  • Allocosa apora (Gertsch, 1934) – USA to Costa Rica
  • Allocosa aurata (Purcell, 1903) – South Africa
  • Allocosa aurichelis Roewer, 1959 – South Africa
  • Allocosa bersabae Roewer, 1959 – Namibia
  • Allocosa biserialis Roewer, 1959 – Congo
  • Allocosa brasiliensis (Petrunkevitch, 1910) – Brazil
  • Allocosa caboverdensis Schmidt & Krause, 1995 – Cape Verde Is.
  • Allocosa calamarica (Strand, 1914) – Colombia
  • Allocosa cambridgei (Simon, 1876) – Turkey, Syria
  • Allocosa chamberlini (Gertsch, 1934) – USA
  • Allocosa clariventris (Guy, 1966) – Morocco
  • Allocosa comotti (Thorell, 1887) – Myanmar
  • Allocosa danneili (Dahl, 1908) – Bismarck Arch.
  • Allocosa delagoa Roewer, 1959 – Mozambique
  • Allocosa delesserti (Caporiacco, 1941) – Ethiopia
  • Allocosa deserticola (Simon, 1898) – Egypt
  • Allocosa dingosaeformis (Guy, 1966) – Morocco
  • Allocosa dubia (Walckenaer, 1837) – Brazil
  • Allocosa dufouri (Simon, 1876) – Portugal, Spain
  • Allocosa edeala Roewer, 1959 – Cameroon
  • Allocosa efficiens Roewer, 1959 – Congo, Rwanda
  • Allocosa excusor (L. Koch, 1867) – Queensland
  • Allocosa exserta Roewer, 1959 – Botswana, South Africa
  • Allocosa faberrima (Simon, 1910) – Namibia
  • Allocosa finkei (Hickman, 1944) – South Australia
  • Allocosa flavisternis (L. Koch, 1877) – Queensland, New South Wales
  • Allocosa floridiana (Chamberlin, 1908) – USA
  • Allocosa funerea (Hentz, 1844) (type species) – USA
  • Allocosa furtiva (Gertsch, 1934) – USA
  • Allocosa gabesia Roewer, 1959 – Tunisia
  • Allocosa glochidea Roewer, 1959 – Namibia
  • Allocosa gorontalensis (Merian, 1911) – Sulawesi
  • Allocosa gracilitarsis (Purcell, 1903) – South Africa
  • Allocosa guianensis (Caporiacco, 1947) – Guyana
  • Allocosa halei (Hickman, 1944) – Northern Territory
  • Allocosa handschini (Schenkel, 1937) – Morocco
  • Allocosa hasselti (L. Koch, 1877) – Queensland, South Australia
  • Allocosa hirsuta (Bösenberg & Lenz, 1895) – Central, East Africa
  • Allocosa hostilis (L. Koch, 1877) – Fiji
  • Allocosa hugonis (Strand, 1911) – Aru Is.
  • Allocosa illegalis (Strand, 1906) – Ethiopia
  • Allocosa ituriana (Strand, 1913) – Central Africa
  • Allocosa iturianella Roewer, 1959 – Kenya, Uganda
  • Allocosa kalaharensis (Simon, 1910) – Namibia, South Africa
  • Allocosa karissimbica (Strand, 1913) – Central, East Africa
  • Allocosa kazibana Roewer, 1959 – Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania
  • Allocosa kulagini (Spassky, 1941) – Tajikistan
  • Allocosa laetella (Strand, 1907) – Moluccas
  • Allocosa lawrencei (Roewer, 1951) – South Africa
  • Allocosa leucotricha Roewer, 1959 – Congo
  • Allocosa lombokensis (Strand, 1913) – Lombok
  • Allocosa mafensis (Lawrence, 1927) – Namibia
  • Allocosa mahengea Roewer, 1959 – Tanzania
  • Allocosa manmaka Roewer, 1960 – Afghanistan
  • Allocosa marindia Simó, Lise, Pompozzi & Laborda, 2017 – Brazil, Uruguay
  • Allocosa maroccana Roewer, 1959 – Morocco
  • Allocosa marshalli (Pocock, 1901) – Zimbabwe
  • Allocosa martinicensis (Strand, 1910) – Martinique
  • Allocosa marua Roewer, 1959 – Cameroon
  • Allocosa mascatensis (Simon, 1898) – Oman
  • Allocosa mexicana (Banks, 1898) – Mexico
  • Allocosa millica (Strand, 1906) – USA
  • Allocosa mirabilis (Strand, 1906) – Ethiopia
  • Allocosa mogadorensis (Simon, 1909) – Morocco
  • Allocosa mokiensis Gertsch, 1934 – USA
  • Allocosa molicola (Strand, 1906) – Ethiopia
  • Allocosa montana Roewer, 1959 – Tanzania
  • Allocosa morelosiana (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – USA, Mexico
  • Allocosa mossambica Roewer, 1959 – Mozambique
  • Allocosa mossamedesa Roewer, 1959 – Angola
  • Allocosa mulaiki (Gertsch, 1934) – USA
  • Allocosa mutilata Mello-Leitão, 1937 – Brazil
  • Allocosa nanahuensis (Badcock, 1932) – Paraguay
  • Allocosa nebulosa Roewer, 1959 – Congo
  • Allocosa nigella (Caporiacco, 1940) – Ethiopia
  • Allocosa nigripes (Guy, 1966) – Morocco
  • Allocosa nigriventris (Guy, 1966) – Morocco
  • Allocosa nigrofulva (Caporiacco, 1955) – Venezuela
  • Allocosa noctuabunda (Montgomery, 1904) – USA, Mexico
  • Allocosa obscuroides (Strand, 1906) – Java, Australia
  • Allocosa obturata (Lawrence, 1928) – Namibia
  • Allocosa olivieri (Simon, 1876) – Syria, Israel
  • Allocosa orinus (Chamberlin, 1916) – Peru
  • Allocosa otavia Roewer, 1959 – Namibia
  • Allocosa palabunda (L. Koch, 1877) – Australia, New Caledonia
  • Allocosa pallideflava (Lawrence, 1936) – Namibia
  • Allocosa panamena Chamberlin, 1925 – Mexico to Ecuador
  • Allocosa paraguayensis (Roewer, 1951) – Paraguay
  • Allocosa pardala (Strand, 1909) – Brazil
  • Allocosa parva (Banks, 1894) – USA to Costa Rica
  • Allocosa parvivulva (Lawrence, 1927) – Namibia
  • Allocosa pellita Roewer, 1960 – Afghanistan
  • Allocosa perfecta Roewer, 1959 – Namibia
  • Allocosa pistia (Strand, 1913) – Central, East Africa
  • Allocosa plumipes Roewer, 1959 – Tanzania
  • Allocosa pugnatrix (Keyserling, 1877) – Central America, West Indies
  • Allocosa pulchella Roewer, 1959 – Namibia
  • Allocosa pylora Chamberlin, 1925 – USA
  • Allocosa quadrativulva (Caporiacco, 1955) – Venezuela
  • Allocosa retenta (Gertsch & Wallace, 1935) – USA
  • Allocosa ruwenzorensis (Strand, 1913) – East Africa
  • Allocosa samoana (Roewer, 1951) – Samoa
  • Allocosa sangtoda Roewer, 1960 – Afghanistan
  • Allocosa schoenlandi (Pocock, 1900) – South Africa
  • Allocosa schubotzi (Strand, 1913) – Rwanda
  • Allocosa sefrana (Schenkel, 1937) – Algeria
  • Allocosa senex (Mello-Leitão, 1945) – Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay
  • Allocosa sennaris Roewer, 1959 – Sudan
  • Allocosa sjostedti (Lessert, 1926) – East Africa, Rwanda
  • Allocosa soluta (Tullgren, 1905) – Bolivia
  • Allocosa sublata (Montgomery, 1902) – USA
  • Allocosa subparva Dondale & Redner, 1983 – USA, Mexico
  • Allocosa tagax (Thorell, 1897) – Myanmar
  • Allocosa tangana Roewer, 1959 – Tanzania
  • Allocosa tarentulina (Audouin, 1826) – North Africa
  • Allocosa tenebrosa (Thorell, 1897) – Myanmar
  • Allocosa testacea Roewer, 1959 – South Africa
  • Allocosa thieli (Dahl, 1908) – Bismarck Arch.
  • Allocosa tremens (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1876) – North Africa
  • Allocosa tuberculipalpa (Caporiacco, 1940) – Central, East Africa
  • Allocosa umtalica (Purcell, 1903) – East, Southern Africa
  • Allocosa utahana Dondale & Redner, 1983 – USA
  • Allocosa venezuelica (Caporiacco, 1955) – Venezuela
  • Allocosa veracruzana (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
  • Allocosa wittei Roewer, 1959 – Congo
  • Allocosa yurae (Strand, 1908) – Peru, Chile
gollark: Yep!
gollark: Also, though this is more personal preference, (GNU[+/])Linux (distributions) has (have):- a package manager useful for general use (the windows store is not really this)- a usable shell (yes, I'm aware you can use WSL, but it's not very integrated with everything else)- lower resource use- a nicer UI (well, the option for one; AFAIK Windows does not allow as much customization)
gollark: I've seen Candy Crush randomly installed on a Windows machine as well as random unwanted gaming-related services, there's advertising for OneDrive in the file explorer IIRC, control over updates is pretty limited though I guess you can do a bit, and by "spying" I don't mean anything targeted but just that it reports quite a lot back to Microsoft.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> So telemetry/spying, in-OS advertising, uncontrollable updates, random useless programs being installed, and that sort of thing don't happen to you?
gollark: I'm sure Lego *could* make the speed consistent as long as the batteries can provide some minimum power. They just don't care, probably.

References

  1. "Gen. Allocosa Banks, 1900". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 2017-03-18.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.