Gradungulidae

Gradungulidae, also known as large-clawed spiders, is a spider family endemic to Australia and New Zealand. They are medium to large-sized haplogyne spiders with three claws and two pairs of book-lungs similar to Mygalomorphae. Some species build extensive webs with an upper retreat tangle and connecting threads to scaffolding. This supports the ladder-like catching platform that is glued to the ground. Progradungula, a large spider with long legs like Hickmania,[1] and Macrogradungula are the only cribellate genera of the family.

Large-clawed spiders
Gradungula sorenseni, male
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Gradungulidae
Forster, 1955
Diversity
7 genera, 16 species

Species

Gradungula Forster, 1955

Kaiya Gray, 1987

Macrogradungula Gray, 1987

Pianoa Forster, 1987

  • Pianoa isolata Forster, 1987 — New Zealand

Progradungula Forster & Gray, 1979

Spelungula Forster, 1987

  • Spelungula cavernicola Forster, 1987 — New Zealand

Tarlina Gray, 1987

  • Tarlina daviesae Gray, 1987 — Queensland
  • Tarlina milledgei Gray, 1987 — New South Wales
  • Tarlina noorundi Gray, 1987 (type species) — New South Wales
  • Tarlina simipes Gray, 1987 — Queensland
  • Tarlina smithersi Gray, 1987 — New South Wales
  • Tarlina woodwardi (Forster, 1955) — Queensland
gollark: That sure is a wikipedia page which exists.
gollark: I don't run mail since I fear that I would break something and be unable to recover it because mail is used for password resets and domain purchasing/renewal and whatever.
gollark: I actually *can't* really do SSO without a lot of custom glue code, as my services authenticate in a ton of different ways.
gollark: Also it has password hashes somewhere since I never got round to implementing single sign on.
gollark: Configuring it isn't very annoying, the language makes decent sense and all, but I have about 10 subdomains and tons of random subpaths with special routing and reverse proxying logic.

References

  • Forster, R. R., Platnick, N. I. and Gray, M. R. (1987): A review of the spider superfamilies Hypochiloidea and Austrochiloidea (Araneae, Araneomorphae). Bulletin of the AMNH 185(1): 1-116 Abstract - PDF (50Mb)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.