Zorinae
The Zorinae are a spider subfamily of the Miturgidae,[1] with more than 70 described species in 13 genera.
Zorinae | |
---|---|
Zora silvestris (female) | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Miturgidae |
Subfamily: | Zorinae |
Genera | |
See text | |
Diversity | |
13 genera, 73 species | |
Spiders in this family hunt without webs.
It is very hard to determine species without high quality images of the genitalia.
Distribution
Most species occur in the tropics (South America, Australia, Africa, Asia). The species Israzorides judaeus is endemic to Israel, and several species of the genus Zora are found in colder climates, including the U.S. and Europe up to Sweden.
Genera
- Argoctenus L. Koch, 1878 — Australia, New Caledonia, New Zealand
- Elassoctenus Simon, 1909 — Australia
- Hestimodema Simon, 1909 — Australia
- Hoedillus Simon, 1898 — Guatemala
- Israzorides Levy, 2003 — Israel
- Odo Keyserling, 1887 — Central and South America, Australia
- Odomasta Simon, 1909 — Tasmania
- Simonus Ritsema, 1881 — Australia
- Thasyraea L. Koch, 1878 — Australia
- Tuxoctenus Raven, 2008 — Australia
- Voraptus Simon, 1898 — Africa
- Xenoctenus Mello-Leitão, 1938 — Argentina
- Zora C. L. Koch, 1847 — Palearctic
- Zoroides Berland, 1924 — Australia
Gallery of natural light images
- Argoctenus sp. (live subadult female)
gollark: ?tag lyricly projects
gollark: Thus, 🦀:crab:🦀.
gollark: The second (or third, I forgot in the 20 seconds since reading the list) biggest room appears to be for Rust.
gollark: Well, there are at least three separate ones for psychedelic drugs, what sound like NSFW ones, "conspiracy", Russian meshnet cryptolibertarians, some people working on adding more vegan locations to openstreetmap, bizarrely large amounts of activity from Perth, London biohackspace, "femboys", "science", and a weirdly popular bodyweight fitness one.
gollark: Matrix public rooms seem to be split between random open source projects and incredibly weird things
See also
- Spider families
References
- Ramírez, M. 2014. The morphology and phylogeny of Dionychan spiders (Araneae: Araneomorphae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 390, 1–374.
- Corey, D. T. & D. J. Mott. A revision of the genus Zora (Araneae, Zoridae) in North America. J. Arachnol. 19: 55-61. PDF
External links
Wikispecies has information related to Zoridae |
- "Images of Zora spinimana". Archived from the original on 2004-08-26.
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