Pellenes

Pellenes is a genus of jumping spiders that was first described by Eugène Louis Simon in 1876.[3] It is considered a senior synonym of Hyllothyene.[2]

Pellenes
Male Pellenes peninsularis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Salticidae
Subfamily: Pelleninae
Genus: Pellenes
Simon, 1876[1]
Type species
P. tripunctatus
(Walckenaer, 1802)
Species

83, see text

Synonyms[1]
  • Hyllothyene Caporiacco, 1939[2]

They are dark to black with white stripes on the back, and often have bright red markings. Most species have a special propensity for snail shells. Pellenes seriatus and P. lapponicus males look very similar to Hasarius adansoni when viewed from the front.

Species

As of August 2019 it contains eighty-three species and one subspecies, found in North America, Africa, Europe, Asia, Australia, and on Saint Helena:[1]

  • P. aethiopicus Strand, 1906Ethiopia
  • P. albopilosus (Tyschchenko, 1965)Russia, Kazakhstan
  • P. allegrii Caporiacco, 1935Ukraine, Russia (Europe) to Central Asia
  • P. amazonka Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999 – Central Asia
  • P. apacheus Lowrie & Gertsch, 1955 – USA
  • P. arciger (Walckenaer, 1837)Southern Europe, Armenia
  • P. badkhyzicus Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999Turkmenistan
  • P. beani Peckham & Peckham, 1903South Africa
  • P. bitaeniata (Keyserling, 1882)Australia (Western Australia, Queensland, New South Wales)
  • P. bonus Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999 – Ukraine (Crimea), Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan
  • P. borisi Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999 – Kazakhstan
  • P. brevis (Simon, 1868)Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Germany, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Greece, Ukraine, Turkey, Cyprus, Iran
  • P. bulawayoensis Wesolowska, 2000Zimbabwe, South Africa, Lesotho
  • P. canadensis Maddison, 2017Canada, USA
  • P. canosus Simon, 1937 – France
  • P. cinctipes (Banks, 1898)Mexico
  • P. cingulatus Wesolowska & Russell-Smith, 2000Tanzania
  • P. corticolens Chamberlin, 1924 – Mexico
  • P. crandalli Lowrie & Gertsch, 1955 – USA
  • P. dahli Lessert, 1915Uganda, Kenya
  • P. denisi Schenkel, 1963Tajikistan, China
  • P. diagonalis (Simon, 1868) – Macedonia, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Iran
  • P. dilutus Logunov, 1995 – Central Asia
  • P. durioei (Lucas, 1846)Algeria
  • P. dyali Roewer, 1951Pakistan
  • P. epularis (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872) – Greece to China, Namibia, South Africa
  • P. flavipalpis (Lucas, 1853) – Greece (incl. Crete), Turkey, Cyprus
  • P. frischi (Audouin, 1826)Egypt
  • P. geniculatus (Simon, 1868) – Southern Europe, Africa, Turkey, Ukraine, Caucasus, Middle East, Iran, Kazakhstan, Central Asia
  • P. gerensis Hu, 2001 – China
  • P. gobiensis Schenkel, 1936 – Russia, Mongolia, China
  • P. grammaticus Chamberlin, 1925 – USA
  • P. hadaensis Prószyński, 1993Saudi Arabia
  • P. hedjazensis Prószyński, 1993 – Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates
  • P. himalaya Caleb, Sajan & Kumar, 2018India
  • P. iforhasorum Berland & Millot, 1941Sudan, Mali
  • P. ignifrons (Grube, 1861) – USA, Canada, Russia, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia
  • P. inexcultus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1873) – St. Helena
  • P. iva Caleb, 2018 – India
  • P. karakumensis Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999 – Turkmenistan
  • P. laevigatus (Simon, 1868) – Greece (Corfu), Lebanon
  • P. lagrecai Cantarella & Alicata, 2002 – Italy
  • P. lapponicus (Sundevall, 1833)North America, Alpine and Northern Europe, Russia (European to Far East)
  • P. levaillanti (Lucas, 1846) – Algeria
  • P. levii Lowrie & Gertsch, 1955 – USA
  • P. limatus Peckham & Peckham, 1901 – USA
  • P. limbatus Kulczyński, 1895 – Russia, Central Asia, Mongolia, China
  • P. logunovi Marusik, Hippa & Koponen, 1996 – Russia
  • P. longimanus Emerton, 1913 – USA
  • P. lucidus Logunov & Zamanpoore, 2005Afghanistan
  • P. luculentus Wesolowska & van Harten, 2007Yemen
  • P. maderianus Kulczyński, 1905 – Madeira, Israel
  • P. marionis (Schmidt & Krause, 1994) – Cape Verde Is.
  • P. mimicus Strand, 1906 – Ethiopia
  • P. minimus (Caporiacco, 1933)Libya
  • P. modicus Wesolowska & Russell-Smith, 2000 – Tanzania, South Africa
  • P. moreanus Metzner, 1999 – Macedonia, Greece, Turkey
  • P. negevensis Prószyński, 2000 – Israel
  • P. nigrociliatus (Simon, 1875) – Canary Is., Europe, Turkey, Israel, Caucasus, Russia to Central Asia, China
  • P. obliquostriatus Caporiacco, 1940 – Ethiopia
  • P. obvolutus Dawidowicz & Wesolowska, 2016 – Kenya
  • P. pamiricus Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999 – Tajikistan
  • P. peninsularis Emerton, 1925 – Canada, USA
  • P. perexcultus Clark & Benoit, 1977 – St. Helena
  • P. pseudobrevis Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999 – Central Asia
  • P. pulcher Logunov, 1995 – Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia
  • P. purcelli Lessert, 1915 – Uganda
  • P. rufoclypeatus Peckham & Peckham, 1903 – South Africa
  • P. seriatus (Thorell, 1875) – France, Greece, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Middle Siberia), Kazakhstan, Central Asia
  • P. shoshonensis Gertsch, 1934 – USA
  • P. sibiricus Logunov & Marusik, 1994 – Russia, Central Asia, Mongolia, China
  • P. siculus Alicata & Cantarella, 2000 – Italy (Sicily)
  • P. stepposus (Logunov, 1991) – Russia, Kazakhstan
  • P. striolatus Wesolowska & van Harten, 2002 – Yemen (Socotra)
  • P. sytchevskayae Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan
  • P. tharinae Wesolowska, 2006 – Namibia, Zimbabwe, South Africa
  • P. tocharistanus Andreeva, 1976 – Central Asia
  • P. tripunctatus (Walckenaer, 1802) (type) – Europe, Caucasus, Russia to Central Asia, China
  • P. turkmenicus Logunov, Marusik & Rakov, 1999 – Russia, Central Asia
  • P. unipunctus Saito, 1937 – China
  • P. univittatus (Caporiacco, 1939) – Ethiopia
  • P. vanharteni Wesolowska, 1998 – Cape Verde Is.
  • P. washonus Lowrie & Gertsch, 1955 – USA

References

  1. "Gen. Pellenes Simon, 1876". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-09-08.
  2. Prószyński, J. (1987). Atlas rysunków diagnostycznych mniej znanych Salticidae 2. p. 44.
  3. Simon, E. (1876). Les arachnides de France. Tome troisième. Roret, Paris. p. 364.


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