Archivos de diario de enero 2023

05 de enero de 2023

Current Stats for Ohio Spiders

As of January 5th, 2023:
For the Ohio spider observations on iNaturalist in between order and superfamily level, about 11.3 percent are in need of ID.

https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?hrank=order&locale=en&lrank=superfamily&place_id=31&taxon_id=47118&verifiable=any

Please help if you can.

Publicado el enero 5, 2023 02:39 TARDE por huttonia huttonia | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

Key to the Lycosoids of Cape Town

Lycosoidea is the superfamily comprising wolf spiders and their allies.

Families in Lycosoidea:
Lycosidae (wolf spiders)
Pisauridae (nursery-web and fishing spiders)
Ctenidae (wandering spiders, tropical wolf spiders)
Oxyopidae (lynx spiders)

Lycosidae:
(https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?locale=en&page=2&place_id=52355&taxon_id=47416)

Lycosids can be distinguished from oxyopids by their eyes. Oxyopids have a hexagonal eye arrangement. Lycosids can be distinguished from ctenids by their 4-2-2 eye arrangement. Ctenids have a 2-4-2 eye arrangement. Lycosids can be distinguished from pisaurids if one were to draw lines through the posterior lateral and median eyes. If they cross at the front of the chelicerae, it is a lycosid. Pisaurid eyes cross at the anterior row of eyes.

Pisauridae:
(https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?locale=en&place_id=52355&taxon_id=55788)

Pisaurids can be distinguished from oxyopids by their eyes. Oxyopids have a hexagonal eye arrangement. Pisaurids can be distinguished from ctenids by their 4-2-2 eye arrangement. Ctenids have a 2-4-2 eye arrangement. Pisaurids can be distinguished from lycosids if one were to draw lines through the posterior lateral and median eyes. If they cross at the anterior row of eyes, it is a pisaurid. Lycosid eyes cross at the front of the chelicerae.

Ctenidae:
(https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?locale=en&place_id=52355&taxon_id=53389 or for more: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?locale=en&place_id=6986&taxon_id=53389)

Ctenids can be distinguished from oxyopids by their eyes. Oxyopids have a hexagonal eye arrangement. Ctenids can be distinguished from both lycosids and pisaurids by their 2-4-2 eye arrangement. Lycosids and pisaurids have a 4-2-2 eye arrangement.

Oxyopidae
(https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?locale=en&place_id=52355&taxon_id=83843)

Oxyopids can be distinguished from all other families in Cape Town by their hexagonal eye arrangement. Six eyes form a wide, not tall, hexagon as a hexagon has six sides. Two small eyes in front of the hexagon are not visible from a true dorsal view. Oxyopids also have a vast abundance of macrosetae (spines) on their legs.

Publicado el enero 5, 2023 03:59 TARDE por huttonia huttonia | 10 comentarios | Deja un comentario