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Agelenidae
Tegenaria Latreille, 1804
EOL Text
Collection Sites: world map showing specimen collection locations for Tegenaria
House spiders of the genus Tegenaria are fast-running brownish funnel-web weavers that occupy much of the Northern Hemisphere except for Japan and Indonesia. Of all Agelenids, Tegenaria possesses the largest species of funnel weavers: the Cardinal spider (T. parietina), whose species' females reach 18 mm in body size. Up until very recently, the genus contained several more species which have now been removed into different genera; in paricular, the recently described genus Eratigena,[1] which now contains both the giant house spider and the infamous hobo spider. Of the >100 species originally in Tegenaria, only 56 are still placed in the genus.[1]
Among the species still included in the genus are the following:
- Tegenaria dalmatica
- Tegenaria domestica (domestic house spider)
- Tegenaria mirifica
- Tegenaria pagana
- Tegenaria parietina (cardinal spider)
References[edit]
- ^ a b Bolzern; Burckhardt, & Hänggi (2013). "Phylogeny and taxonomy of European funnel-web spiders of the Tegenaria-Malthonica complex (Araneae: Agelenidae) based upon morphological and molecular data.". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 168: 723–848. doi:10.1111/zoj.12040. Cite uses deprecated parameters (help)
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Source | http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tegenaria&oldid=645633568 |
Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD) Stats
Specimen Records:73
Specimens with Sequences:67
Specimens with Barcodes:39
Species:11
Species With Barcodes:11
Public Records:30
Public Species:10
Public BINs:3