Inermocoelotes
Appearance
Inermocoelotes | |
---|---|
I. inermis, female | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Agelenidae |
Genus: | Inermocoelotes Ovtchinnikov, 1999[1] |
Type species | |
I. inermis (L. Koch, 1855)
| |
Species | |
15, see text | |
Synonyms[1] | |
|
Inermocoelotes is a genus of funnel weavers that was first described by S. V. Ovtchinnikov in 1999.[3]
Species
As of July 2019[update] it contains fifteen species, found only in Europe:[1]
- Inermocoelotes anoplus (Kulczyński, 1897) – Austria, Italy, Eastern Europe
- Inermocoelotes brevispinus (Deltshev & Dimitrov, 1996) – Bulgaria
- Inermocoelotes deltshevi (Dimitrov, 1996) – Macedonia, Bulgaria
- Inermocoelotes drenskii (Deltshev, 1990) – Bulgaria
- Inermocoelotes falciger (Kulczyński, 1897) – Eastern Europe
- Inermocoelotes gasperinii (Simon, 1891) – Croatia, Montenegro
- Inermocoelotes halanensis (Wang, Zhu & Li, 2010) – Croatia
- Inermocoelotes inermis (L. Koch, 1855) (type) – Europe
- Inermocoelotes jurinitschi (Drensky, 1915) – Bulgaria
- Inermocoelotes karlinskii (Kulczyński, 1906) – South-eastern Europe
- Inermocoelotes kulczynskii (Drensky, 1915) – Macedonia, Bulgaria
- Inermocoelotes melovskii Komnenov, 2017 – Macedonia
- Inermocoelotes microlepidus (de Blauwe, 1973) – Italy, Bulgaria
- Inermocoelotes paramicrolepidus (Wang, Zhu & Li, 2010) – Greece
- Inermocoelotes xinpingwangi (Deltshev, 2009) – Bulgaria
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Gen. Inermocoelotes Ovtchinnikov, 1999". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
- ^ Mikhailov, K. G. (2010). "Inermocoelotes Ovtshinnikov, 1999, a valid genus (Aranei: Amaurobiidae: Coelotinae)". Arthropoda Selecta. 19: 101. doi:10.15298/arthsel.19.2.08.
- ^ Ovtchinnikov, S. V. (1999). "On the supraspecific systematics of the subfamily Coelotinae (Araneae, Amaurobiidae) in the former USSR fauna". Tethys Entomological Research. 1: 63–80.