Pardosa lasciva L. Koch, 1879
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3894.1.5 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0E0A629E-3153-45A7-A929-1DEE66A62252 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4956524 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038CE06D-FFAD-FFA4-FF0F-41D2FAA1E880 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Pardosa lasciva L. Koch, 1879 |
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Pardosa lasciva L. Koch, 1879 View in CoL View at ENA
Figs 4 View FIGURES 1–8 , 12 View FIGURES 9–16 , 23 View FIGURES 20–27 , 31 View FIGURES 28–35 , 39 View FIGURES 36–43 , 49–50 View FIGURES 44–58 , 62, 70, 79–80, 93, 104–105 View FIGURES 98–113 , 116, 123, 128–130
Pardosa lasciva L. Koch, 1879: 103 View in CoL , pl. 3 fig. 16 (♀); Holm 1947: 35, pl. 7 figs 76, 77, pl. 10 fig. 43 (♂ ♀); Holm 1973: 101, figs 92–100 (♂ ♀); Zhou & Song 1987: 20, figs 5a–d (♀); Hu & Wu 1989: 213, figs 177: 1–2 (♀); Almquist 2005: 229, figs 226a–f (♂ ♀).
Pardosa guernei Simon, 1887: 457 View in CoL (♀); Palmgren 1939: 42, figs 40, 74, 89 (♀). Synonymized by Holm (1973).
Type material. Lectotype ♀ from Russia: Krasnoyarsk Kray, Selivaninskoj (see Holm 1973) [=Selivanikha now, part of Turukhansk Municipality], in NHRS, examined.
Other material examined. SWEDEN. Lule Lappmark : Muddus National Park, marsh in wood with Betula nana and Ledum palustre on Sphagnum , pitfall traps, 21–23 June 1975 (Å. Holm, NHRS), 3♂ 1♀ ( Gustafsson & Holm 1980). RUSSIA. Sverdlovsk Oblast: Denezhkin Kamen Range, 450 m, conifer forest, July 1982 (L. Simakin, MMUM), 10♂ 1♀. Krasnoyarsk Kray: Mirnoye Village (62.46ºN 89ºE), 1988–89 (L.B. Rybalov, ZMMU, NHRS), 38♂ 4♀; Peredvinsk Village (57ºN 93.5ºE), June 1995 (L.B. Rybalov, MMUM), 2♂ 2♀. Sayan, 1914 (Sayanskaya Partiya Ekspeditsiya Departamenta Zemledeliya, ZISP), 1♀. Material of this species was examined for Koponen et al. (1998: Polar Ural), Marusik et al. (2000: Tuva), Marusik et al. (2002: Krasnoyarsk Kray), Koponen & Marusik (1992: Yakutia), Logunov & Marusik (1995: Chita Oblast).
Comments. The species was described by Holm (1947) and Almquist (2005). A detailed description is found in Holm (1973), where a considerable variation in the shape of the epigyne is illustrated.
Habitat. A taiga species found in various habitats in conifer forests (e.g. pine forests with lichens, marshes etc.) ( Almquist 2005). In the Sokhondo Reserve (Chita Oblast), this species was found in the same type of habitats as P. eiseni and P. lyrata , in mountain taiga forests and in deciduous and mixed forests ( Logunov & Marusik 1995).
Distribution ( Figs 128-130 View FIGURE 128 View FIGURES 129–130 ). Wide distribution in the Palearctic, from Sweden to Russia: Khabarovsk Kray ( Trilikauskas 2001: Bureinsky Reserve) in the east, and south to China: Altai Mts in Xinjiang ( Hu & Wu 1989).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Pardosa lasciva L. Koch, 1879
Kronestedt, Torbjörn, Marusik, Yuri M. & Omelko, Mikhail M. 2014 |
Pardosa guernei
Palmgren, P. 1939: 42 |
Simon, E. 1887: 457 |
Pardosa lasciva L. Koch, 1879: 103
Almquist, S. 2005: 229 |
Hu, J. L. & Wu, W. G. 1989: 213 |
Zhou, N. L. & Song, D. X. 1987: 20 |
Holm, A. 1973: 101 |
Holm, A. 1947: 35 |
Koch, L. 1879: 103 |