Dysderinae C.L. Koch, 1837, 1971

Zamani, Alireza, Marusik, Yuri M. & Szűts, Tamas, 2023, A survey of the spider genus Dysdera Latreille, 1804 (Araneae, Dysderidae) in Iran, with fourteen new species and notes on two fossil genera, ZooKeys 1146, pp. 43-86 : 43

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1146.97517

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:01E76F6A-B991-4F33-9BD6-991090F07E80

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/42DB2826-8091-5FE7-B12E-BB80F0F2CAE9

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Dysderinae C.L. Koch, 1837
status

 

Subfamily Dysderinae C.L. Koch, 1837

Diagnosis.

This subfamily can be diagnosed from other dysderids by the edge of sternum-labium joint ca. 2.5-3 × longer than the edge of the maxilla-sternum joint, all tarsi bearing claw tufts, posterior metatarsi bearing scopulae, and the spineless anterior tibiae and metatarsi. Furthermore, the bulb of dysderines does not bear a free embolus (with the exception of Harpactocrates Simon, 1914), and the posterior diverticulum of endogyne is large and wide ( Deeleman-Reinhold and Deeleman 1988; Le Peru 2011; Kunt et al. 2019).

Composition.

Around 360 species in 11 genera: Cryptoparachtes Dunin, 1992, Dysdera Latreille, 1804, Dysderella Dunin, 1992, Dysderocrates Deeleman-Reinhold & Deeleman, 1988, Harpactocrates , Hygrocrates Deeleman-Reinhold, 1988, Kut Kunt, Elverici, Yağmur & Özkütük, 2019, Parachtes Alicata, 1964, Rhodera Deeleman-Reinhold, 1989, Stalitochara Simon, 1913, and Tedia Simon, 1882. The position of Rhodera in Dysderinae is questionable (see Le Peru 2011).

Kingdom

Animalia

Order

Araneae

Family

Dysderinae