ARACHNOLOGISCHE GESELLSCHAFT

Arachnologische Mitteilungen

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Jörg Wunderlich (ed.) (2012): Fifteen papers on extant and fossil spiders (Araneae). 368 pp. Beiträge zur Araneologie 7

Jörg Wunderlich (ed.) (2012): Fifteen papers on extant and fossil spiders (Araneae). 368 pp. Beiträge zur Araneologie 7

Abstract

book review: Jörg Wunderlich (ed.) (2012): Fifteen papers on extant and fossil spiders (Araneae). 368 pp. Beiträge zur Araneologie 7.

Jörg Wunderlich (ed.) (2012): The spider families of Europe: keys, diagnoses and diversity. A bilingual manual, 192 pp. Beiträge zur Araneologie 8

Jörg Wunderlich (ed.) (2012): Die Spinnen-Familien Europas: Bestimmung, Merkmale und Vielfalt. Ein zweisprachiges Handbuch, 192 pp. Beiträge zur Araneologie 8

Abstract

book review: Jörg Wunderlich (ed.) (2012): Die Spinnen-Familien Europas: Bestimmung, Merkmale und Vielfalt. Ein zweisprachiges Handbuch, 192 pp. Beiträge zur Araneologie 8.

Die Gemeine Tapezierspinne, Atypus affinis (Araneae: Atypidae), Spinne des Jahres 2013

The common purse-web spider, Atypus affinis (Araneae: Atypidae), spider of the year 2013

Abstract

European Spider of the Year 2013

Report on the 27th European Congress of Arachnology, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2-7 September 2012

Report on the 27th European Congress of Arachnology, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2-7 September 2012

Abstract

congress report

Die epigäische Spinnenfauna (Arachnida, Araneae) in Sandrasen, Borstgrasrasen und Ruderalfluren im Naturschutzgebiet „Alter Flugplatz Karlsruhe“

The epigeic spider assemblages (Arachnida, Araneae) of dry acid grassland, mat-grass and ruderal vegetation in a nature protection area in the upper Rhine valley

Abstract

Epigeic spiders were sampled using pitfall traps during one year in an anthropogenic open site within the city of Karlsruhe (Alter Flugplatz Karlsruhe). The area, historically used as a military parade ground and airport, is protected as a Special Area of Conservation (SAC) within the Natura 2000 network of the EU and since 2010 as a German nature reserve. We were interested in the diversity, assemblage structure and distribution of spider species within the area and investigated three different plant formations: sparse grass-dominated vegetation with frequent open sand patches (sandy turf), closed grassland dominated by the mat-grass (Nardus stricta) and ruderal vegetation with blackberry bushes. 123 species were identified from these captures, including many specialists of xerothermic habitats and rare and endangered species like Alopecosa striatipes, Agroeca lusatica, Haplodrassus dalmatensis, Styloctetor romanus, Typhochrestus simoni and Xysticus striatipes as well as extremely rare species of unclassified red list status like Mysmenella jobi, Theonoe minutissima and Zora parallela. The three investigated habitat types were quite similar concerning α-diversity, while measures of β-diversity indicated a strong species turnover. By performing an ecological habitat analysis (using autecological data on spiders) essential differences between the three habitat types could not be discovered, especially not between mat-grass and sandy turf. However, analysing the guild structures showed that different ways of using habitat resources dominated in the different habitat types. For Nardus-grassland several species could be identified as indicator species. While many xero- and photophiles live in the open grassland, the stenotopic psammophiles of inland dunes in the region were not found. The ruderal area houses a mix of grassland- and forest species.

A collection of spiders (Araneae) in Albanian coastal areas

A collection of spiders (Araneae) in Albanian coastal areas

Abstract

The present study unites data from several excursions in typical Mediterranean lowland ecosystems in Albania during the years 2006 to 2009. Spiders from several different habitat types along the coast were analysed in six districts: Saranda, Fieri, Kavaja, Durrësi, Tirana and Lezha. In total 299 adult specimens were collected. They belong to 82 species, 60 genera and 22 families. Six species are new to the Albanian fauna: Aculepeira armida (Audouin, 1826), Zygiella x-notata (Clerck, 1757), Histopona torpida (C. L. Koch, 1837), Malthonica campestris (C. L. Koch, 1834), Pellenes tripunctatus (Walckenaer, 1802) and Pseudeuophrys erratica (Walckenaer, 1826). With respect to zoogeography, the spider fauna is mainly characterized by the presence of many Palaearctic species.

Chelifer longimanus Kollar, 1848: a nomen nudum corresponding to Neobisium spelaeum (Schiödte, 1847) (Pseudoscorpiones: Chelonethi: Neobisiidae)

Chelifer longimanus Kollar, 1848: a nomen nudum corresponding to Neobisium spelaeum (Schiödte, 1847) (Pseudoscorpiones: Chelonethi: Neobisiidae)

Abstract

The manuscript name Chelifer longimanus Kollar, 1848, most often cited as Obisium longimanum Kollar, was first introduced in a note by Kollar (1848) that has been overlooked in the taxonomic literature on pseudoscorpions. No description or indication has been associated with this name, which is therefore a nomen nudum. It corresponds to the valid pseudoscorpion species Neobisium spelaeum (Schiödte, 1847), having been found at one of the type localities of the latter (Postojna Cave, Slovenia). Two specimens originally identified as O. longimanum (probably by V. Kollar) are present in the collections of the Naturhistorisches Museum Wien.

19th International Congress of Arachnology

19th International Congress of Arachnology

Abstract

Congress invitation

Faunistic spider collections in the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin: The collection of Erich Hesse

Faunistische Spinnensammlungen im Museum für Naturkunde Berlin: Die Sammlung von Erich Hesse

Abstract

The ‘Hesse collection’ of spiders (Araneae) and harvestmen (Opiliones) in the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin is documented. Biographical notes on Erich Hesse – a former arachnid curator at the museum (1921–1940) – are provided. The ‘Hesse collection’ was actually put together by other workers, and can be broadly divided into two parts. One comes from Bielinek (= Bellinchen) on the Polish side of the Oder Valley (West Pommerania); now part of the ‘Unteres Odertal’ National Park. This Bielinek material includes notable records of Heriaeus oblongus Simon, 1918 and Gibbaranea ullrichi (Hahn, 1835). The other part of the collection comes from Colbitz-Letzlinger Heide in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Notable here are Pistius truncatus (Pallas, 1772) and Philodromus buchari Kubcová, 2004; the latter representing the first record of this species for Saxony-Anhalt.

Nachträge zum „Katalog der schweizerischen Spinnen“ 4. Neunachweise von 2002 bis 2011

Supplement to the "Katalog der schweizerischen Spinnen" 4. New records from 2002 to 2011

Abstract

In the ”Checklist of the spiders of Central Europe” 945 species are listed for Switzerland. During the last few years numerous species have been found which represent new records for Switzerland and that, at least partly, have already been published. This 4th appendix to the catalogue of Swiss spiders presents fourteen species recorded for the first time in Switzerland: Carniella brignolii Thaler & Steinberger, 1988, Theridion cinereum Thorell, 1875, Diplocephalus foraminifer (O. P.-Cambridge, 1875), Panamomops affinis Miller & Kratochvíl, 1939, Troxochrota scabra Kulczyński, 1894, Pardosa fulvipes (Collett, 1876), P. sphagnicola (Dahl, 1908), Hahnia microphthalma Snazell & Duffey, 1980, Archaeodictyna consecuta (O. P.-Cambridge, 1872), Brommella falcigera (Balogh, 1935), Cheiracanthium campestre Lohmander, 1944, Drassodex drescoi Hervé, Roberts & Murphy, 2009, Thanatus firmetorum Muster & Thaler, 2003 and Xysticus viduus Kulczyński, 1898. Thirteen further species are presented that were already published elsewhere. The current number of species in Switzerland is thus 972. As special curiosities, five species are presented that will not yet be entered into the checklist but nevertheless may happen to be found in human surroundings.

A faunistic study on ground-dwelling spiders (Araneae) in the Tirana district, Albania

A faunistic study on ground-dwelling spiders (Araneae) in the Tirana district, Albania

Abstract

Spiders from the Tirana district of Albania were investigated. Currently, 78 species from 24 families and a collection of 400 specimens from January to August 2010 were recorded for Tirana. A total of 32 new records for the Albanian fauna are included in the present paper. Agraecina lineata (Simon, 1878) is the first record for the Balkan Peninsula. Saitis graecus Kulczyński, 1905 was known before only from Greece and Bulgaria. Presently, 373 spider species are known for Albania.

Cover/Contents Arachnologische Mitteilungen 44, 2012

Cover/Contents Arachnologische Mitteilungen 44, 2012

Arachnologische Mitteilungen 44, 2012

Arachnologische Mitteilungen 44, 2012

Observations on web-invasion by the jumping spider Thyene imperialis in Israel (Araneae: Salticidae)

Observations on web-invasion by the jumping spider Thyene imperialis in Israel (Araneae: Salticidae)

Abstract

Observations on Thyene imperialis (Rossi, 1846) in Israel, Negev desert, invading a web of Cyclosa deserticola Levy, 1998 are reported. The female leapt into the orb-web to catch Cyclosa spiders. Photographs are provided, and a link to additional film material is given.

The sejugal furrow in camel spiders and acariform mites

The sejugal furrow in camel spiders and acariform mites

Abstract

Camel spiders (Arachnida: Solifugae) are one of the arachnid groups characterised by a prosomal dorsal shield composed of three distinct elements: the pro-, meso- and metapeltidium. These are associated respectively with prosomal appendages one to four, five, and six. What is less well known, although noted in the historical literature, is that the coxae of the 4th and 5th prosomal segments (i.e. walking legs 2 and 3) of camel spiders are also separated ventrally by a distinct membranous region, which is absent between the coxae of the other legs. We suggest that this essentially ventral division of the prosoma specifically between coxae 2 and 3 is homologous with the so-called sejugal furrow (the sejugal interval sensu van der Hammen). This division constitutes a fundamental part of the body plan in acariform mites (Arachnida: Acariformes). If homologous, this sejugal furrow could represent a further potential synapomorphy for (Solifugae + Acariformes); a relationship with increasing morphological and molecular support. Alternatively, outgroup comparison with sea spiders (Pycnogonida) and certain early Palaeozoic fossils could imply that the sejugal furrow defines an older tagma, derived from a more basal grade of organisation. In this scenario the (still) divided prosoma of acariform mites and camel spiders would be plesiomorphic. This interpretation challenges the textbook arachnid character of a peltidium (or ‘carapace’) covering an undivided prosoma.

The scorpion collections (Arachnida, Scorpiones) held in the Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali of Turin (Italy)

The scorpion collections (Arachnida, Scorpiones) held in the Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali of Turin (Italy)

Abstract

Data and considerations about the history and contents of the scorpion collection housed in the Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali of Turin (MRSN) are reported. Information on type material and important historical specimens are provided, as well as biographical notes about the major zoologists of the museum.

26th ECA Midreshet Ben-Gurion, Sede Boqer, Israel: preface

26th ECA Midreshet Ben-Gurion, Sede Boqer, Israel: preface

Abstract

Preface: Lubin, Y., E. Gavish-Regev, T. Blick & O.-D. Finch (Eds) (2012): European Arachnology 2011. Proceedings of the 26th European Congress of Arachnology, Midreshet Ben-Gurion, Sede Boqer, Israel, 4-9 September 2011

Geography-related sub-generic diversity within the Mediterranean trapdoor

spider genus Nemesia (Araneae, Mygalomorphae, Nemesiidae)

Geography-related sub-generic diversity within the Mediterranean trapdoor

spider genus Nemesia (Araneae, Mygalomorphae, Nemesiidae)

Abstract

Three different male and female super-specific types are distinguished according to variations in the morphology of the bulb and spermathecae within the genus Nemesia Audouin, 1826. Plotting the distributions of these sexual types on a map of the Mediterranean indicates the existence of geography-related sub-generic diversity in which the Nemesia fauna of the eastern Mediterranean differs markedly from that of the western Mediterranean. While the eastern Mediterranean Nemesia fauna is highly homogeneous, the fauna of the western Mediterranean is very diverse. The eastern and western Nemesia faunae appear to overlap in the central Mediterranean. Efforts to relate the specific bulb types to the particular types of spermathecae described here were only partly successful.

Spiders in Fauna Europaea: dual use of the database

Spiders in Fauna Europaea: dual use of the database

Abstract

The history and current work of the project Fauna Europaea is outlined. The different sources used for building up the database and the efforts to keep it updated are described. Available models of national checklists are discussed and the ideal checklist is described. The double use of the database as a matrix behind the official site of Fauna Europaea – as well as a directly visible document on the website of the European Society of Arachnology – are indicated and the differences in transparency, links to literature sources, and facilities such as distribution maps and calculations of numbers of scores per species or of species per country are discussed. The future of the project is briefly outlined. The need for a European identification tool for spiders is stressed.

On the spider species described by L. Koch in 1882 from the Balearic Islands (Araneae)

On the spider species described by L. Koch in 1882 from the Balearic Islands (Araneae)

Abstract

Examination of the L. Koch collection of the Zoological Museum in Berlin allows us to propose the following new synonyms and combinations: Erigone marina L. Koch, 1882 = Oedothorax fuscus (Blackwall, 1834) n. syn.; Theridion elimatum L. Koch, 1882 = Enoplognatha diversa (Blackwall, 1859) n. syn.; Liocranum variabilis Wunderlich, 2008 = Zora inornata L. Koch, 1882 n. syn. = Liocranum inornatum n. comb.; Lycosa perspicax L. Koch, 1882 = Arctosa fulvolineata (Lucas, 1846) n. syn.; Alopecosella Roewer, 1960 = Arctosa C. L. Koch, 1847 n. syn.; Lycosa subhirsuta L. Koch, 1882 = Arctosa lacustris (Simon, 1876) n. syn.; Philodromus vegetus L. Koch, 1882 = Thanatus vulgaris Simon, 1870 n. syn.; Ozyptila bicuspis Simon, 1932 = Ozyptila furcula L. Koch, 1882 n. syn.; Haplodrassus maroccanus Denis, 1956 = Drassus parvulus L. Koch, 1882 n. syn. = Haplodrassus parvicorpus (Roewer, 1951) n. comb. (replacement name); Zelotes ruscinensis Simon, 1914 = Zelotes semirufa (L. Koch, 1882) n. syn.; Phlegra simoni L. Koch, 1882 = Phlegra bresnieri Lucas, 1846 n. syn.; Trochosula conspersa (L. Koch, 1882), Lycorma fraisnei (L. Koch, 1882), Lycorma insulana (L. Koch, 1882), Arctosa misella (L. Koch, 1882) and Pirata simplex (L. Koch, 1882) are all retransferred to their original genus Lycosa stat. rev. Cheiracanthium occidentale L. Koch, 1882, Ozyptila furcula L. Koch, 1882 and Zelotes callidus (Simon, 1878) are redescribed.