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Category: Lycosidae. 27 languages. ... Members of the family Lycosidae in the Suborder Araneomorphae Subcategories. This category has the following 6 subcategories ...
Acantholycosa Dahl, 1908. Acantholycosa aborigenica Zyuzin & Marusik, 1988 — Russia, Mongolia; Acantholycosa altaiensis Marusik, Azarkina & Koponen, 2004 — Russia; Acantholycosa azarkinae Marusik & Omelko, 2011 — Russia
Wolf spiders are members of the family Lycosidae (from Ancient Greek λύκος (lúkos) 'wolf'), named for their robust and agile hunting skills and excellent eyesight. They live mostly in solitude, hunt alone, and usually do not spin webs .
Pardosa pseudoannulata, a member of a group of species referred to as wolf-spiders, is a non-web-building spider belonging to the family Lycosidae. P. pseudoannulata are wandering spiders that track and ambush prey and display sexual cannibalism. They are commonly encountered in farmlands across China and other East Asian countries.
Lycosa tarantula is the species originally known as the tarantula, a name that nowadays in English commonly refers to spiders in another family entirely, the Theraphosidae. It now may be better called the tarantula wolf spider , being in the wolf spider family, the Lycosidae.
Acantholycosa is a genus of wolf spiders.Members of this genus can be distinguished from closely related genera by the presence of more than three pairs of ventral tibial spines on each front leg.
Tigrosa helluo, commonly known as the Wetland Giant Wolf Spider, is a species of spider belonging to the family Lycosidae, also known as wolf spiders. T. helluo was formerly known as Hogna helluo before differences between dorsal color patterns, habitat preferences, body structures, etc. were discovered. [2]
Pardosa lapidicina, the stone spider, is a species of wolf spider in the family Lycosidae. ... Binomial name; Pardosa lapidicina. Emerton, 1885. References