enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tegenaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria

    Tegenaria is a genus of fast-running funnel weavers that occupy much of the Northern Hemisphere except for Japan and Indonesia. It was first described by Pierre André Latreille in 1804, [ 2 ] though many of its species have been moved elsewhere.

  3. Tegenaria domestica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria_domestica

    Tegenaria domesticoides Schmidt & Piepho, 1994 Draconarius amygdaliformis (Zhu & Wang, 1991) The spider species Tegenaria domestica , commonly known as the barn funnel weaver in North America and the domestic house spider in Europe, is a member of the funnel-web family Agelenidae .

  4. Giant house spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_house_spider

    The first description of a spider now assigned to this species was by Carl Ludwig Koch in 1843, under the name Tegenaria atrica. Other supposedly different species were described later, including Tegenaria saeva by John Blackwall in 1844, Tegenaria duellica by Eugène Simon in 1875 and Tegenaria gigantea by Ralph Vary Chamberlin and Wilton Ivie ...

  5. Hobo spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobo_spider

    The species was first described in 1802 by naturalist Charles Athanase Walckenaer as Aranea agrestis, [1] in reference to its western European habitat in fields, woods, and under rocks. [5] In 1841, Walckenaer transferred the species to the genus Tegenaria. [1]

  6. Tegenaria parietina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria_parietina

    Tegenaria taprobanica Strand, 1907 Tegenaria parietina is a species of spider native to Europe. Its modern day distribution includes area from Northern Africa to Central Asia and Sri Lanka , and from the West Indies to Uruguay and Argentina , where it may have been introduced.

  7. Tegenaria ferruginea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria_ferruginea

    Tegenaria ferruginea or charcoal spider is a European reddish, rather common spider with rusty markings on its back. The body looks rather similar to T. parietina, however the legs are much shorter and the funnel web built lacks backdoor exit. It was transferred to Malthonica in 2005, but back to Tegenaria in 2013. [1]

  8. List of Agelenidae species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Agelenidae_species

    Tegenaria Latreille, 1804. Tegenaria abchasica Charitonov, 1941 — Caucasus (Russia, Georgia) Tegenaria achaea Brignoli, 1977 — Greece, Turkey; Tegenaria adomestica Guseinov, Marusik & Koponen, 2005 — Azerbaijan; Tegenaria africana Lucas, 1846 — Algeria; Tegenaria agnolettii Brignoli, 1978 — Turkey; Tegenaria alamto Zamani, Marusik ...

  9. Tegenaria abchasica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegenaria_abchasica

    Tegenaria abchasica differs from all other known species in the genus Tegenaria by the presence of two dark spots on the upper surface of the cephalothorax at the junction of the head and thorax. There is also a characteristic pattern on the under surface of the cephalothorax, consisting of a paler central line with a pair of lighter spots on ...