enow.com Web Search

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Migidae

    Migidae, also known as tree trapdoor spiders, is a family of spiders with about 100 species in eleven genera. They are small to large spiders with little to no hair and build burrows with a trapdoor. [ 1 ]

  3. Dipluridae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipluridae

    The family Dipluridae, known as curtain-web spiders (or confusingly as funnel-web tarantulas, a name shared with other distantly related families [2]) are a group of spiders in the infraorder Mygalomorphae, that have two pairs of booklungs, and chelicerae (fangs) that move up and down in a stabbing motion.

  4. Phrurolithidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrurolithidae

    Phrurolithidae is a family of araneomorph spiders, known as guardstone spiders. The family was first described by Nathan Banks in 1892. [ 1 ] First included in the Corinnidae as the subfamily Phrurolithinae, later phylogenetic studies justified a separate family.

  5. Category:Lists of spider species by family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Lists_of_spider...

    This category contains lists of spider species, one for each family. If a family is not listed here, check for the family page at Araneae families . The species are mostly taken from various versions of the World Spider Catalog .

  6. Heptathelidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heptathelidae

    Heptathelidae is a family of spiders. [1] It has been sunk within the family Liphistiidae as the subfamily Heptathelinae, [2] but as of April 2024 was accepted by the World Spider Catalog. [1] It is placed in suborder Mesothelae, which contains the most basal living spiders.

  7. Pacullidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacullidae

    The family Pacullidae contains three-clawed spiders with six eyes, lacking a cribellum. They resemble spiders from the family Tetrablemmidae in some respects but are much larger, always exceeding 5 mm long, have a very wrinkled (rugose) cuticle, and females do not have large membranous receptacles.

  8. Micrathena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micrathena

    Micrathena, known as spiny orbweavers, is a genus of orb-weaver spiders first described by Carl Jakob Sundevall in 1833. [5] [6] Micrathena contains more than a hundred species, most of them Neotropical woodland-dwelling species. The name is derived from the Greek "micro", meaning "small", and the goddess Athena. [7]

  9. Pycnothelidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pycnothelidae

    Pycnothelidae is a family of mygalomorph spiders first described in 1917. [2] It was downgraded to a subfamily of the funnel-web trapdoor spiders in 1985, [ 3 ] but returned to family status in 2020.