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The Newsletter of the British Arachnological Society is a more informal publication, including observations on arachnids and other short papers of academic interest, reports of meetings, obituaries, historical notes and book reviews, etc. Running to 155 volumes as of 2022, it was originally edited by John Parker (issues 1–50), then John ...
Active in the field especially in the 1970s and 1980s, he described several dozen taxa, in particular among the spiders of the Salticidae family. [2] Wanless played a significant role in the British Arachnological Society being its member in 1969–1973, 1974–1976 and 1986–1989, and Meetings Secretary in 1973–1978. [1]
These spiders can be found under rocks and leaves, ... Gnaphosid genera of the world. British Arachnological Society, St Neots, Cambs 1, i-xii, 1-92; 2:i-11, 93-605;
Joro spiders first showed up in Georgia in 2013 and have since spread through several nearby states. Here's a look at how they could affect Kentucky. Joro spiders are a little scary looking ...
The reference below need to be included in the section of checklist: Norma-Rashid, Y. & D. Li. 2009. A checklist of spiders (Arachnida: Araneae) from Peninsular Malaysia inclusive of twenty new records. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 57(2): 305-322. the pdf format can be uploaded online
Arachnologia Belgica – Belgian Arachnological Society (ARABEL) website; Arachnologische Gesellschaft (AraGes) website Archived 2016-10-23 at the Wayback Machine; Association Francaise d'Arachnologie (AsFrA) website; British Arachnological Society (BAS) website; Czech Arachnological Society website; European Society of Arachnology (ESA ...
Spiders in this genus mainly catch and feed on ants (myrmecophagy). A Southeast Asian species of the genus Aelurillus has been observed to jump around 30-40 times its body length straight onto the back of a large gnaphosid spider and kill it. [3] They like hot, dry, stony places or small bare open areas with dead twigs or similar amongst low ...
Attulus caricis is a species of spider in the family Salticidae (jumping spiders). It has a Palearctic distribution, [ 1 ] including Britain . [ 2 ] Until 2017, it was placed in the genus Sitticus .