From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genus of spiders
Bassaniodes is a
genus of
crab spiders that was first described by
Reginald Innes Pocock in 1903.
[3]
Species
As of July 2022
[update] it contains thirty-nine species and one subspecies, found in Africa, Europe, and Asia:
[1]
Bassaniodes adzharicus (Mcheidze, 1971) –
Georgia
Bassaniodes anatolicus (Demir, Aktaş & Topçu, 2008) –
Turkey
Bassaniodes blagoevi Naumova, 2020 –
Albania
Bassaniodes bliteus (
Simon , 1875) – Mediterranean
Bassaniodes bufo (Dufour, 1820) – Mediterranean
Bassaniodes canariensis (Wunderlich, 1987) – Canary Is.
Bassaniodes caperatoides (Levy, 1976) –
Israel
Bassaniodes caperatus (Simon, 1875) – Mediterranean, Turkey, Ukrain,
Russia (
Caucasus )
Bassaniodes clavulus (Wunderlich, 1987) – Canary Is.
Bassaniodes cribratus (Simon, 1885) – Mediterranean, Russia (
Europe ), Turkey, Caucasus,
Iran ,
China ,
Korea
Bassaniodes dolpoensis (Ono, 1978) –
Nepal , China
Bassaniodes egenus (Simon, 1886) –
West Africa
Bassaniodes falx (Wunderlich, 2022) – Canary Is.
Bassaniodes ferus (
O. Pickard-Cambridge , 1876) –
Cyprus ,
Egypt , Israel
Bassaniodes fienae (Jocqué, 1993) –
Spain
Bassaniodes fuerteventurensis (Wunderlich, 1992) – Canary Is.
Bassaniodes graecus (
C. L. Koch , 1837) –
Balkans ,
Greece ,
Ukraine , Russia (Europe), Turkey, Israel,
Iraq
Bassaniodes grohi (Wunderlich, 1992) – Madeira
Bassaniodes hariaensis (Wunderlich, 2022) – Canary Is.
Bassaniodes lalandei (
Audouin , 1826) – Mediterranean,
Azerbaijan
Bassaniodes lanzarotensis (Wunderlich, 1992) – Canary Is., Savage Is.
Bassaniodes loeffleri (
Roewer , 1955) – Greece, Turkey, Caucasus, Iran,
Kazakhstan , Central Asia
Bassaniodes madeirensis (Wunderlich, 1992) – Madeira
Bassaniodes obesus (
Thorell , 1875) – Ukraine, Russia (Europe)
Bassaniodes ovadan (Marusik & Logunov, 1995) –
Turkmenistan
Bassaniodes ovcharenkoi (Marusik & Logunov, 1990) – Central Asia
Bassaniodes pinocorticalis (Wunderlich, 1992) – Canary Is.
Bassaniodes pseudorectilineus (Wunderlich, 1995) – Greece, Turkey
Bassaniodes rectilineus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872) –
Syria ,
Lebanon , Israel, Iran
Bassaniodes robustus (
Hahn , 1832) – Europe to Central Asia
Bassaniodes sardiniensis (Wunderlich, 1995) –
Italy (
Sardinia )
Bassaniodes sinaiticus (Levy, 1999) – Egypt
Bassaniodes socotrensis Pocock, 1903 (
type ) –
Yemen (
Socotra )
Bassaniodes squalidus (Simon, 1883) – Canary Is., Madeira
Bassaniodes tenebrosus (Šilhavý, 1944) – East Mediterranean
Bassaniodes tristrami (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872) – Greece, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe) to Central Asia, Middle East
Bassaniodes turlan (Marusik & Logunov, 1990) – Central Asia
Bassaniodes ulkan (Marusik & Logunov, 1990) – Russia (Europe),
Kyrgyzstan
Bassaniodes xizangensis (Tang & Song, 1988) – China
See also
References
^
a
b
c
"Gen. Bassaniodes Pocock, 1903" . World Spider Catalog Version 20.0 . Natural History Museum Bern. 2020.
doi :
10.24436/2 . Retrieved 2020-07-28 .
^ Lehtinen, P. T. (2002), "Generic revision of some thomisids related to Xysticus C.L.Koch, 1835 and Ozyptila Simon, 1864", in Toft, S. (ed.), European Arachnology 2000: Proceedings of the 19th European Colloquium of Arachnology , p. 322
^
Pocock, R. I. (1903), "Arachnida", in Forbes, H. O. (ed.), The Natural History of Sokotra and Abd-el-Kuri
Further reading
Breitling, R. (2019).
"A barcode-based phylogenetic scaffold for Xysticus and its relatives (Araneae: Thomisidae: Coriarachnini)" . Ecologica Montenegrina . 20 : 198–206.
doi :
10.37828/em.2019.20.16 .
S2CID
108977575 .
Levy, G. (1976). "The spider genus Xysticus (Araneae: Thomisidae) in Israel". Israel Journal of Zoology . 25 : 1–37.
Wunderlich, J. (1995). "Zur Kenntnis west-paläarktischer Arten der Gattungen Psammitis Menge 1875, Xysticus C. L. Koch 1835 und Ozyptila Simon 1864 (Arachnida: Araneae: Thomisidae)". Beiträge zur Araneologie . 4 (1994): 749–774.
Levy, G. (1985), "Araneae: Thomisidae", Fauna Palaestina, Arachnida II
Wunderlich, J. (1987). Die Spinnen der Kanarischen Inseln und Madeiras: Adaptive Radiation, Biogeographie, Revisionen und Neubeschreibungen . Triops, Langen. p. 435.