Pseudamycus
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Pseudamycus |
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Amycus albo-maculatus Hasselt, 1882 |
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Pseudamycus is a spider genus of the Salticidae family (jumping spiders). The monotypic genus Taivala is thought to be closely related.
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[edit] Appearance
These jumping spiders are light or colorful, sometimes iridiscent. The cephalothorax is high, with steep sides of the thorax. The eyes protrude from the head, located within an orange-brown eye field. The rest of the carapace is greyish-orange, the abdomen light grey-brown with dots and light and dark streaks on the sides. The first pair of legs are dark brown with yellow tarsi, the other three pairs are reddish yellow and spiny.[1]
[edit] Habits
They live on shrubs and other, mostly broad leaved plants, for example ginger.
[edit] Distribution
The ten species are found in Southeast Asia, from India to New Britain (New Guinea).
[edit] Name
Combined of Greek pseudo "false" and the salticid genus name Amycus.
[edit] Species
- Pseudamycus albomaculatus (Hasselt, 1882) (Malaysia to Java)
- Pseudamycus amabilis Peckham & Peckham, 1907 (Borneo)
- Pseudamycus bhutani Zabka, 1990 (Bhutan)
- Pseudamycus canescens Simon, 1899 (Sumatra)
- Pseudamycus evarchanus Strand, 1915 (New Britain)
- Pseudamycus flavopubescens Simon, 1899 (Sumatra)
- Pseudamycus hasselti Zabka, 1985 (Vietnam)
- Pseudamycus himalaya (Tikader, 1967) (India)
- Pseudamycus sylvestris Peckham & Peckham, 1907 (Borneo)
- Pseudamycus validus (Thorell, 1877) (Sulawesi)
[edit] References
- ^ Salticidae: Diagnostic Drawings Library - Genus Pseudamycus
- Platnick, N. I. (2007). The world spider catalog, version 7.5. American Museum of Natural History.