Attus

Attus is a deprecated spider genus that is now considered a junior synonym of Salticus. In the 18th and early 19th centuries, the majority of jumping spiders were grouped under the name Attus.[1]

The genus was originally described in 1805 by Charles Walckenaer,[2] only a year after Pierre Latreille described the first jumping spider genus, Salticus.[3] Walckenaer, ignoring Latreille, placed all of the spiders assigned to Salticus into his new genus, Attus, with the exception of Aranea cinnaberinus which he placed into Eresus. No further actions were taken regarding these genera until 1810, when Latreille moved Aranea scenica back to Salticus by declaring it as the type species for the genus.[4]

Over the course of the 19th century, numerous new genera were split off of Attus, reducing the number of species assigned to the genus considerably. In 1832, Nicholas Marcellus Hentz detached the genera Lyssomanes, Synemosyna, and Epiblemum from Attus.[5] In 1833, Carl Sundevall moved numerous species from Attus to Salticus.[5] From 1833 to 1850, Carl Ludwig Koch created twenty-four new jumping spider genera, most of which were detached from Attus.[5]

Due the genus's unclear definition it was often used as a provisional classification for any jumping spiders which could not otherwise be assigned to a genus.[1][6] In 1955, Pierre Bonnet declared it a synonym of Salticus since Walkenaer did not differentiate Attus from Salticus and the later had priority as an older name.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Proszynski, Jerzy (2002). "Attus". Catalogue of Salticidae (Araneae). http://www.salticidae.org/salticid/catalog/attus.htm. Retrieved 2009-11-23. 
  2. ^ Walckenaer, Charles Athanase (1805) (in French). Tableau des aranéides ou caractères essentiels des tribus, genres, familles et races que renferme le genre Aranea de Linné, avec la désignation des espèces comprises dans chacune de ces divisions. Paris. 
  3. ^ Latreille, Pierre André (1804). "Tableau methodique des Insectes". Nouveau dictionnaire d'histoire naturelle (Paris) 24: 135. 
  4. ^ Pickard-Cambridge, Frederick Octavius (1901). "A Revision of the Genera of the Araneae or Spiders with Reference to their Type Species". The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Including Zoology, Botany, and Geology (London) 9: 65. 
  5. ^ a b c Peckham, George; Peckham, Elizabeth (1885). "Genera of the Family Attidae: With a Partial Synonymy". Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters 6: 261. http://www.peckhamia.com/editions/Peckham%201885%20Genera%20of%20the%20family%20Attidae%20with%20a%20partial%20synonymy.pdf. 
  6. ^ Peckham, George; Peckham, Elizabeth (1888). "Attidae of North America". Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters 7: 8. http://www.peckhamia.com/editions/Peckham%201888%20Attidae%20of%20North%20America.pdf. 
  7. ^ Bonnet, Pierre (1955) (in French). Bibliographia Araneorum. 2. Toulouse, France. p. 781.