Gradungulidae

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Gradungulidae
Gradungula sorenseni (adult male topotype)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Suborder: Araneomorphae
Superfamily: Austrochiloidea
Family: Gradungulidae
Forster, 1955
Diversity
7 genera, 16 species

The Gradungulidae are a small spider family of Australia and New Zealand with 16 species in seven genera. They are medium to large three-clawed haplogyne spiders with two pairs of book-lungs (like Mygalomorphae).

The genus Gradungula lives in forest litter. Progradungula and Macrogradungula are the only cribellate genera of the family.

It spins an extensive web consisting of an upper retreat tangle with connecting threads to scaffolding, which supports the ladder-like catching platform, which in turn is glued to the ground. Progradungula is a large spider with very long legs; it resembles Hickmania (Austrochilidae).

Species

Gradungula Forster, 1955

Kaiya Gray, 1987

Macrogradungula Gray, 1987

Pianoa Forster, 1987

  • Pianoa isolata Forster, 1987 — New Zealand

Progradungula Forster & Gray, 1979

Spelungula Forster, 1987

Tarlina Gray, 1987

  • Tarlina daviesae Gray, 1987 — Queensland
  • Tarlina milledgei Gray, 1987 — New South Wales
  • Tarlina noorundi Gray, 1987 — New South Wales
  • Tarlina simipes Gray, 1987 — Queensland
  • Tarlina smithersi Gray, 1987 — New South Wales
  • Tarlina woodwardi (Forster, 1955) — Queensland

See also

  • List of Gradungulidae species
  • Spider families

References

  • Forster, R. R., Gray, M. R. (1979): Progradungula, a new cribellate genus of the spider family Gradungulidae (Araneae). Australian Journal of Zoology 27: 1051-1071. Abstract
  • Forster, R. R., Platnick, N. I. and Gray, M. R. (1987): A review of the spider superfamilies Hypochiloidea and Austrochiloidea (Araneae, Araneomorphae). Bulletin of the AMNH 185(1): 1-116 Abstract - PDF (50Mb)
  • Platnick, Norman I. (2014): The world spider catalog, version 14.5. American Museum of Natural History. doi:10.5531/db.iz.0001

External links

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