Corinnid sac spider

Corinnid sac spiders
Supunna species photographed in Berowra, Australia.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Suborder: Araneomorphae
Superfamily: Corinnoidea
Family: Corinnidae
Karsch, 1880
Genera

Castianeira
Corinna
Humua
Mazax
Meriola
Myrmecium
Myrmecotypus
Phrurolithus
Phrurotimpus
Psellocoptus
Trachelas
many others

Diversity
77 genera, 935 species

The corinnid sac spiders (family Corinnidae), like the other clubionoid families, have a very confusing taxonomic history. Once this family was a part of the large catch-all taxon Clubionidae, now a shadow of its former self. The clubionoids are apparently similar only in that they have eight eyes arranged in two rows, conical anterior spinnerets that touch and are generally wandering predators that build silken retreats, or sacs, usually on plant terminals, between leaves, under bark or under rocks.

Among the families formerly classified as "Clubionidae", some of which have common names including the words "sac spider", include:

The Corinnidae, as now recognized, contains 75 genera and over 900 species worldwide, making it the largest of the "clubionoid" families. Among the common genera are Castianeira (nearly world wide), Corinna (widespread), Meriola (New World), Phrurolithus (widespread), Phrurotimpus (North America) and Trachelas (widespread).

Members of the genus Castianeira appear to be mimics of ants and velvet ants. Other corinnid ant-like genera include Mazax, Myrmecium and Myrmecotypus. The "phurolithines" (including Phrurolithus and Phrurotimpus) are tiny spiders often found in leaf litter that have many ventral spines on their first tibiae. The 'trachelines" (Meriola and Trachelas) are usually bicolored spiders with red-brown cephalothoraxes (carapaces) and dirty grey to yellowish abdomens. Corinna is the type genus for the family and consists of small running spiders.

Systematics

The categorization into subfamilies follows Joel Hallan.

    • Ablator lanatus (Petrunkevitch, 1958) †
    • Ablator triguttatus (Koch & Berendt, 1854) †
    • Phrurolithus extinctus Petrunkevitch, 1958 †
    • Phrurolithus fossilis Petrunkevitch, 1958 †
    • Phrurolithus ipseni Petrunkevitch, 1958 †

See also

External links

Wikispecies has information related to: Corinnidae
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Corinnidae.